InnoDB mySQL unable to set "ON DELETE SET DEFAULT'. How to set? - mysql

I am trying to create a table named EMPLOYEE. When I use the following statements without "ON DELETE SET DEFAULT" it is working.
Here is the Error I get with "ON DELETE SET DEFAULT":
ERROR 1005 (HY000): Can't create table 'COMPANY.EMPLOYEE' (errno: 150)
Here is the DDL
CREATE TABLE EMPLOYEE (
Fname VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
Minit CHAR, Lname VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
Ssn CHAR(9) NOT NULL DEFAULT '123456789',
Bdate DATE, ADDRESS VARCHAR(30),
Sex CHAR, Salary DECIMAL(10,2),
Super_Ssn CHAR(9) NOT NULL DEFAULT '123456789',
Dno INT NOT NULL DEFAULT -99,
PRIMARY KEY (Ssn),
FOREIGN KEY (Super_Ssn) REFERENCES COMPANY.EMPLOYEE(Ssn)
ON DELETE SET DEFAULT
ON UPDATE CASCADE )ENGINE=InnoDB;
Please help me!!! and Thanks in advance :)

You can't use ON DELETE SET DEFAULT or ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT with InnoDB
InnoDB and FOREIGN KEY Constraints
While SET DEFAULT is allowed by the MySQL Server, it is rejected as
invalid by InnoDB. CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE statements using this
clause are not allowed for InnoDB tables.
You may try ON DELETE SET NULL if it fits your needs
If ON UPDATE CASCADE or ON UPDATE SET NULL recurses to update the same
table it has previously updated during the cascade, it acts like
RESTRICT. This means that you cannot use self-referential ON UPDATE
CASCADE or ON UPDATE SET NULL operations. This is to prevent infinite
loops resulting from cascaded updates. A self-referential ON DELETE
SET NULL, on the other hand, is possible, as is a self-referential ON
DELETE CASCADE. Cascading operations may not be nested more than 15
levels deep
Here is SQLFiddle demo

just use SET NULL rule and define trigger which will try to set to default value with exception handler if your default value has been deleted from master table

You delete your parent table, which triggers the set default in the
child. The DB tries to set the child records to their default 0. But
there's no 0 record in the parent table, triggering the foreign key
violation.
Check out the MySQL manual about foreign key constrains:
If you re-create a table that was dropped, it must have a definition
that conforms to the foreign key constraints referencing it. It must
have the right column names and types, and it must have indexes on the
referenced keys, as stated earlier. If these are not satisfied, MySQL
returns error number 1005 and refers to error 150 in the error
message.
A few ideas:
Better drop the tables and create it new with a well formed syntax.
Make sure to add ENGINE=InnoDB; to your CREATE TABLE - command.
Make sure InnoDB is enabled on your MySQL server. To verify this, try this command: SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'have_innodb'; - if it returns a YES, then InnoDB is enabled.
Check your command for upper- and lowercases in table- and fieldnames.
Check this not only one the table you want to create, but also on the tables the foreign keys are referring to.
Make sure your referred tables are properly indexed.
"When creating a foreign key constraint, MySQL requires a usable index on both the referencing table and also on the referenced table. The index on the referencing table is created automatically if one doesn't exist, but the one on the referenced table needs to be created manually (Source). Yours appears to be missing."
See MySQL Foreign Key Error 1005 errno 150

Related

How to add options unsigned on ID column after creating table and added foreign_key? [duplicate]

I got this error when i was trying to alter my table.
Error Code: 1833. Cannot change column 'person_id': used in a foreign key constraint 'fk_fav_food_person_id' of table 'table.favorite_food'
Here is my CREATE TABLE STATEMENT Which ran successfully.
CREATE TABLE favorite_food(
person_id SMALLINT UNSIGNED,
food VARCHAR(20),
CONSTRAINT pk_favorite_food PRIMARY KEY(person_id,food),
CONSTRAINT fk_fav_food_person_id FOREIGN KEY (person_id)
REFERENCES person (person_id)
);
Then i tried to execute this statement and i got the above error.
ALTER TABLE person MODIFY person_id SMALLINT UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT;
You can turn off foreign key checks:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;
/* DO WHAT YOU NEED HERE */
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
Please make sure to NOT use this on production and have a backup.
The type and definition of foreign key field and reference must be equal.
This means your foreign key disallows changing the type of your field.
One solution would be this:
LOCK TABLES
favorite_food WRITE,
person WRITE;
ALTER TABLE favorite_food
DROP FOREIGN KEY fk_fav_food_person_id,
MODIFY person_id SMALLINT UNSIGNED;
Now you can change you person_id
ALTER TABLE person MODIFY person_id SMALLINT UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT;
recreate foreign key
ALTER TABLE favorite_food
ADD CONSTRAINT fk_fav_food_person_id FOREIGN KEY (person_id)
REFERENCES person (person_id);
UNLOCK TABLES;
EDIT:
Added locks above, thanks to comments
You have to disallow writing to the database while you do this,
otherwise you risk data integrity problems.
I've added a write lock above
All writing queries in any other session than your own ( INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ) will wait till timeout or UNLOCK TABLES; is executed
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/lock-tables.html
EDIT 2: OP asked for a more detailed explanation of the line "The type and definition of foreign key field and reference must be equal. This means your foreign key disallows changing the type of your field."
From MySQL 5.5 Reference Manual: FOREIGN KEY Constraints
Corresponding columns in the foreign key and the referenced key must
have similar internal data types inside InnoDB so that they can be
compared without a type conversion. The size and sign of integer types
must 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.
In my case it was necessary to add GLOBAL.
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;
SET GLOBAL FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
/* DO WHAT YOU NEED HERE */
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
SET GLOBAL FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1;
Go to the structure tab of the table in question.
Under actions you have indexes.
Drop them
Once you are finished with the necessary modifications,
Bring back the foreign key and restore the indexes deleted. Then make sure your structure is the same and has not changed
When you set keys (primary or foreign) you are setting constraints on how they can be used, which in turn limits what you can do with them. If you really want to alter the column, you could re-create the table without the constraints, although I'd recommend against it. Generally speaking, if you have a situation in which you want to do something, but it is blocked by a constraint, it's best resolved by changing what you want to do rather than the constraint.

Error 1215 while creating foreign key on varchar column [duplicate]

I am trying to forward engineer my new schema onto my database server, but I can't figure out why I am getting this error.
I've tried to search for the answer here, but everything I've found has said to either set the database engine to InnoDB or to make sure the keys I'm trying to use as a foreign key are primary keys in their own tables. I have done both of these things, if I'm not mistaken. What else can I do?
Executing SQL script in server
ERROR: Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Table `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients_has_Staff`
-- -----------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients_has_Staff` (
`Clients_Case_Number` INT NOT NULL ,
`Staff_Emp_ID` INT NOT NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Clients_Case_Number`, `Staff_Emp_ID`) ,
INDEX `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Staff1_idx` (`Staff_Emp_ID` ASC) ,
INDEX `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Clients_idx` (`Clients_Case_Number` ASC) ,
CONSTRAINT `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Clients`
FOREIGN KEY (`Clients_Case_Number` )
REFERENCES `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients` (`Case_Number` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION,
CONSTRAINT `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Staff1`
FOREIGN KEY (`Staff_Emp_ID` )
REFERENCES `Alternative_Pathways`.`Staff` (`Emp_ID` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
ENGINE = InnoDB
SQL script execution finished: statements: 7 succeeded, 1 failed
Here is the SQL for the parent tables.
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients` (
`Case_Number` INT NOT NULL ,
`First_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Middle_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Last_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Address` CHAR(50) NULL ,
`Phone_Number` INT(10) NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Case_Number`) )
ENGINE = InnoDB
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Staff` (
`Emp_ID` INT NOT NULL ,
`First_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Middle_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Last_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Emp_ID`) )
ENGINE = InnoDB
I'm guessing that Clients.Case_Number and/or Staff.Emp_ID are not exactly the same data type as Clients_has_Staff.Clients_Case_Number and Clients_has_Staff.Staff_Emp_ID.
Perhaps the columns in the parent tables are INT UNSIGNED?
They need to be exactly the same data type in both tables.
Reasons you may get a foreign key constraint error:
You are not using InnoDB as the engine on all tables.
You are trying to reference a nonexistent key on the target table. Make sure it is a key on the other table (it can be a primary or unique key, or just a key)
The types of the columns are not the same (an exception is the column on the referencing table can be nullable even if it is not nullable in the referenced table).
If the primary key or foreign key is a varchar, make sure the collation is the same for both.
One of the reasons may also be that the column you are using for ON DELETE SET NULL is not defined to be null. So make sure that the column is set default null.
Check these.
For others, the same error may not always be due to a column type mismatch. You can find out more information about a MySQL foreign key error by issuing the command
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
You may find an error near the top of the printed message. Something like
Cannot find an index in the referenced table where the
referenced columns appear as the first columns, or column types
in the table and the referenced table do not match for constraint.
Error 1215 is an annoying one. Explosion Pill's answer covers the basics. You want to make sure to start from there. However, there are more, much more subtle cases to look out for:
For example, when you try to link up PRIMARY KEYs of different tables, make sure to provide proper ON UPDATE and ON DELETE options. E.g.:
...
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
FOREIGN KEY (`id`) REFERENCES `t` (`other_id`) ON DELETE SET NULL
....
won't fly, because PRIMARY KEYs (such as id) can't be NULL.
I am sure, there are even more, similarly subtle issues when adding these sort of constraints, which is why when coming across constraint errors, always make sure that the constraints and their implications make sense in your current context. Good luck with your error 1215!
Check the collation of the table. Using SHOW TABLE STATUS, you can check information about the tables, including the collation.
Both tables have to have the same collation.
It's happened to me.
In my case, I had deleted a table using SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0, then SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1 after. When I went to reload the table, I got error 1215. The problem was there was another table in the database that had a foreign key to the table I had deleted and was reloading. Part of the reloading process involved changing a data type for one of the fields, which made the foreign key from the other table invalid, thus triggering error 1215. I resolved the problem by dropping and then reloading the other table with the new data type for the involved field.
There is a pitfall I have experienced with "Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint" when using Laravel 4, especially with JeffreyWay's Laravel 4 Generators.
In Laravel 4, you can use JeffreyWay's Generators to generate migration files to create tables one-by-one, which means, each migration file generates one table.
You have to be aware of the fact that each migration file is generated with a timestamp in the filename, which gives the files an order. The order of generation is also the order of migration operation when you fire the Artisan CLI command php artisan migrate.
So, if a file asks for a foreign key constraint referring to a key which will be, but not yet, generated in a latter file, the Error 1215 is fired.
In such a case, you have to adjust the order of migration files generation. Generate new files in proper order, copy-in the content, and then delete the disordered old files.
For MySQL (InnoDB) ... get definitions for the columns you want to link:
SELECT * FROM information_schema.columns WHERE
TABLE_NAME IN (tb_name','referenced_table_name') AND
COLUMN_NAME IN ('col_name','referenced_col_name')\G
Compare and verify both column definitions have:
same COLUMN_TYPE(length), same COLATION
It could be necessary to disable/enable the foreign_key mechanism, but be aware if in a production context:
set foreign_key_checks=0;
ALTER TABLE tb_name ADD FOREIGN KEY(col_name) REFERENCES ref_table(ref_column) ON DELETE ...
set foreign_key_checks=1;
I got the same error while trying to add a foreign key. In my case, the problem was caused by the foreign key table's primary key which was marked as unsigned.
Check for table compatibility (engine) with SHOW TABLE STATUS WHERE Name = 'tableName'.
For example, if one table is MyISAM and the other one is InnoDB, you may have this issue.
You can change it thanks to this command:
ALTER TABLE myTable ENGINE = InnoDB;
From documentation.
In my case I had to disable FOREIGN KEY checks as the source tables did not exist.
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
I just wanted to add this case as well for VARCHAR foreign key relation. I spent the last week trying to figure this out in MySQL Workbench 8.0 and was finally able to fix the error.
Short Answer:
The character set and collation of the schema, the table, the column, the referencing table, the referencing column and any other tables that reference to the parent table have to match.
Long Answer:
I had an ENUM datatype in my table. I changed this to VARCHAR and I can get the values from a reference table so that I don't have to alter the parent table to add additional options. This foreign-key relationship seemed straightforward but I got 1215 error. arvind's answer and the following link suggested the use of
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
On using this command I got the following verbose description for the error with no additional helpful information
Cannot find an index in the referenced table where the
referenced columns appear as the first columns, or column types
in the table and the referenced table do not match for constraint.
Note that the internal storage type of ENUM and SET changed in
tables created with >= InnoDB-4.1.12, and such columns in old tables
cannot be referenced by such columns in new tables.
Please refer to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/innodb-foreign-key-constraints.html for correct foreign key definition.
After which I used SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; as suggested by Arvind Bharadwaj and the link here:
This gave the following error message:
Error Code: 1822. Failed to add the foreign key constraint. Missing
index for constraint
At this point, I 'reverse engineer'-ed the schema and I was able to make the foreign-key relationship in the EER diagram. On 'forward engineer'-ing, I got the following error:
Error 1452: Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint
fails
When I 'forward engineer'-ed the EER diagram to a new schema, the SQL script ran without issues. On comparing the generated SQL from the attempts to forward engineer, I found that the difference was the character set and collation. The parent table, child table and the two columns had utf8mb4 character set and utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci collation, however, another column in the parent table was referenced using CHARACTER SET = utf8 , COLLATE = utf8_bin ; to a different child table.
For the entire schema, I changed the character set and collation for all the tables and all the columns to the following:
CHARACTER SET = utf8mb4 COLLATE = utf8mb4_general_ci;
This finally solved my problem with 1215 error.
Side Note:
The collation utf8mb4_general_ci works in MySQL Workbench 5.0 or later. Collation utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci works just for MySQL Workbench 8.0 or higher. I believe one of the reasons I had issues with character set and collation is due to MySQL Workbench upgrade to 8.0 in between. Here is a link that talks more about this collation.
I had the same problem.
I solved it doing this:
I created the following line in the
primary key: (id int(11) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT)
I found out this solution after trying to import a table in my schema builder.
I had the same issue, and my solution is:
Before:
CREATE TABLE EMPRES
( NoFilm smallint NOT NULL
PRIMARY KEY (NoFilm)
FOREIGN KEY (NoFilm) REFERENCES cassettes
);
Solution:
CREATE TABLE EMPRES
(NoFilm smallint NOT NULL REFERENCES cassettes,
PRIMARY KEY (NoFilm)
);
This also happens when the type of the columns is not the same.
E.g., if the column you are referring to is an UNSIGNED INT and the column being referred to is INT then you get this error.
I can not find this error
CREATE TABLE RATING (
Riv_Id INT(5),
Mov_Id INT(10) DEFAULT 0,
Stars INT(5),
Rating_date DATE,
PRIMARY KEY (Riv_Id, Mov_Id),
FOREIGN KEY (Riv_Id) REFERENCES REVIEWER(Reviewer_ID)
ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE CASCADE,
FOREIGN KEY (Mov_Id) REFERENCES MOVIE(Movie_ID)
ON DELETE SET DEFAULT ON UPDATE CASCADE
)
For me it was the column types. BigINT != INT.
But then it still didn't work.
So I checked the engines. Make sure Table1 = InnoDB and Table = InnoDB
Another reason: if you use ON DELETE SET NULL all columns that are used in the foreign key must allow null values. Someone else found this out in this question.
From my understanding it wouldn't be a problem regarding data integrity, but it seems that MySQL just doesn't support this feature (in 5.7).
So I tried all the fixes above and no luck. I may be missing the error in my tables -just could not find the cause and I kept getting error 1215. So I used this fix.
In my local environment in phpMyAdmin, I exported data from the table in question. I selected format CSV. While still in phpMyAdmin with the table selected, I selected "More->Options". Here I scrolled down to "Copy table to (database.table). Select "Structure only". Rename the table something, maybe just add the word "copy" next to the current table name. Click "Go" This will create a new table. Export the new table and import it to the new or other server. I am also using phpMyAdmin here also. Once imported change the name of the table back to its original name. Select the new table, select import. For format select CSV. Uncheck "enable foreign key checks". Select "Go". So far all is working good.
I posted my fix on my blog.
When trying to make a foreign key when using Laravel migration, like this example:
User table
public function up()
{
Schema::create('flights', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('name');
$table->TinyInteger('color_id')->unsigned();
$table->foreign('color_id')->references('id')->on('colors');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
Colors table
public function up()
{
Schema::create('flights', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('color');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
Sometimes properties didn't work:
[PDOException]
SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 1215 Cannot add foreign key constraint
This error happened because the foreign key (type) in [user table] is different from the primary key (type) in the [colors table].
To solve this problem, you should change the primary key in the [colors table]:
$table->tinyIncrements('id');
When you use the primary key, $table->Increments('id');, you should use Integer as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->tinyIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedTinyInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedTinyInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->smallIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedSmallInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedSmallInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->mediumIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedMediumInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedMediumInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When this error occurs because the referenced table uses the MyISAM engine, this answer provides a quick way to convert your database so all Django model tables use InnoDB: Converting an existing MyISAM database to InnoDB with Django
It's a Django management command called convert_to_innodb.
Wooo, I just got it! It was a mix of a lot of already-posted answers (InnoDB, unsigned, etc.).
One thing I didn't see here though is: if your foreign key is pointing to a primary key, ensure the source column has a value that makes sense. For example, if the primary key is a mediumint(8), make sure the source column also contains a mediumint(8). That was part of the problem for me.
I experienced this error for a completely different reason. I used MySQL Workbench 6.3 for creating my data model (awesome tool). I noticed that when the column order defined in the foreign key constraint definition does not fit the table column sequence, this error is also generated.
It took me about four hours of trying everything else but checking that.
Now all is working well and I can get back to coding. :-)
This is a subtle version of what has already been said, but in my instance, I had 2 databases (foo and bar). I created foo first and I didn't realize it referenced a foreign key in bar.baz (which wasn't created yet). When I tried to create bar.baz (without any foreign keys), I kept getting this error. After looking around for a while I found the foreign key in foo.
So, long story short, If you get this error, you may have a pre-existing foreign key to the table being created.
As well as all of the previous advice for making sure that fields are identically defined, and table types also have the same collation, make sure that you don't make the rookie mistake of trying to link fields where data in the child field is not already in the parent field. If you have data that is in the child field that you have not already entered in to the parent field then that will cause this error. It's a shame that the error message is not a bit more helpful.
If you are unsure, then back up the table that has the foreign key, delete all the data and then try to create the foreign key. If successful then you know what to do!
Be aware of the use of backticks too. I had in a script the following statement
ALTER TABLE service ADD FOREIGN KEY (create_by) REFERENCES `system_user(id)`;
but the backticks at the end were false. It should have been:
ALTER TABLE service ADD FOREIGN KEY (create_by) REFERENCES `system_user`(`id`);
MySQL unfortunately does not give any details on this error...
Another source of this error is when you have two or more of the same table names which have the same foreign key names.
This sometimes happens to people who use modelling and design software, like MySQL Workbench, and later generate the script from the design.
For me, the 1215 error occurred when I was importing a dumpfile created by mysqldump, which creates the tables alphabetically, which in my case, caused foreign keys to reference tables created later in the file. (Props to this blog post for pointing it out: MySQL Error Code 1215: “Cannot add foreign key constraint”)
Since mysqldump orders tables alphabetically and I did not want to change the names of tables, I followed the instructions in the answer by JeremyWeir on this page, which states to put set FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0; at the top of the dump file and put SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1; at the bottom of the dump file.
That solution worked for me.
You may also check the Engine of both tables is set to InnoDB.

SQL Cannot add foreign key restraint [duplicate]

I am trying to forward engineer my new schema onto my database server, but I can't figure out why I am getting this error.
I've tried to search for the answer here, but everything I've found has said to either set the database engine to InnoDB or to make sure the keys I'm trying to use as a foreign key are primary keys in their own tables. I have done both of these things, if I'm not mistaken. What else can I do?
Executing SQL script in server
ERROR: Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Table `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients_has_Staff`
-- -----------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients_has_Staff` (
`Clients_Case_Number` INT NOT NULL ,
`Staff_Emp_ID` INT NOT NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Clients_Case_Number`, `Staff_Emp_ID`) ,
INDEX `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Staff1_idx` (`Staff_Emp_ID` ASC) ,
INDEX `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Clients_idx` (`Clients_Case_Number` ASC) ,
CONSTRAINT `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Clients`
FOREIGN KEY (`Clients_Case_Number` )
REFERENCES `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients` (`Case_Number` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION,
CONSTRAINT `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Staff1`
FOREIGN KEY (`Staff_Emp_ID` )
REFERENCES `Alternative_Pathways`.`Staff` (`Emp_ID` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
ENGINE = InnoDB
SQL script execution finished: statements: 7 succeeded, 1 failed
Here is the SQL for the parent tables.
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients` (
`Case_Number` INT NOT NULL ,
`First_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Middle_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Last_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Address` CHAR(50) NULL ,
`Phone_Number` INT(10) NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Case_Number`) )
ENGINE = InnoDB
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Staff` (
`Emp_ID` INT NOT NULL ,
`First_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Middle_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Last_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Emp_ID`) )
ENGINE = InnoDB
I'm guessing that Clients.Case_Number and/or Staff.Emp_ID are not exactly the same data type as Clients_has_Staff.Clients_Case_Number and Clients_has_Staff.Staff_Emp_ID.
Perhaps the columns in the parent tables are INT UNSIGNED?
They need to be exactly the same data type in both tables.
Reasons you may get a foreign key constraint error:
You are not using InnoDB as the engine on all tables.
You are trying to reference a nonexistent key on the target table. Make sure it is a key on the other table (it can be a primary or unique key, or just a key)
The types of the columns are not the same (an exception is the column on the referencing table can be nullable even if it is not nullable in the referenced table).
If the primary key or foreign key is a varchar, make sure the collation is the same for both.
One of the reasons may also be that the column you are using for ON DELETE SET NULL is not defined to be null. So make sure that the column is set default null.
Check these.
For others, the same error may not always be due to a column type mismatch. You can find out more information about a MySQL foreign key error by issuing the command
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
You may find an error near the top of the printed message. Something like
Cannot find an index in the referenced table where the
referenced columns appear as the first columns, or column types
in the table and the referenced table do not match for constraint.
Error 1215 is an annoying one. Explosion Pill's answer covers the basics. You want to make sure to start from there. However, there are more, much more subtle cases to look out for:
For example, when you try to link up PRIMARY KEYs of different tables, make sure to provide proper ON UPDATE and ON DELETE options. E.g.:
...
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
FOREIGN KEY (`id`) REFERENCES `t` (`other_id`) ON DELETE SET NULL
....
won't fly, because PRIMARY KEYs (such as id) can't be NULL.
I am sure, there are even more, similarly subtle issues when adding these sort of constraints, which is why when coming across constraint errors, always make sure that the constraints and their implications make sense in your current context. Good luck with your error 1215!
Check the collation of the table. Using SHOW TABLE STATUS, you can check information about the tables, including the collation.
Both tables have to have the same collation.
It's happened to me.
In my case, I had deleted a table using SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0, then SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1 after. When I went to reload the table, I got error 1215. The problem was there was another table in the database that had a foreign key to the table I had deleted and was reloading. Part of the reloading process involved changing a data type for one of the fields, which made the foreign key from the other table invalid, thus triggering error 1215. I resolved the problem by dropping and then reloading the other table with the new data type for the involved field.
There is a pitfall I have experienced with "Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint" when using Laravel 4, especially with JeffreyWay's Laravel 4 Generators.
In Laravel 4, you can use JeffreyWay's Generators to generate migration files to create tables one-by-one, which means, each migration file generates one table.
You have to be aware of the fact that each migration file is generated with a timestamp in the filename, which gives the files an order. The order of generation is also the order of migration operation when you fire the Artisan CLI command php artisan migrate.
So, if a file asks for a foreign key constraint referring to a key which will be, but not yet, generated in a latter file, the Error 1215 is fired.
In such a case, you have to adjust the order of migration files generation. Generate new files in proper order, copy-in the content, and then delete the disordered old files.
For MySQL (InnoDB) ... get definitions for the columns you want to link:
SELECT * FROM information_schema.columns WHERE
TABLE_NAME IN (tb_name','referenced_table_name') AND
COLUMN_NAME IN ('col_name','referenced_col_name')\G
Compare and verify both column definitions have:
same COLUMN_TYPE(length), same COLATION
It could be necessary to disable/enable the foreign_key mechanism, but be aware if in a production context:
set foreign_key_checks=0;
ALTER TABLE tb_name ADD FOREIGN KEY(col_name) REFERENCES ref_table(ref_column) ON DELETE ...
set foreign_key_checks=1;
I got the same error while trying to add a foreign key. In my case, the problem was caused by the foreign key table's primary key which was marked as unsigned.
Check for table compatibility (engine) with SHOW TABLE STATUS WHERE Name = 'tableName'.
For example, if one table is MyISAM and the other one is InnoDB, you may have this issue.
You can change it thanks to this command:
ALTER TABLE myTable ENGINE = InnoDB;
From documentation.
In my case I had to disable FOREIGN KEY checks as the source tables did not exist.
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
I just wanted to add this case as well for VARCHAR foreign key relation. I spent the last week trying to figure this out in MySQL Workbench 8.0 and was finally able to fix the error.
Short Answer:
The character set and collation of the schema, the table, the column, the referencing table, the referencing column and any other tables that reference to the parent table have to match.
Long Answer:
I had an ENUM datatype in my table. I changed this to VARCHAR and I can get the values from a reference table so that I don't have to alter the parent table to add additional options. This foreign-key relationship seemed straightforward but I got 1215 error. arvind's answer and the following link suggested the use of
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
On using this command I got the following verbose description for the error with no additional helpful information
Cannot find an index in the referenced table where the
referenced columns appear as the first columns, or column types
in the table and the referenced table do not match for constraint.
Note that the internal storage type of ENUM and SET changed in
tables created with >= InnoDB-4.1.12, and such columns in old tables
cannot be referenced by such columns in new tables.
Please refer to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/innodb-foreign-key-constraints.html for correct foreign key definition.
After which I used SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; as suggested by Arvind Bharadwaj and the link here:
This gave the following error message:
Error Code: 1822. Failed to add the foreign key constraint. Missing
index for constraint
At this point, I 'reverse engineer'-ed the schema and I was able to make the foreign-key relationship in the EER diagram. On 'forward engineer'-ing, I got the following error:
Error 1452: Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint
fails
When I 'forward engineer'-ed the EER diagram to a new schema, the SQL script ran without issues. On comparing the generated SQL from the attempts to forward engineer, I found that the difference was the character set and collation. The parent table, child table and the two columns had utf8mb4 character set and utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci collation, however, another column in the parent table was referenced using CHARACTER SET = utf8 , COLLATE = utf8_bin ; to a different child table.
For the entire schema, I changed the character set and collation for all the tables and all the columns to the following:
CHARACTER SET = utf8mb4 COLLATE = utf8mb4_general_ci;
This finally solved my problem with 1215 error.
Side Note:
The collation utf8mb4_general_ci works in MySQL Workbench 5.0 or later. Collation utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci works just for MySQL Workbench 8.0 or higher. I believe one of the reasons I had issues with character set and collation is due to MySQL Workbench upgrade to 8.0 in between. Here is a link that talks more about this collation.
I had the same problem.
I solved it doing this:
I created the following line in the
primary key: (id int(11) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT)
I found out this solution after trying to import a table in my schema builder.
I had the same issue, and my solution is:
Before:
CREATE TABLE EMPRES
( NoFilm smallint NOT NULL
PRIMARY KEY (NoFilm)
FOREIGN KEY (NoFilm) REFERENCES cassettes
);
Solution:
CREATE TABLE EMPRES
(NoFilm smallint NOT NULL REFERENCES cassettes,
PRIMARY KEY (NoFilm)
);
This also happens when the type of the columns is not the same.
E.g., if the column you are referring to is an UNSIGNED INT and the column being referred to is INT then you get this error.
I can not find this error
CREATE TABLE RATING (
Riv_Id INT(5),
Mov_Id INT(10) DEFAULT 0,
Stars INT(5),
Rating_date DATE,
PRIMARY KEY (Riv_Id, Mov_Id),
FOREIGN KEY (Riv_Id) REFERENCES REVIEWER(Reviewer_ID)
ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE CASCADE,
FOREIGN KEY (Mov_Id) REFERENCES MOVIE(Movie_ID)
ON DELETE SET DEFAULT ON UPDATE CASCADE
)
For me it was the column types. BigINT != INT.
But then it still didn't work.
So I checked the engines. Make sure Table1 = InnoDB and Table = InnoDB
Another reason: if you use ON DELETE SET NULL all columns that are used in the foreign key must allow null values. Someone else found this out in this question.
From my understanding it wouldn't be a problem regarding data integrity, but it seems that MySQL just doesn't support this feature (in 5.7).
So I tried all the fixes above and no luck. I may be missing the error in my tables -just could not find the cause and I kept getting error 1215. So I used this fix.
In my local environment in phpMyAdmin, I exported data from the table in question. I selected format CSV. While still in phpMyAdmin with the table selected, I selected "More->Options". Here I scrolled down to "Copy table to (database.table). Select "Structure only". Rename the table something, maybe just add the word "copy" next to the current table name. Click "Go" This will create a new table. Export the new table and import it to the new or other server. I am also using phpMyAdmin here also. Once imported change the name of the table back to its original name. Select the new table, select import. For format select CSV. Uncheck "enable foreign key checks". Select "Go". So far all is working good.
I posted my fix on my blog.
When trying to make a foreign key when using Laravel migration, like this example:
User table
public function up()
{
Schema::create('flights', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('name');
$table->TinyInteger('color_id')->unsigned();
$table->foreign('color_id')->references('id')->on('colors');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
Colors table
public function up()
{
Schema::create('flights', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('color');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
Sometimes properties didn't work:
[PDOException]
SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 1215 Cannot add foreign key constraint
This error happened because the foreign key (type) in [user table] is different from the primary key (type) in the [colors table].
To solve this problem, you should change the primary key in the [colors table]:
$table->tinyIncrements('id');
When you use the primary key, $table->Increments('id');, you should use Integer as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->tinyIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedTinyInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedTinyInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->smallIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedSmallInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedSmallInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->mediumIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedMediumInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedMediumInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When this error occurs because the referenced table uses the MyISAM engine, this answer provides a quick way to convert your database so all Django model tables use InnoDB: Converting an existing MyISAM database to InnoDB with Django
It's a Django management command called convert_to_innodb.
Wooo, I just got it! It was a mix of a lot of already-posted answers (InnoDB, unsigned, etc.).
One thing I didn't see here though is: if your foreign key is pointing to a primary key, ensure the source column has a value that makes sense. For example, if the primary key is a mediumint(8), make sure the source column also contains a mediumint(8). That was part of the problem for me.
I experienced this error for a completely different reason. I used MySQL Workbench 6.3 for creating my data model (awesome tool). I noticed that when the column order defined in the foreign key constraint definition does not fit the table column sequence, this error is also generated.
It took me about four hours of trying everything else but checking that.
Now all is working well and I can get back to coding. :-)
This is a subtle version of what has already been said, but in my instance, I had 2 databases (foo and bar). I created foo first and I didn't realize it referenced a foreign key in bar.baz (which wasn't created yet). When I tried to create bar.baz (without any foreign keys), I kept getting this error. After looking around for a while I found the foreign key in foo.
So, long story short, If you get this error, you may have a pre-existing foreign key to the table being created.
As well as all of the previous advice for making sure that fields are identically defined, and table types also have the same collation, make sure that you don't make the rookie mistake of trying to link fields where data in the child field is not already in the parent field. If you have data that is in the child field that you have not already entered in to the parent field then that will cause this error. It's a shame that the error message is not a bit more helpful.
If you are unsure, then back up the table that has the foreign key, delete all the data and then try to create the foreign key. If successful then you know what to do!
Be aware of the use of backticks too. I had in a script the following statement
ALTER TABLE service ADD FOREIGN KEY (create_by) REFERENCES `system_user(id)`;
but the backticks at the end were false. It should have been:
ALTER TABLE service ADD FOREIGN KEY (create_by) REFERENCES `system_user`(`id`);
MySQL unfortunately does not give any details on this error...
Another source of this error is when you have two or more of the same table names which have the same foreign key names.
This sometimes happens to people who use modelling and design software, like MySQL Workbench, and later generate the script from the design.
For me, the 1215 error occurred when I was importing a dumpfile created by mysqldump, which creates the tables alphabetically, which in my case, caused foreign keys to reference tables created later in the file. (Props to this blog post for pointing it out: MySQL Error Code 1215: “Cannot add foreign key constraint”)
Since mysqldump orders tables alphabetically and I did not want to change the names of tables, I followed the instructions in the answer by JeremyWeir on this page, which states to put set FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0; at the top of the dump file and put SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1; at the bottom of the dump file.
That solution worked for me.
You may also check the Engine of both tables is set to InnoDB.

Foreign Key error in MySql [duplicate]

I am trying to forward engineer my new schema onto my database server, but I can't figure out why I am getting this error.
I've tried to search for the answer here, but everything I've found has said to either set the database engine to InnoDB or to make sure the keys I'm trying to use as a foreign key are primary keys in their own tables. I have done both of these things, if I'm not mistaken. What else can I do?
Executing SQL script in server
ERROR: Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Table `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients_has_Staff`
-- -----------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients_has_Staff` (
`Clients_Case_Number` INT NOT NULL ,
`Staff_Emp_ID` INT NOT NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Clients_Case_Number`, `Staff_Emp_ID`) ,
INDEX `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Staff1_idx` (`Staff_Emp_ID` ASC) ,
INDEX `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Clients_idx` (`Clients_Case_Number` ASC) ,
CONSTRAINT `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Clients`
FOREIGN KEY (`Clients_Case_Number` )
REFERENCES `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients` (`Case_Number` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION,
CONSTRAINT `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Staff1`
FOREIGN KEY (`Staff_Emp_ID` )
REFERENCES `Alternative_Pathways`.`Staff` (`Emp_ID` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
ENGINE = InnoDB
SQL script execution finished: statements: 7 succeeded, 1 failed
Here is the SQL for the parent tables.
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients` (
`Case_Number` INT NOT NULL ,
`First_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Middle_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Last_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Address` CHAR(50) NULL ,
`Phone_Number` INT(10) NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Case_Number`) )
ENGINE = InnoDB
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Staff` (
`Emp_ID` INT NOT NULL ,
`First_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Middle_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Last_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Emp_ID`) )
ENGINE = InnoDB
I'm guessing that Clients.Case_Number and/or Staff.Emp_ID are not exactly the same data type as Clients_has_Staff.Clients_Case_Number and Clients_has_Staff.Staff_Emp_ID.
Perhaps the columns in the parent tables are INT UNSIGNED?
They need to be exactly the same data type in both tables.
Reasons you may get a foreign key constraint error:
You are not using InnoDB as the engine on all tables.
You are trying to reference a nonexistent key on the target table. Make sure it is a key on the other table (it can be a primary or unique key, or just a key)
The types of the columns are not the same (an exception is the column on the referencing table can be nullable even if it is not nullable in the referenced table).
If the primary key or foreign key is a varchar, make sure the collation is the same for both.
One of the reasons may also be that the column you are using for ON DELETE SET NULL is not defined to be null. So make sure that the column is set default null.
Check these.
For others, the same error may not always be due to a column type mismatch. You can find out more information about a MySQL foreign key error by issuing the command
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
You may find an error near the top of the printed message. Something like
Cannot find an index in the referenced table where the
referenced columns appear as the first columns, or column types
in the table and the referenced table do not match for constraint.
Error 1215 is an annoying one. Explosion Pill's answer covers the basics. You want to make sure to start from there. However, there are more, much more subtle cases to look out for:
For example, when you try to link up PRIMARY KEYs of different tables, make sure to provide proper ON UPDATE and ON DELETE options. E.g.:
...
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
FOREIGN KEY (`id`) REFERENCES `t` (`other_id`) ON DELETE SET NULL
....
won't fly, because PRIMARY KEYs (such as id) can't be NULL.
I am sure, there are even more, similarly subtle issues when adding these sort of constraints, which is why when coming across constraint errors, always make sure that the constraints and their implications make sense in your current context. Good luck with your error 1215!
Check the collation of the table. Using SHOW TABLE STATUS, you can check information about the tables, including the collation.
Both tables have to have the same collation.
It's happened to me.
In my case, I had deleted a table using SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0, then SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1 after. When I went to reload the table, I got error 1215. The problem was there was another table in the database that had a foreign key to the table I had deleted and was reloading. Part of the reloading process involved changing a data type for one of the fields, which made the foreign key from the other table invalid, thus triggering error 1215. I resolved the problem by dropping and then reloading the other table with the new data type for the involved field.
There is a pitfall I have experienced with "Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint" when using Laravel 4, especially with JeffreyWay's Laravel 4 Generators.
In Laravel 4, you can use JeffreyWay's Generators to generate migration files to create tables one-by-one, which means, each migration file generates one table.
You have to be aware of the fact that each migration file is generated with a timestamp in the filename, which gives the files an order. The order of generation is also the order of migration operation when you fire the Artisan CLI command php artisan migrate.
So, if a file asks for a foreign key constraint referring to a key which will be, but not yet, generated in a latter file, the Error 1215 is fired.
In such a case, you have to adjust the order of migration files generation. Generate new files in proper order, copy-in the content, and then delete the disordered old files.
For MySQL (InnoDB) ... get definitions for the columns you want to link:
SELECT * FROM information_schema.columns WHERE
TABLE_NAME IN (tb_name','referenced_table_name') AND
COLUMN_NAME IN ('col_name','referenced_col_name')\G
Compare and verify both column definitions have:
same COLUMN_TYPE(length), same COLATION
It could be necessary to disable/enable the foreign_key mechanism, but be aware if in a production context:
set foreign_key_checks=0;
ALTER TABLE tb_name ADD FOREIGN KEY(col_name) REFERENCES ref_table(ref_column) ON DELETE ...
set foreign_key_checks=1;
I got the same error while trying to add a foreign key. In my case, the problem was caused by the foreign key table's primary key which was marked as unsigned.
Check for table compatibility (engine) with SHOW TABLE STATUS WHERE Name = 'tableName'.
For example, if one table is MyISAM and the other one is InnoDB, you may have this issue.
You can change it thanks to this command:
ALTER TABLE myTable ENGINE = InnoDB;
From documentation.
In my case I had to disable FOREIGN KEY checks as the source tables did not exist.
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
I just wanted to add this case as well for VARCHAR foreign key relation. I spent the last week trying to figure this out in MySQL Workbench 8.0 and was finally able to fix the error.
Short Answer:
The character set and collation of the schema, the table, the column, the referencing table, the referencing column and any other tables that reference to the parent table have to match.
Long Answer:
I had an ENUM datatype in my table. I changed this to VARCHAR and I can get the values from a reference table so that I don't have to alter the parent table to add additional options. This foreign-key relationship seemed straightforward but I got 1215 error. arvind's answer and the following link suggested the use of
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
On using this command I got the following verbose description for the error with no additional helpful information
Cannot find an index in the referenced table where the
referenced columns appear as the first columns, or column types
in the table and the referenced table do not match for constraint.
Note that the internal storage type of ENUM and SET changed in
tables created with >= InnoDB-4.1.12, and such columns in old tables
cannot be referenced by such columns in new tables.
Please refer to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/innodb-foreign-key-constraints.html for correct foreign key definition.
After which I used SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; as suggested by Arvind Bharadwaj and the link here:
This gave the following error message:
Error Code: 1822. Failed to add the foreign key constraint. Missing
index for constraint
At this point, I 'reverse engineer'-ed the schema and I was able to make the foreign-key relationship in the EER diagram. On 'forward engineer'-ing, I got the following error:
Error 1452: Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint
fails
When I 'forward engineer'-ed the EER diagram to a new schema, the SQL script ran without issues. On comparing the generated SQL from the attempts to forward engineer, I found that the difference was the character set and collation. The parent table, child table and the two columns had utf8mb4 character set and utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci collation, however, another column in the parent table was referenced using CHARACTER SET = utf8 , COLLATE = utf8_bin ; to a different child table.
For the entire schema, I changed the character set and collation for all the tables and all the columns to the following:
CHARACTER SET = utf8mb4 COLLATE = utf8mb4_general_ci;
This finally solved my problem with 1215 error.
Side Note:
The collation utf8mb4_general_ci works in MySQL Workbench 5.0 or later. Collation utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci works just for MySQL Workbench 8.0 or higher. I believe one of the reasons I had issues with character set and collation is due to MySQL Workbench upgrade to 8.0 in between. Here is a link that talks more about this collation.
I had the same problem.
I solved it doing this:
I created the following line in the
primary key: (id int(11) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT)
I found out this solution after trying to import a table in my schema builder.
I had the same issue, and my solution is:
Before:
CREATE TABLE EMPRES
( NoFilm smallint NOT NULL
PRIMARY KEY (NoFilm)
FOREIGN KEY (NoFilm) REFERENCES cassettes
);
Solution:
CREATE TABLE EMPRES
(NoFilm smallint NOT NULL REFERENCES cassettes,
PRIMARY KEY (NoFilm)
);
This also happens when the type of the columns is not the same.
E.g., if the column you are referring to is an UNSIGNED INT and the column being referred to is INT then you get this error.
I can not find this error
CREATE TABLE RATING (
Riv_Id INT(5),
Mov_Id INT(10) DEFAULT 0,
Stars INT(5),
Rating_date DATE,
PRIMARY KEY (Riv_Id, Mov_Id),
FOREIGN KEY (Riv_Id) REFERENCES REVIEWER(Reviewer_ID)
ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE CASCADE,
FOREIGN KEY (Mov_Id) REFERENCES MOVIE(Movie_ID)
ON DELETE SET DEFAULT ON UPDATE CASCADE
)
For me it was the column types. BigINT != INT.
But then it still didn't work.
So I checked the engines. Make sure Table1 = InnoDB and Table = InnoDB
Another reason: if you use ON DELETE SET NULL all columns that are used in the foreign key must allow null values. Someone else found this out in this question.
From my understanding it wouldn't be a problem regarding data integrity, but it seems that MySQL just doesn't support this feature (in 5.7).
So I tried all the fixes above and no luck. I may be missing the error in my tables -just could not find the cause and I kept getting error 1215. So I used this fix.
In my local environment in phpMyAdmin, I exported data from the table in question. I selected format CSV. While still in phpMyAdmin with the table selected, I selected "More->Options". Here I scrolled down to "Copy table to (database.table). Select "Structure only". Rename the table something, maybe just add the word "copy" next to the current table name. Click "Go" This will create a new table. Export the new table and import it to the new or other server. I am also using phpMyAdmin here also. Once imported change the name of the table back to its original name. Select the new table, select import. For format select CSV. Uncheck "enable foreign key checks". Select "Go". So far all is working good.
I posted my fix on my blog.
When trying to make a foreign key when using Laravel migration, like this example:
User table
public function up()
{
Schema::create('flights', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('name');
$table->TinyInteger('color_id')->unsigned();
$table->foreign('color_id')->references('id')->on('colors');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
Colors table
public function up()
{
Schema::create('flights', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('color');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
Sometimes properties didn't work:
[PDOException]
SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 1215 Cannot add foreign key constraint
This error happened because the foreign key (type) in [user table] is different from the primary key (type) in the [colors table].
To solve this problem, you should change the primary key in the [colors table]:
$table->tinyIncrements('id');
When you use the primary key, $table->Increments('id');, you should use Integer as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->tinyIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedTinyInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedTinyInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->smallIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedSmallInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedSmallInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->mediumIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedMediumInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedMediumInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When this error occurs because the referenced table uses the MyISAM engine, this answer provides a quick way to convert your database so all Django model tables use InnoDB: Converting an existing MyISAM database to InnoDB with Django
It's a Django management command called convert_to_innodb.
Wooo, I just got it! It was a mix of a lot of already-posted answers (InnoDB, unsigned, etc.).
One thing I didn't see here though is: if your foreign key is pointing to a primary key, ensure the source column has a value that makes sense. For example, if the primary key is a mediumint(8), make sure the source column also contains a mediumint(8). That was part of the problem for me.
I experienced this error for a completely different reason. I used MySQL Workbench 6.3 for creating my data model (awesome tool). I noticed that when the column order defined in the foreign key constraint definition does not fit the table column sequence, this error is also generated.
It took me about four hours of trying everything else but checking that.
Now all is working well and I can get back to coding. :-)
This is a subtle version of what has already been said, but in my instance, I had 2 databases (foo and bar). I created foo first and I didn't realize it referenced a foreign key in bar.baz (which wasn't created yet). When I tried to create bar.baz (without any foreign keys), I kept getting this error. After looking around for a while I found the foreign key in foo.
So, long story short, If you get this error, you may have a pre-existing foreign key to the table being created.
As well as all of the previous advice for making sure that fields are identically defined, and table types also have the same collation, make sure that you don't make the rookie mistake of trying to link fields where data in the child field is not already in the parent field. If you have data that is in the child field that you have not already entered in to the parent field then that will cause this error. It's a shame that the error message is not a bit more helpful.
If you are unsure, then back up the table that has the foreign key, delete all the data and then try to create the foreign key. If successful then you know what to do!
Be aware of the use of backticks too. I had in a script the following statement
ALTER TABLE service ADD FOREIGN KEY (create_by) REFERENCES `system_user(id)`;
but the backticks at the end were false. It should have been:
ALTER TABLE service ADD FOREIGN KEY (create_by) REFERENCES `system_user`(`id`);
MySQL unfortunately does not give any details on this error...
Another source of this error is when you have two or more of the same table names which have the same foreign key names.
This sometimes happens to people who use modelling and design software, like MySQL Workbench, and later generate the script from the design.
For me, the 1215 error occurred when I was importing a dumpfile created by mysqldump, which creates the tables alphabetically, which in my case, caused foreign keys to reference tables created later in the file. (Props to this blog post for pointing it out: MySQL Error Code 1215: “Cannot add foreign key constraint”)
Since mysqldump orders tables alphabetically and I did not want to change the names of tables, I followed the instructions in the answer by JeremyWeir on this page, which states to put set FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0; at the top of the dump file and put SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1; at the bottom of the dump file.
That solution worked for me.
You may also check the Engine of both tables is set to InnoDB.

MySQL Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint

I am trying to forward engineer my new schema onto my database server, but I can't figure out why I am getting this error.
I've tried to search for the answer here, but everything I've found has said to either set the database engine to InnoDB or to make sure the keys I'm trying to use as a foreign key are primary keys in their own tables. I have done both of these things, if I'm not mistaken. What else can I do?
Executing SQL script in server
ERROR: Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Table `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients_has_Staff`
-- -----------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients_has_Staff` (
`Clients_Case_Number` INT NOT NULL ,
`Staff_Emp_ID` INT NOT NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Clients_Case_Number`, `Staff_Emp_ID`) ,
INDEX `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Staff1_idx` (`Staff_Emp_ID` ASC) ,
INDEX `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Clients_idx` (`Clients_Case_Number` ASC) ,
CONSTRAINT `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Clients`
FOREIGN KEY (`Clients_Case_Number` )
REFERENCES `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients` (`Case_Number` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION,
CONSTRAINT `fk_Clients_has_Staff_Staff1`
FOREIGN KEY (`Staff_Emp_ID` )
REFERENCES `Alternative_Pathways`.`Staff` (`Emp_ID` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
ENGINE = InnoDB
SQL script execution finished: statements: 7 succeeded, 1 failed
Here is the SQL for the parent tables.
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Clients` (
`Case_Number` INT NOT NULL ,
`First_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Middle_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Last_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Address` CHAR(50) NULL ,
`Phone_Number` INT(10) NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Case_Number`) )
ENGINE = InnoDB
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `Alternative_Pathways`.`Staff` (
`Emp_ID` INT NOT NULL ,
`First_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Middle_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
`Last_Name` CHAR(10) NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`Emp_ID`) )
ENGINE = InnoDB
I'm guessing that Clients.Case_Number and/or Staff.Emp_ID are not exactly the same data type as Clients_has_Staff.Clients_Case_Number and Clients_has_Staff.Staff_Emp_ID.
Perhaps the columns in the parent tables are INT UNSIGNED?
They need to be exactly the same data type in both tables.
Reasons you may get a foreign key constraint error:
You are not using InnoDB as the engine on all tables.
You are trying to reference a nonexistent key on the target table. Make sure it is a key on the other table (it can be a primary or unique key, or just a key)
The types of the columns are not the same (an exception is the column on the referencing table can be nullable even if it is not nullable in the referenced table).
If the primary key or foreign key is a varchar, make sure the collation is the same for both.
One of the reasons may also be that the column you are using for ON DELETE SET NULL is not defined to be null. So make sure that the column is set default null.
Check these.
For others, the same error may not always be due to a column type mismatch. You can find out more information about a MySQL foreign key error by issuing the command
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
You may find an error near the top of the printed message. Something like
Cannot find an index in the referenced table where the
referenced columns appear as the first columns, or column types
in the table and the referenced table do not match for constraint.
Error 1215 is an annoying one. Explosion Pill's answer covers the basics. You want to make sure to start from there. However, there are more, much more subtle cases to look out for:
For example, when you try to link up PRIMARY KEYs of different tables, make sure to provide proper ON UPDATE and ON DELETE options. E.g.:
...
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
FOREIGN KEY (`id`) REFERENCES `t` (`other_id`) ON DELETE SET NULL
....
won't fly, because PRIMARY KEYs (such as id) can't be NULL.
I am sure, there are even more, similarly subtle issues when adding these sort of constraints, which is why when coming across constraint errors, always make sure that the constraints and their implications make sense in your current context. Good luck with your error 1215!
Check the collation of the table. Using SHOW TABLE STATUS, you can check information about the tables, including the collation.
Both tables have to have the same collation.
It's happened to me.
In my case, I had deleted a table using SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0, then SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1 after. When I went to reload the table, I got error 1215. The problem was there was another table in the database that had a foreign key to the table I had deleted and was reloading. Part of the reloading process involved changing a data type for one of the fields, which made the foreign key from the other table invalid, thus triggering error 1215. I resolved the problem by dropping and then reloading the other table with the new data type for the involved field.
There is a pitfall I have experienced with "Error 1215: Cannot add foreign key constraint" when using Laravel 4, especially with JeffreyWay's Laravel 4 Generators.
In Laravel 4, you can use JeffreyWay's Generators to generate migration files to create tables one-by-one, which means, each migration file generates one table.
You have to be aware of the fact that each migration file is generated with a timestamp in the filename, which gives the files an order. The order of generation is also the order of migration operation when you fire the Artisan CLI command php artisan migrate.
So, if a file asks for a foreign key constraint referring to a key which will be, but not yet, generated in a latter file, the Error 1215 is fired.
In such a case, you have to adjust the order of migration files generation. Generate new files in proper order, copy-in the content, and then delete the disordered old files.
For MySQL (InnoDB) ... get definitions for the columns you want to link:
SELECT * FROM information_schema.columns WHERE
TABLE_NAME IN (tb_name','referenced_table_name') AND
COLUMN_NAME IN ('col_name','referenced_col_name')\G
Compare and verify both column definitions have:
same COLUMN_TYPE(length), same COLATION
It could be necessary to disable/enable the foreign_key mechanism, but be aware if in a production context:
set foreign_key_checks=0;
ALTER TABLE tb_name ADD FOREIGN KEY(col_name) REFERENCES ref_table(ref_column) ON DELETE ...
set foreign_key_checks=1;
I got the same error while trying to add a foreign key. In my case, the problem was caused by the foreign key table's primary key which was marked as unsigned.
Check for table compatibility (engine) with SHOW TABLE STATUS WHERE Name = 'tableName'.
For example, if one table is MyISAM and the other one is InnoDB, you may have this issue.
You can change it thanks to this command:
ALTER TABLE myTable ENGINE = InnoDB;
From documentation.
In my case I had to disable FOREIGN KEY checks as the source tables did not exist.
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
I just wanted to add this case as well for VARCHAR foreign key relation. I spent the last week trying to figure this out in MySQL Workbench 8.0 and was finally able to fix the error.
Short Answer:
The character set and collation of the schema, the table, the column, the referencing table, the referencing column and any other tables that reference to the parent table have to match.
Long Answer:
I had an ENUM datatype in my table. I changed this to VARCHAR and I can get the values from a reference table so that I don't have to alter the parent table to add additional options. This foreign-key relationship seemed straightforward but I got 1215 error. arvind's answer and the following link suggested the use of
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
On using this command I got the following verbose description for the error with no additional helpful information
Cannot find an index in the referenced table where the
referenced columns appear as the first columns, or column types
in the table and the referenced table do not match for constraint.
Note that the internal storage type of ENUM and SET changed in
tables created with >= InnoDB-4.1.12, and such columns in old tables
cannot be referenced by such columns in new tables.
Please refer to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/innodb-foreign-key-constraints.html for correct foreign key definition.
After which I used SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; as suggested by Arvind Bharadwaj and the link here:
This gave the following error message:
Error Code: 1822. Failed to add the foreign key constraint. Missing
index for constraint
At this point, I 'reverse engineer'-ed the schema and I was able to make the foreign-key relationship in the EER diagram. On 'forward engineer'-ing, I got the following error:
Error 1452: Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint
fails
When I 'forward engineer'-ed the EER diagram to a new schema, the SQL script ran without issues. On comparing the generated SQL from the attempts to forward engineer, I found that the difference was the character set and collation. The parent table, child table and the two columns had utf8mb4 character set and utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci collation, however, another column in the parent table was referenced using CHARACTER SET = utf8 , COLLATE = utf8_bin ; to a different child table.
For the entire schema, I changed the character set and collation for all the tables and all the columns to the following:
CHARACTER SET = utf8mb4 COLLATE = utf8mb4_general_ci;
This finally solved my problem with 1215 error.
Side Note:
The collation utf8mb4_general_ci works in MySQL Workbench 5.0 or later. Collation utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci works just for MySQL Workbench 8.0 or higher. I believe one of the reasons I had issues with character set and collation is due to MySQL Workbench upgrade to 8.0 in between. Here is a link that talks more about this collation.
I had the same problem.
I solved it doing this:
I created the following line in the
primary key: (id int(11) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT)
I found out this solution after trying to import a table in my schema builder.
I had the same issue, and my solution is:
Before:
CREATE TABLE EMPRES
( NoFilm smallint NOT NULL
PRIMARY KEY (NoFilm)
FOREIGN KEY (NoFilm) REFERENCES cassettes
);
Solution:
CREATE TABLE EMPRES
(NoFilm smallint NOT NULL REFERENCES cassettes,
PRIMARY KEY (NoFilm)
);
This also happens when the type of the columns is not the same.
E.g., if the column you are referring to is an UNSIGNED INT and the column being referred to is INT then you get this error.
I can not find this error
CREATE TABLE RATING (
Riv_Id INT(5),
Mov_Id INT(10) DEFAULT 0,
Stars INT(5),
Rating_date DATE,
PRIMARY KEY (Riv_Id, Mov_Id),
FOREIGN KEY (Riv_Id) REFERENCES REVIEWER(Reviewer_ID)
ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE CASCADE,
FOREIGN KEY (Mov_Id) REFERENCES MOVIE(Movie_ID)
ON DELETE SET DEFAULT ON UPDATE CASCADE
)
For me it was the column types. BigINT != INT.
But then it still didn't work.
So I checked the engines. Make sure Table1 = InnoDB and Table = InnoDB
Another reason: if you use ON DELETE SET NULL all columns that are used in the foreign key must allow null values. Someone else found this out in this question.
From my understanding it wouldn't be a problem regarding data integrity, but it seems that MySQL just doesn't support this feature (in 5.7).
So I tried all the fixes above and no luck. I may be missing the error in my tables -just could not find the cause and I kept getting error 1215. So I used this fix.
In my local environment in phpMyAdmin, I exported data from the table in question. I selected format CSV. While still in phpMyAdmin with the table selected, I selected "More->Options". Here I scrolled down to "Copy table to (database.table). Select "Structure only". Rename the table something, maybe just add the word "copy" next to the current table name. Click "Go" This will create a new table. Export the new table and import it to the new or other server. I am also using phpMyAdmin here also. Once imported change the name of the table back to its original name. Select the new table, select import. For format select CSV. Uncheck "enable foreign key checks". Select "Go". So far all is working good.
I posted my fix on my blog.
When trying to make a foreign key when using Laravel migration, like this example:
User table
public function up()
{
Schema::create('flights', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('name');
$table->TinyInteger('color_id')->unsigned();
$table->foreign('color_id')->references('id')->on('colors');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
Colors table
public function up()
{
Schema::create('flights', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('color');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
Sometimes properties didn't work:
[PDOException]
SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 1215 Cannot add foreign key constraint
This error happened because the foreign key (type) in [user table] is different from the primary key (type) in the [colors table].
To solve this problem, you should change the primary key in the [colors table]:
$table->tinyIncrements('id');
When you use the primary key, $table->Increments('id');, you should use Integer as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->tinyIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedTinyInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedTinyInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->smallIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedSmallInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedSmallInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When you use primary key $table->mediumIncrements('id'); you should use unsignedMediumInteger as a foreign key:
$table->unsignedMediumInteger('fk_id');
$table->foreign('fk_id')->references('id')->on('table_name');
When this error occurs because the referenced table uses the MyISAM engine, this answer provides a quick way to convert your database so all Django model tables use InnoDB: Converting an existing MyISAM database to InnoDB with Django
It's a Django management command called convert_to_innodb.
Wooo, I just got it! It was a mix of a lot of already-posted answers (InnoDB, unsigned, etc.).
One thing I didn't see here though is: if your foreign key is pointing to a primary key, ensure the source column has a value that makes sense. For example, if the primary key is a mediumint(8), make sure the source column also contains a mediumint(8). That was part of the problem for me.
I experienced this error for a completely different reason. I used MySQL Workbench 6.3 for creating my data model (awesome tool). I noticed that when the column order defined in the foreign key constraint definition does not fit the table column sequence, this error is also generated.
It took me about four hours of trying everything else but checking that.
Now all is working well and I can get back to coding. :-)
This is a subtle version of what has already been said, but in my instance, I had 2 databases (foo and bar). I created foo first and I didn't realize it referenced a foreign key in bar.baz (which wasn't created yet). When I tried to create bar.baz (without any foreign keys), I kept getting this error. After looking around for a while I found the foreign key in foo.
So, long story short, If you get this error, you may have a pre-existing foreign key to the table being created.
As well as all of the previous advice for making sure that fields are identically defined, and table types also have the same collation, make sure that you don't make the rookie mistake of trying to link fields where data in the child field is not already in the parent field. If you have data that is in the child field that you have not already entered in to the parent field then that will cause this error. It's a shame that the error message is not a bit more helpful.
If you are unsure, then back up the table that has the foreign key, delete all the data and then try to create the foreign key. If successful then you know what to do!
Be aware of the use of backticks too. I had in a script the following statement
ALTER TABLE service ADD FOREIGN KEY (create_by) REFERENCES `system_user(id)`;
but the backticks at the end were false. It should have been:
ALTER TABLE service ADD FOREIGN KEY (create_by) REFERENCES `system_user`(`id`);
MySQL unfortunately does not give any details on this error...
Another source of this error is when you have two or more of the same table names which have the same foreign key names.
This sometimes happens to people who use modelling and design software, like MySQL Workbench, and later generate the script from the design.
For me, the 1215 error occurred when I was importing a dumpfile created by mysqldump, which creates the tables alphabetically, which in my case, caused foreign keys to reference tables created later in the file. (Props to this blog post for pointing it out: MySQL Error Code 1215: “Cannot add foreign key constraint”)
Since mysqldump orders tables alphabetically and I did not want to change the names of tables, I followed the instructions in the answer by JeremyWeir on this page, which states to put set FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0; at the top of the dump file and put SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1; at the bottom of the dump file.
That solution worked for me.
You may also check the Engine of both tables is set to InnoDB.