MySQL supports foreign keys, which permit cross-referencing related data across tables, and foreign key constraints, which help keep the related data consistent.
A foreign key relationship involves a parent table that holds the initial column values, and a child table with column values that reference the parent column values. A foreign key constraint is defined on the child table.
The essential syntax for a defining a foreign key constraint in
a CREATE TABLE or
ALTER TABLE statement includes
the following:
[CONSTRAINT [symbol]] FOREIGN KEY
[index_name] (col_name, ...)
REFERENCES tbl_name (col_name,...)
[ON DELETE reference_option]
[ON UPDATE reference_option]
reference_option:
RESTRICT | CASCADE | SET NULL | NO ACTION | SET DEFAULTForeign key constraint usage is described under the following topics in this section:
Foreign key constraint naming is governed by the following rules:
The
CONSTRAINTsymbolvalue is used, if defined.If the
CONSTRAINTsymbolclause is not defined, or a symbol is not included following theCONSTRAINTkeyword, a constraint name name is generated automatically.If the
CONSTRAINTsymbolclause is not defined, or a symbol is not included following theCONSTRAINTkeyword, bothInnoDBandNDBstorage engines ignoreFOREIGN_KEY.index_nameThe
CONSTRAINTvalue, if defined, must be unique in the database. A duplicatesymbolsymbolresults in an error similar to: ERROR 1005 (HY000): Can't create table 'test.fk1' (errno: 121).NDB Cluster stores foreign key names using the same lettercase with which they are created.
Table and column identifiers in a FOREIGN KEY ...
REFERENCES clause can be quoted within backticks
(`). Alternatively, double quotation marks
(") can be used if the
ANSI_QUOTES SQL mode is
enabled. The
lower_case_table_names system
variable setting is also taken into account.
Foreign key constraints are subject to the following conditions and restrictions:
Parent and child tables must use the same storage engine, and they cannot be defined as temporary tables.
Creating a foreign key constraint requires the
REFERENCESprivilege on the parent table.Corresponding columns in the foreign key and the referenced key must have similar data types. The size and sign of fixed precision types such as
INTEGERandDECIMALmust be the same. The length of string types need not be the same. For nonbinary (character) string columns, the character set and collation must be the same.MySQL supports foreign key references between one column and another within a table. (A column cannot have a foreign key reference to itself.) In these cases, a “child table record” refers to a dependent record within the same table.
MySQL requires indexes on foreign keys and referenced keys so that foreign key checks can be fast and not require a table scan. In the referencing table, there must be an index where the foreign key columns are listed as the first columns in the same order. Such an index is created on the referencing table automatically if it does not exist. This index might be silently dropped later if you create another index that can be used to enforce the foreign key constraint.
index_name, if given, is used as described previously.Previously,
InnoDBallowed a foreign key to reference any index column or group of columns, even a non-unique index or partial index, an extension of standard SQL. This is still allowed for backwards compatibility, but is now deprecated; in addition, it must be enabled by settingrestrict_fk_on_non_standard_key. If this is done, there must still be an index in the referenced table where the referenced columns are the first columns in the same order. Hidden columns thatInnoDBadds to an index are also considered in such cases (see Section 17.6.2.1, “Clustered and Secondary Indexes”). You should expect support for use of nonstandard keys to be removed in a future version of MySQL, and migrate away from their use.NDBalways requires an explicit unique key (or primary key) on any column referenced as a foreign key.Index prefixes on foreign key columns are not supported. Consequently,
BLOBandTEXTcolumns cannot be included in a foreign key because indexes on those columns must always include a prefix length.InnoDBdoes not currently support foreign keys for tables with user-defined partitioning. This includes both parent and child tables.This restriction does not apply for
NDBtables that are partitioned byKEYorLINEAR KEY(the only user partitioning types supported by theNDBstorage engine); these may have foreign key references or be the targets of such references.A table in a foreign key relationship cannot be altered to use another storage engine. To change the storage engine, you must drop any foreign key constraints first.
A foreign key constraint cannot reference a virtual generated column.
For information about how the MySQL implementation of foreign key constraints differs from the SQL standard, see Section 1.7.2.3, “FOREIGN KEY Constraint Differences”.
When an UPDATE or
DELETE operation affects a key
value in the parent table that has matching rows in the child
table, the result depends on the referential
action specified by ON UPDATE
and ON DELETE subclauses of the
FOREIGN KEY clause. Referential actions
include:
CASCADE: Delete or update the row from the parent table and automatically delete or update the matching rows in the child table. BothON DELETE CASCADEandON UPDATE CASCADEare supported. Between two tables, do not define severalON UPDATE CASCADEclauses that act on the same column in the parent table or in the child table.If a
FOREIGN KEYclause is defined on both tables in a foreign key relationship, making both tables a parent and child, anON UPDATE CASCADEorON DELETE CASCADEsubclause defined for oneFOREIGN KEYclause must be defined for the other in order for cascading operations to succeed. If anON UPDATE CASCADEorON DELETE CASCADEsubclause is only defined for oneFOREIGN KEYclause, cascading operations fail with an error.NoteCascaded foreign key actions do not activate triggers.
SET NULL: Delete or update the row from the parent table and set the foreign key column or columns in the child table toNULL. BothON DELETE SET NULLandON UPDATE SET NULLclauses are supported.If you specify a
SET NULLaction, make sure that you have not declared the columns in the child table asNOT NULL.RESTRICT: Rejects the delete or update operation for the parent table. SpecifyingRESTRICT(orNO ACTION) is the same as omitting theON DELETEorON UPDATEclause.NO ACTION: A keyword from standard SQL. ForInnoDB, this is equivalent toRESTRICT; the delete or update operation for the parent table is immediately rejected if there is a related foreign key value in the referenced table.NDBsupports deferred checks, andNO ACTIONspecifies a deferred check; when this is used, constraint checks are not performed until commit time. Note that forNDBtables, this causes all foreign key checks made for both parent and child tables to be deferred.SET DEFAULT: This action is recognized by the MySQL parser, but bothInnoDBandNDBreject table definitions containingON DELETE SET DEFAULTorON UPDATE SET DEFAULTclauses.
For storage engines that support foreign keys, MySQL rejects
any INSERT or
UPDATE operation that attempts
to create a foreign key value in a child table if there is no
matching candidate key value in the parent table.
For an ON DELETE or ON
UPDATE that is not specified, the default action is
always NO ACTION.
As the default, an ON DELETE NO ACTION or
ON UPDATE NO ACTION clause that is
specified explicitly does not appear in
SHOW CREATE TABLE output or in
tables dumped with mysqldump.
RESTRICT, which is an equivalent
non-default keyword, appears in SHOW
CREATE TABLE output and in tables dumped with
mysqldump.
For NDB tables, ON
UPDATE CASCADE is not supported where the reference
is to the parent table's primary key.
For NDB tables, ON
DELETE CASCADE is not supported where the child
table contains one or more columns of any of the
TEXT or
BLOB types. (Bug #89511, Bug
#27484882)
InnoDB performs cascading operations using
a depth-first search algorithm on the records of the index
that corresponds to the foreign key constraint.
A foreign key constraint on a stored generated column cannot
use CASCADE, SET NULL,
or SET DEFAULT as ON
UPDATE referential actions, nor can it use
SET NULL or SET DEFAULT
as ON DELETE referential actions.
A foreign key constraint on the base column of a stored
generated column cannot use CASCADE,
SET NULL, or SET DEFAULT
as ON UPDATE or ON
DELETE referential actions.
This simple example relates parent and
child tables through a single-column
foreign key:
CREATE TABLE parent (
id INT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
) ENGINE=INNODB;
CREATE TABLE child (
id INT,
parent_id INT,
INDEX par_ind (parent_id),
FOREIGN KEY (parent_id)
REFERENCES parent(id)
ON DELETE CASCADE
) ENGINE=INNODB;
MySQL 9.4 supports inline
REFERENCE clauses as well as implicit
parent table primary keys, so the second
CREATE TABLE statement can be
rewritten as shown here:
CREATE TABLE child (
id INT,
parent_id INT NOT NULL REFERENCES parent ON DELETE CASCADE,
INDEX par_ind (parent_id)
) ENGINE=INNODB;
This is a more complex example in which a
product_order table has foreign keys for
two other tables. One foreign key references a two-column
index in the product table. The other
references a single-column index in the
customer table:
CREATE TABLE product (
category INT NOT NULL, id INT NOT NULL,
price DECIMAL,
PRIMARY KEY(category, id)
) ENGINE=INNODB;
CREATE TABLE customer (
id INT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
) ENGINE=INNODB;
CREATE TABLE product_order (
no INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
product_category INT NOT NULL,
product_id INT NOT NULL,
customer_id INT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY(no),
INDEX (product_category, product_id),
INDEX (customer_id),
FOREIGN KEY (product_category, product_id)
REFERENCES product(category, id)
ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
FOREIGN KEY (customer_id)
REFERENCES customer(id)
) ENGINE=INNODB;
You can add a foreign key constraint to an existing table
using the following ALTER TABLE
syntax:
ALTER TABLE tbl_name
ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] FOREIGN KEY
[index_name] (col_name, ...)
REFERENCES tbl_name (col_name,...)
[ON DELETE reference_option]
[ON UPDATE reference_option]
The foreign key can be self referential (referring to the same
table). When you add a foreign key constraint to a table using
ALTER TABLE, remember
to first create an index on the column(s) referenced by the
foreign key.
You can drop a foreign key constraint using the following
ALTER TABLE syntax:
ALTER TABLE tbl_name DROP FOREIGN KEY fk_symbol;
If the FOREIGN KEY clause defined a
CONSTRAINT name when you created the
constraint, you can refer to that name to drop the foreign key
constraint. Otherwise, a constraint name was generated
internally, and you must use that value. To determine the
foreign key constraint name, use SHOW
CREATE TABLE:
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE child\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Table: child
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `child` (
`id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`parent_id` int NOT NULL,
KEY `par_ind` (`parent_id`),
CONSTRAINT `child_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`parent_id`)
REFERENCES `parent` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci
mysql> ALTER TABLE child DROP FOREIGN KEY `child_ibfk_1`;
Adding and dropping a foreign key in the same
ALTER TABLE statement is
supported for
ALTER TABLE ...
ALGORITHM=INPLACE. It is not supported for
ALTER TABLE ...
ALGORITHM=COPY.
In MySQL, InnoDB and NDB tables support checking of foreign
key constraints. Foreign key checking is controlled by the
foreign_key_checks variable,
which is enabled by default. Typically, you leave this
variable enabled during normal operation to enforce
referential integrity. The
foreign_key_checks variable
has the same effect on NDB tables
as it does for InnoDB tables.
The foreign_key_checks
variable is dynamic and supports both global and session
scopes. For information about using system variables, see
Section 7.1.9, “Using System Variables”.
Disabling foreign key checking is useful when:
Dropping a table that is referenced by a foreign key constraint. A referenced table can only be dropped after
foreign_key_checksis disabled. When you drop a table, constraints defined on the table are also dropped.Reloading tables in different order than required by their foreign key relationships. For example, mysqldump produces correct definitions of tables in the dump file, including foreign key constraints for child tables. To make it easier to reload dump files for tables with foreign key relationships, mysqldump automatically includes a statement in the dump output that disables
foreign_key_checks. This enables you to import the tables in any order in case the dump file contains tables that are not correctly ordered for foreign keys. Disablingforeign_key_checksalso speeds up the import operation by avoiding foreign key checks.Executing
LOAD DATAoperations, to avoid foreign key checking.Performing an
ALTER TABLEoperation on a table that has a foreign key relationship.
When foreign_key_checks is
disabled, foreign key constraints are ignored, with the
following exceptions:
Recreating a table that was previously dropped returns an error if the table definition does not conform to the foreign key constraints that reference the table. The table must have the correct column names and types. It must also have indexes on the referenced keys. If these requirements are not satisfied, MySQL returns Error 1005 that refers to errno: 150 in the error message, which means that a foreign key constraint was not correctly formed.
Altering a table returns an error (errno: 150) if a foreign key definition is incorrectly formed for the altered table.
Dropping an index required by a foreign key constraint. The foreign key constraint must be removed before dropping the index.
Creating a foreign key constraint where a column references a nonmatching column type.
Disabling foreign_key_checks
has these additional implications:
It is permitted to drop a database that contains tables with foreign keys that are referenced by tables outside the database.
It is permitted to drop a table with foreign keys referenced by other tables.
Enabling
foreign_key_checksdoes not trigger a scan of table data, which means that rows added to a table whileforeign_key_checksis disabled are not checked for consistency whenforeign_key_checksis re-enabled.
MySQL extends metadata locks, as necessary, to tables that are related by a foreign key constraint. Extending metadata locks prevents conflicting DML and DDL operations from executing concurrently on related tables. This feature also enables updates to foreign key metadata when a parent table is modified. In earlier MySQL releases, foreign key metadata, which is owned by the child table, could not be updated safely.
If a table is locked explicitly with LOCK
TABLES, any tables related by a foreign key
constraint are opened and locked implicitly. For foreign key
checks, a shared read-only lock
(LOCK TABLES
READ) is taken on related tables. For cascading
updates, a shared-nothing write lock
(LOCK TABLES
WRITE) is taken on related tables that are involved
in the operation.
To view a foreign key definition, use
SHOW CREATE TABLE:
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE child\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Table: child
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `child` (
`id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`parent_id` int NOT NULL,
KEY `par_ind` (`parent_id`),
CONSTRAINT `child_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`parent_id`)
REFERENCES `parent` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci
You can obtain information about foreign keys from the
Information Schema
KEY_COLUMN_USAGE table. An
example of a query against this table is shown here:
mysql> SELECT TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_NAME, COLUMN_NAME, CONSTRAINT_NAME
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
WHERE REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA IS NOT NULL;
+--------------+------------+-------------+-----------------+
| TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_NAME | COLUMN_NAME | CONSTRAINT_NAME |
+--------------+------------+-------------+-----------------+
| test | child | parent_id | child_ibfk_1 |
+--------------+------------+-------------+-----------------+
You can obtain information specific to
InnoDB foreign keys from the
INNODB_FOREIGN and
INNODB_FOREIGN_COLS tables.
Example queries are show here:
mysql> SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_FOREIGN \G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
ID: test/child_ibfk_1
FOR_NAME: test/child
REF_NAME: test/parent
N_COLS: 1
TYPE: 1
mysql> SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_FOREIGN_COLS \G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
ID: test/child_ibfk_1
FOR_COL_NAME: parent_id
REF_COL_NAME: id
POS: 0
In the event of a foreign key error involving
InnoDB tables (usually Error 150 in the
MySQL Server), information about the latest foreign key error
can be obtained by checking
SHOW ENGINE
INNODB STATUS output.
mysql> SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS\G
...
------------------------
LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR
------------------------
2018-04-12 14:57:24 0x7f97a9c91700 Transaction:
TRANSACTION 7717, ACTIVE 0 sec inserting
mysql tables in use 1, locked 1
4 lock struct(s), heap size 1136, 3 row lock(s), undo log entries 3
MySQL thread id 8, OS thread handle 140289365317376, query id 14 localhost root update
INSERT INTO child VALUES (NULL, 1), (NULL, 2), (NULL, 3), (NULL, 4), (NULL, 5), (NULL, 6)
Foreign key constraint fails for table `test`.`child`:
,
CONSTRAINT `child_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`parent_id`) REFERENCES `parent` (`id`) ON DELETE
CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE
Trying to add in child table, in index par_ind tuple:
DATA TUPLE: 2 fields;
0: len 4; hex 80000003; asc ;;
1: len 4; hex 80000003; asc ;;
But in parent table `test`.`parent`, in index PRIMARY,
the closest match we can find is record:
PHYSICAL RECORD: n_fields 3; compact format; info bits 0
0: len 4; hex 80000004; asc ;;
1: len 6; hex 000000001e19; asc ;;
2: len 7; hex 81000001110137; asc 7;;
...
If a user has table-level privileges for all parent tables,
ER_NO_REFERENCED_ROW_2 and
ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED_2 error
messages for foreign key operations expose information about
parent tables. If a user does not have table-level
privileges for all parent tables, more generic error
messages are displayed instead
(ER_NO_REFERENCED_ROW and
ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED).
An exception is that, for stored programs defined to execute
with DEFINER privileges, the user against
which privileges are assessed is the user in the program
DEFINER clause, not the invoking user. If
that user has table-level parent table privileges, parent
table information is still displayed. In this case, it is
the responsibility of the stored program creator to hide the
information by including appropriate condition handlers.