Table partitioning restrictions include the following:
Table partitions must reside in Type II areas.
Partitions can not span storage areas.
A maximum of 32,768 partitions (one of which is the composite initial partition) are allowed per table.
A maximum of 15 sub-partitions are allowed per table.
Only one range column per table may be specified as defining a range partition; it can be either the only partition or the last sub-partition.
Overlapping range partitions are not supported. Ranges are contiguous, without gaps. Data in each range partition is all data less than or equal to (<=) the partition definition value down to the previous partition definition or down to the beginning of time if there is no smaller value.
Partition-aligned columns in a local index must be ascending.
Once you partition a table, if you need to re-define partitions for that table, you must dump and load the data.
Once you enable table partitioning for your database, you must remove all partitions to in order to disable the feature.
Table partitioning is not supported for multi-tenant tables.
Note: Note you can have both multi-tenant and partitioned tables in the same database, but you cannot use both features on the same table.