The MySQL implementation of foreign key constraints differs from the SQL standard in the following key respects:
If there are several rows in the parent table with the same referenced key value,
InnoDBperforms a foreign key check as if the other parent rows with the same key value do not exist. For example, if you define aRESTRICTtype constraint, and there is a child row with several parent rows,InnoDBdoes not permit the deletion of any of the parent rows.If
ON UPDATE CASCADEorON UPDATE SET NULLrecurses to update the same table it has previously updated during the same cascade, it acts likeRESTRICT. This means that you cannot use self-referentialON UPDATE CASCADEorON UPDATE SET NULLoperations. This is to prevent infinite loops resulting from cascaded updates. A self-referentialON DELETE SET NULL, on the other hand, is possible, as is a self-referentialON DELETE CASCADE. Cascading operations may not be nested more than 15 levels deep.In an SQL statement that inserts, deletes, or updates many rows, foreign key constraints (like unique constraints) are checked row-by-row. When performing foreign key checks,
InnoDBsets shared row-level locks on child or parent records that it must examine. MySQL checks foreign key constraints immediately; the check is not deferred to transaction commit. According to the SQL standard, the default behavior should be deferred checking. That is, constraints are only checked after the entire SQL statement has been processed. This means that it is not possible to delete a row that refers to itself using a foreign key.No storage engine, including
InnoDB, recognizes or enforces theMATCHclause used in referential-integrity constraint definitions. Use of an explicitMATCHclause does not have the specified effect, and it causesON DELETEandON UPDATEclauses to be ignored. Specifying theMATCHshould be avoided.The
MATCHclause in the SQL standard controls howNULLvalues in a composite (multiple-column) foreign key are handled when comparing to a primary key in the referenced table. MySQL essentially implements the semantics defined byMATCH SIMPLE, which permits a foreign key to be all or partiallyNULL. In that case, a (child table) row containing such a foreign key can be inserted even though it does not match any row in the referenced (parent) table. (It is possible to implement other semantics using triggers.)MySQL requires that the referenced columns be indexed for performance reasons. However, MySQL does not enforce a requirement that the referenced columns be
UNIQUEor be declaredNOT NULL.A
FOREIGN KEYconstraint that references a non-UNIQUEkey is not standard SQL but rather anInnoDBextension. TheNDBstorage engine, on the other hand, requires an explicit unique key (or primary key) on any column referenced as a foreign key.The handling of foreign key references to nonunique keys or keys that contain
NULLvalues is not well defined for operations such asUPDATEorDELETE CASCADE. You are advised to use foreign keys that reference onlyUNIQUE(includingPRIMARY) andNOT NULLkeys.For storage engines that do not support foreign keys (such as
MyISAM), MySQL Server parses and ignores foreign key specifications.MySQL parses but ignores “inline
REFERENCESspecifications” (as defined in the SQL standard) where the references are defined as part of the column specification. MySQL acceptsREFERENCESclauses only when specified as part of a separateFOREIGN KEYspecification.Defining a column to use a
REFERENCESclause has no actual effect and serves only as a memo or comment to you that the column which you are currently defining is intended to refer to a column in another table. It is important to realize when using this syntax that:tbl_name(col_name)MySQL does not perform any sort of check to make sure that
col_nameactually exists intbl_name(or even thattbl_nameitself exists).MySQL does not perform any sort of action on
tbl_namesuch as deleting rows in response to actions taken on rows in the table which you are defining; in other words, this syntax induces noON DELETEorON UPDATEbehavior whatsoever. (Although you can write anON DELETEorON UPDATEclause as part of theREFERENCESclause, it is also ignored.)This syntax creates a column; it does not create any sort of index or key.
You can use a column so created as a join column, as shown here:
CREATE TABLE person ( id SMALLINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, name CHAR(60) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id) ); CREATE TABLE shirt ( id SMALLINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, style ENUM('t-shirt', 'polo', 'dress') NOT NULL, color ENUM('red', 'blue', 'orange', 'white', 'black') NOT NULL, owner SMALLINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL REFERENCES person(id), PRIMARY KEY (id) ); INSERT INTO person VALUES (NULL, 'Antonio Paz'); SELECT @last := LAST_INSERT_ID(); INSERT INTO shirt VALUES (NULL, 'polo', 'blue', @last), (NULL, 'dress', 'white', @last), (NULL, 't-shirt', 'blue', @last); INSERT INTO person VALUES (NULL, 'Lilliana Angelovska'); SELECT @last := LAST_INSERT_ID(); INSERT INTO shirt VALUES (NULL, 'dress', 'orange', @last), (NULL, 'polo', 'red', @last), (NULL, 'dress', 'blue', @last), (NULL, 't-shirt', 'white', @last); SELECT * FROM person; +----+---------------------+ | id | name | +----+---------------------+ | 1 | Antonio Paz | | 2 | Lilliana Angelovska | +----+---------------------+ SELECT * FROM shirt; +----+---------+--------+-------+ | id | style | color | owner | +----+---------+--------+-------+ | 1 | polo | blue | 1 | | 2 | dress | white | 1 | | 3 | t-shirt | blue | 1 | | 4 | dress | orange | 2 | | 5 | polo | red | 2 | | 6 | dress | blue | 2 | | 7 | t-shirt | white | 2 | +----+---------+--------+-------+ SELECT s.* FROM person p INNER JOIN shirt s ON s.owner = p.id WHERE p.name LIKE 'Lilliana%' AND s.color <> 'white'; +----+-------+--------+-------+ | id | style | color | owner | +----+-------+--------+-------+ | 4 | dress | orange | 2 | | 5 | polo | red | 2 | | 6 | dress | blue | 2 | +----+-------+--------+-------+When used in this fashion, the
REFERENCESclause is not displayed in the output ofSHOW CREATE TABLEorDESCRIBE:SHOW CREATE TABLE shirt\G *************************** 1. row *************************** Table: shirt Create Table: CREATE TABLE `shirt` ( `id` smallint(5) unsigned NOT NULL auto_increment, `style` enum('t-shirt','polo','dress') NOT NULL, `color` enum('red','blue','orange','white','black') NOT NULL, `owner` smallint(5) unsigned NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ) ENGINE=MyISAM DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
For information about foreign key constraints, see Section 13.1.18.5, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.