Adding FK to MySQL Table Not Working - mysql

I work with SQL Server and haven't had such an issue adding a FK to a table like I am having with MySQL. The datatypes match up, the foreign key table contains 300K rows, and is taking forever to execute and eventually times out. Am I doing something wrong? I did this in Workbench and Toad, same thing happens.
The relationship is a one to one, with the User table primary key ID being used a a FK for the District Admins table primary key ID.
I dont know how to find the MySQL version, and can't tell you the amount of memory.

Found out the issue was the table collations were different. My new tables were using latin1, but the existing were using UTF8. That is what I get for relying on Workbench to muchy.

Related

mysql error 150 with INNODB [duplicate]

I am trying to import a .sql file and its failing on creating tables.
Here's the query that fails:
CREATE TABLE `data` (
`id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`value` varchar(15) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE KEY `id` (`id`,`name`),
CONSTRAINT `data_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`id`) REFERENCES `keywords` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
I exported the .sql from the same database, I dropped all the tables and now im trying to import it, why is it failing?
MySQL: Can't create table './dbname/data.frm' (errno: 150)
From the MySQL - FOREIGN KEY Constraints Documentation:
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 correct column names and types, and it must have indexes on the referenced keys, as stated earlier. If these are not satisfied, MySQL returns Error 1005 and refers to Error 150 in the error message, which means that a foreign key constraint was not correctly formed. Similarly, if an ALTER TABLE fails due to Error 150, this means that a foreign key definition would be incorrectly formed for the altered table.
Error 150 means you have a problem with your foreign key. Possibly the key on the foreign table isn't the exact same type?
You can get the actual error message by running SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS; and then looking for LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR in the output.
Source: answer from another user in a similar question
Data types must match exactly. If you are dealing with varchar types, the tables must use the same collation.
I think all these answers while correct are misleading to the question.
The actual answer is this before you start a restore, if you're restoring a dump file with foreign keys:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
because naturally the restore will be creating some constraints before the foreign table even exists.
In some cases, you may encounter this error message if there are different engines between the relating tables. For example, a table may be using InnoDB while the other uses MyISAM. Both need to be same
Error no. 150 means a foreign key constraint failure. You are probably creating this table before the table the foreign key depends on (table keywords). Create that table first and it should work fine.
If it doesn't, remove the foreign key statement and add it after the table is created - you will get a more meaningful error message about the specific constraint failure.
There are quite a few things that can cause errno 150, so for people searching this topic, here is what I think is a close to exhaustive list (source Causes of Errno 150):
For errno 150 or errno 121, simply typing in SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS, there is a section called "LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR". Under that it will give you a very helpful error message, which typically will tell you right away what is the matter. You need SUPER privileges to run it, so if you don't have that, you'll just have to test out the following scenarios.
1) Data Types Don't Match: The types of the columns have to be the same
2) Parent Columns Not Indexed (Or Indexed in Wrong Order)
3) Column Collations Don't Match
4) Using SET NULL on a NOT NULL Column
5) Table Collations Don't Match: even if the column collations match, on some MySQL versions this can be a problem.
6) Parent Column Doesn't Actually Exist In Parent Table. Check spelling (and perhaps a space at the beginning or end of column)
7) One of the indexes on one of the columns is incomplete, or the column is too long for a complete index. Note that MySQL (unless you tweak it) has a maximum single column key length of 767 bytes (this corresponds to a varchar(255) UTF column)
In case you get an errno 121, here are a couple of causes:
1) The constraint name you chose is already taken
2) On some systems if there is a case difference in your statement and table names. This can bite you if you go from one server to another that have different case handling rules.
Sometimes MySQL is just super stupid - i can understand the reason cause of foreign-keys.. but in my case, i have just dropped the whole database, and i still get the error... why? i mean, there is no database anymore... and the sql-user i'm using has no access to any other db's on the server... i mean, the server is "empty" for the current user and i still get this error? Sorry but i guess MySQL is lying to me... but i can deal with it :) Just add these two lines of SQL around your fucky statement:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;
# some code that gives you errno: 150
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
Now the sql should be executed... If you really have a foreign-key problem, it would show up to you by the line where you will enable the checks again - this will fail then.. but my server is just quiet :)
usually, the mismatch between foreign key & primary key causes the
error:150.
The foreign key must have the same datatype as the primary key. Also, if the primary key is unsigned then the foreign key must also be unsigned.
I had same issue. It was related to table's column Collation and Character Set.
Make sure Character Set and Collation must be same for both columns on two tables. If you want to set a foreign key on that.
Example- If you put foreign key on userID column of userImage table referencing userID column of users table.Then Collation must be same that is utf8_general_ci and Character set utf8 for both columns of tables. Generally when you create a table mysql takes these two configuration from server settings.
After cruising through the answers above, and experimenting a bit, this is an effective way to solve Foreign Key errors in MySQL (1005 - error 150).
For the foreign key to be properly created, all MySQL asks for is:
All referenced keys MUST have either PRIMARY or UNIQUE index.
Referencing Column again MUST have identical data type to the Referenced column.
Satisfy these requirements and all will be well.
I experienced this error when have ported Windows application to Linux. In Windows, database table names are case-insensitive, and in Linux they are case-sensitive, probably because of file system difference. So, on Windows table Table1 is the same as table1, and in REFERENCES both table1 and Table1 works. On Linux, when application used table1 instead of Table1 when it created database structure I saw error #150; when I made correct character case in Table1 references, it started to work on Linux too. So, if nothing else helps, make you sure that in REFERENCES you use correct character case in table name when you on Linux.
Change the engines of your tables, only innoDB supports foreign keys
If the PK table is created in one CHARSET and then you create FK table in another CHARSET..then also you might get this error...I too got this error but after changing the charset to PK charset then it got executed without errors
create table users
(
------------
-------------
)DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
create table Emp
(
---------
---------
---------
FOREIGN KEY (userid) REFERENCES users(id) on update cascade on delete cascade)ENGINE=InnoDB, DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
This error can occur if two tables have a reference, for example, one table is Student and another table is Education, and we want the Education table to have a foreign key reference of Student table. In this instance the column data type for both tables should be same, otherwise it will generate an error.
In most of the cases the problem is because of the ENGINE dIfference .If the parent is created by InnoDB then the referenced tables supposed to be created by MyISAM & vice versa
In my case. I had problems with engine and charset because my Hosting server change settings and my new tables was MyISAM but my old tables are InnoDB. Just i changed.
Please make sure both your primary key column and referenced column have the same data types and attributes (unsigned, binary, unsigned zerofill etc).
A real edge case is where you have used an MySQL tool, (Sequel Pro in my case) to rename a database. Then created a database with the same name.
This kept foreign key constraints to the same database name, so the renamed database (e.g. my_db_renamed) had foreign key constraints in the newly created database (my_db)
Not sure if this is a bug in Sequel Pro, or if some use case requires this behaviour, but it cost me best part of a morning :/
The column of PARENT table to which you are referring to from child table has to be unique. If it is not, cause an error no 150.
I had the same error. In my case the reason for the error was that I had a ON DELETE SET NULL statement in the constraint while the field on which I put the constraint in its definition had a NOT NULL statement. Allowing NULL in the field solved the problem.
I faced this kind of issue while creating DB from the textfile.
mysql -uroot -padmin < E:\important\sampdb\createdb.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\create_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\create_absence.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\insert_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\insert_absence.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\load_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\load_absence.sql
I just wrote the above lines in Create.batand run the bat file.
My mistake is in the sequence order of execution in my sql files. I tried to create table with primary key and also foreign key. While its running it will search for the reference table but tables are not there.
So it will return those kind of error.
If you creating tables with foreign key then check the reference
tables were present or not. And also check the name of the reference
tables and fields.
I had a similar problem but mine was because i was adding a new field to an existing table that had data , and the new field was referencing another field from the parent table and also had the Defination of NOT NULL and without any DEFAULT VALUES. - I found out the reason things were not working was because
My new field needed to autofill the blank fields with a value from the parent table on each record, before the constraint could be applied. Every time the constraint is applied it needs to leave the Integrity of the table data intact. Implementing the Constraint (Foreign Key) yet there were some database records that did not have the values from the parent table would mean the data is corrupt so MySQL would NEVER ENFORCE YOUR CONSTRAINT
It is important to remember that under normal circumstances if you planned your database well ahead of time, and implemented constraints before data insertion this particular scenario would be avoided
The easier Approach to avoid this gotcha is to
Save your database tables data
Truncate the table data (and table artifacts i.e indexes etc)
Apply the Constraints
Import Your Data
I Hope this helps someone
Create the table without foreign key, then set the foreign key separately.
Perhaps this will help? The definition of the primary key column should be exactly the same as the foreign key column.
Make sure that the all tables can support foreign key - InnoDB engine
I had a similar problem when dumping a Django mysql database with a single table. I was able to fix the problem by dumping the database to a text file, moving the table in question to the end of the file using emacs and importing the modified sql dump file into the new instance.
HTH Uwe
I've corrected the problem by making the variable accept null
ALTER TABLE `ajout_norme`
CHANGE `type_norme_code` `type_norme_code` VARCHAR( 2 ) CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_general_ci NULL
I got the same problem when executing a series of MySQL commands. Mine occurs during creating a table when referencing a foreign key to other table which was not created yet. It's the sequence of table existence before referencing.
The solution: Create the parent tables first before creating a child table which has a foreign key.

Phpmyadmin version 4: Relation view sometimes does not show foreign key constraints

I have a database that I built a while back. Every table in the database is InnoDb. Several tables had foreign key constraints, and I set them up for On Delete = Cascade. When I was using an earlier version of phpmyadmin, working with these was simple: I'd just go to the Structure tab of a table, click the Relation View link, and as long as I had the correct indexes set up on the correct columns, I could set the foreign keys as I saw fit.
Since upgrading to version 4, it's become a nightmare. For some tables, I go to the relation view and everything is just fine. But for others--even when they already have foreign key constraints set--I can't see any options for working with them.
To make matters worse, I've even tried dropping the indexes and re-adding them, only to be given the following error: Cannot drop index [index_name]: needed in a foreign key constraint. So unless I'm mistaken, the constraint is there, but phpmyadmin is refusing to show it to me.
Is there something I have to do to make them show up again? This is extremely frustrating to say the least: something that worked just fine before now does not thanks to an upgrade.
OK, after playing around with the tables a bit, I figured out what's going on. The only time the foreign key constraint options don't show up are when the table names contain capital letters. Very frustrating to say the least.
I just filed a bug report for phpmyadmin: https://github.com/phpmyadmin/phpmyadmin/issues/11461
It should be an easy fix.
happened to me because i used '&" in the database name.
In my case it is that I used two columns (A and B) both as foreigns keys to other tables then I also used a composite unique for ([A, B]), phpMyAdmin does not show the existed foreign index of column A but does show that for column B.
My system version are as follows:
Server version: 5.7.30 - MySQL Community Server (GPL)

1005, "Can't create table 'test.addr_count' (errno: 150)" [duplicate]

I am trying to import a .sql file and its failing on creating tables.
Here's the query that fails:
CREATE TABLE `data` (
`id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`value` varchar(15) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE KEY `id` (`id`,`name`),
CONSTRAINT `data_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`id`) REFERENCES `keywords` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
I exported the .sql from the same database, I dropped all the tables and now im trying to import it, why is it failing?
MySQL: Can't create table './dbname/data.frm' (errno: 150)
From the MySQL - FOREIGN KEY Constraints Documentation:
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 correct column names and types, and it must have indexes on the referenced keys, as stated earlier. If these are not satisfied, MySQL returns Error 1005 and refers to Error 150 in the error message, which means that a foreign key constraint was not correctly formed. Similarly, if an ALTER TABLE fails due to Error 150, this means that a foreign key definition would be incorrectly formed for the altered table.
Error 150 means you have a problem with your foreign key. Possibly the key on the foreign table isn't the exact same type?
You can get the actual error message by running SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS; and then looking for LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR in the output.
Source: answer from another user in a similar question
Data types must match exactly. If you are dealing with varchar types, the tables must use the same collation.
I think all these answers while correct are misleading to the question.
The actual answer is this before you start a restore, if you're restoring a dump file with foreign keys:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
because naturally the restore will be creating some constraints before the foreign table even exists.
In some cases, you may encounter this error message if there are different engines between the relating tables. For example, a table may be using InnoDB while the other uses MyISAM. Both need to be same
Error no. 150 means a foreign key constraint failure. You are probably creating this table before the table the foreign key depends on (table keywords). Create that table first and it should work fine.
If it doesn't, remove the foreign key statement and add it after the table is created - you will get a more meaningful error message about the specific constraint failure.
There are quite a few things that can cause errno 150, so for people searching this topic, here is what I think is a close to exhaustive list (source Causes of Errno 150):
For errno 150 or errno 121, simply typing in SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS, there is a section called "LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR". Under that it will give you a very helpful error message, which typically will tell you right away what is the matter. You need SUPER privileges to run it, so if you don't have that, you'll just have to test out the following scenarios.
1) Data Types Don't Match: The types of the columns have to be the same
2) Parent Columns Not Indexed (Or Indexed in Wrong Order)
3) Column Collations Don't Match
4) Using SET NULL on a NOT NULL Column
5) Table Collations Don't Match: even if the column collations match, on some MySQL versions this can be a problem.
6) Parent Column Doesn't Actually Exist In Parent Table. Check spelling (and perhaps a space at the beginning or end of column)
7) One of the indexes on one of the columns is incomplete, or the column is too long for a complete index. Note that MySQL (unless you tweak it) has a maximum single column key length of 767 bytes (this corresponds to a varchar(255) UTF column)
In case you get an errno 121, here are a couple of causes:
1) The constraint name you chose is already taken
2) On some systems if there is a case difference in your statement and table names. This can bite you if you go from one server to another that have different case handling rules.
Sometimes MySQL is just super stupid - i can understand the reason cause of foreign-keys.. but in my case, i have just dropped the whole database, and i still get the error... why? i mean, there is no database anymore... and the sql-user i'm using has no access to any other db's on the server... i mean, the server is "empty" for the current user and i still get this error? Sorry but i guess MySQL is lying to me... but i can deal with it :) Just add these two lines of SQL around your fucky statement:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;
# some code that gives you errno: 150
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
Now the sql should be executed... If you really have a foreign-key problem, it would show up to you by the line where you will enable the checks again - this will fail then.. but my server is just quiet :)
usually, the mismatch between foreign key & primary key causes the
error:150.
The foreign key must have the same datatype as the primary key. Also, if the primary key is unsigned then the foreign key must also be unsigned.
I had same issue. It was related to table's column Collation and Character Set.
Make sure Character Set and Collation must be same for both columns on two tables. If you want to set a foreign key on that.
Example- If you put foreign key on userID column of userImage table referencing userID column of users table.Then Collation must be same that is utf8_general_ci and Character set utf8 for both columns of tables. Generally when you create a table mysql takes these two configuration from server settings.
After cruising through the answers above, and experimenting a bit, this is an effective way to solve Foreign Key errors in MySQL (1005 - error 150).
For the foreign key to be properly created, all MySQL asks for is:
All referenced keys MUST have either PRIMARY or UNIQUE index.
Referencing Column again MUST have identical data type to the Referenced column.
Satisfy these requirements and all will be well.
I experienced this error when have ported Windows application to Linux. In Windows, database table names are case-insensitive, and in Linux they are case-sensitive, probably because of file system difference. So, on Windows table Table1 is the same as table1, and in REFERENCES both table1 and Table1 works. On Linux, when application used table1 instead of Table1 when it created database structure I saw error #150; when I made correct character case in Table1 references, it started to work on Linux too. So, if nothing else helps, make you sure that in REFERENCES you use correct character case in table name when you on Linux.
Change the engines of your tables, only innoDB supports foreign keys
If the PK table is created in one CHARSET and then you create FK table in another CHARSET..then also you might get this error...I too got this error but after changing the charset to PK charset then it got executed without errors
create table users
(
------------
-------------
)DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
create table Emp
(
---------
---------
---------
FOREIGN KEY (userid) REFERENCES users(id) on update cascade on delete cascade)ENGINE=InnoDB, DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
This error can occur if two tables have a reference, for example, one table is Student and another table is Education, and we want the Education table to have a foreign key reference of Student table. In this instance the column data type for both tables should be same, otherwise it will generate an error.
In most of the cases the problem is because of the ENGINE dIfference .If the parent is created by InnoDB then the referenced tables supposed to be created by MyISAM & vice versa
In my case. I had problems with engine and charset because my Hosting server change settings and my new tables was MyISAM but my old tables are InnoDB. Just i changed.
Please make sure both your primary key column and referenced column have the same data types and attributes (unsigned, binary, unsigned zerofill etc).
A real edge case is where you have used an MySQL tool, (Sequel Pro in my case) to rename a database. Then created a database with the same name.
This kept foreign key constraints to the same database name, so the renamed database (e.g. my_db_renamed) had foreign key constraints in the newly created database (my_db)
Not sure if this is a bug in Sequel Pro, or if some use case requires this behaviour, but it cost me best part of a morning :/
The column of PARENT table to which you are referring to from child table has to be unique. If it is not, cause an error no 150.
I had the same error. In my case the reason for the error was that I had a ON DELETE SET NULL statement in the constraint while the field on which I put the constraint in its definition had a NOT NULL statement. Allowing NULL in the field solved the problem.
I faced this kind of issue while creating DB from the textfile.
mysql -uroot -padmin < E:\important\sampdb\createdb.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\create_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\create_absence.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\insert_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\insert_absence.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\load_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\load_absence.sql
I just wrote the above lines in Create.batand run the bat file.
My mistake is in the sequence order of execution in my sql files. I tried to create table with primary key and also foreign key. While its running it will search for the reference table but tables are not there.
So it will return those kind of error.
If you creating tables with foreign key then check the reference
tables were present or not. And also check the name of the reference
tables and fields.
I had a similar problem but mine was because i was adding a new field to an existing table that had data , and the new field was referencing another field from the parent table and also had the Defination of NOT NULL and without any DEFAULT VALUES. - I found out the reason things were not working was because
My new field needed to autofill the blank fields with a value from the parent table on each record, before the constraint could be applied. Every time the constraint is applied it needs to leave the Integrity of the table data intact. Implementing the Constraint (Foreign Key) yet there were some database records that did not have the values from the parent table would mean the data is corrupt so MySQL would NEVER ENFORCE YOUR CONSTRAINT
It is important to remember that under normal circumstances if you planned your database well ahead of time, and implemented constraints before data insertion this particular scenario would be avoided
The easier Approach to avoid this gotcha is to
Save your database tables data
Truncate the table data (and table artifacts i.e indexes etc)
Apply the Constraints
Import Your Data
I Hope this helps someone
Create the table without foreign key, then set the foreign key separately.
Perhaps this will help? The definition of the primary key column should be exactly the same as the foreign key column.
Make sure that the all tables can support foreign key - InnoDB engine
I had a similar problem when dumping a Django mysql database with a single table. I was able to fix the problem by dumping the database to a text file, moving the table in question to the end of the file using emacs and importing the modified sql dump file into the new instance.
HTH Uwe
I've corrected the problem by making the variable accept null
ALTER TABLE `ajout_norme`
CHANGE `type_norme_code` `type_norme_code` VARCHAR( 2 ) CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_general_ci NULL
I got the same problem when executing a series of MySQL commands. Mine occurs during creating a table when referencing a foreign key to other table which was not created yet. It's the sequence of table existence before referencing.
The solution: Create the parent tables first before creating a child table which has a foreign key.

How do I remove redundant Primary Keys from a MYSqL Table?

Ihave been developing an app for some time. This involves entering and deleteing alot of useless data in the tables. Now that I want to go to production I want to get rid of all the data but also restore all the 'IDs' ( primary keys ) to 0 so that the live system can start fresh with sensible ID's like 1,2,3 etc.
Using MySQL and PHP / Codeigniter
Many Many Thanks for yoru help !
I would normally use TRUNCATE - this both removes the data and resets the AUTO_INCREMENT.
Note that MySQL will perform a row by row deletion if there is a foreign key relationship, which is quite convenient (compared to SQL Server).
If your pk is autoincrement, you can do
ALTER TABLE tbl AUTO_INCREMENT =1
Make sure table is empty before executing the query.

MySQL: Can't create table (errno: 150)

I am trying to import a .sql file and its failing on creating tables.
Here's the query that fails:
CREATE TABLE `data` (
`id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`value` varchar(15) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE KEY `id` (`id`,`name`),
CONSTRAINT `data_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`id`) REFERENCES `keywords` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
I exported the .sql from the same database, I dropped all the tables and now im trying to import it, why is it failing?
MySQL: Can't create table './dbname/data.frm' (errno: 150)
From the MySQL - FOREIGN KEY Constraints Documentation:
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 correct column names and types, and it must have indexes on the referenced keys, as stated earlier. If these are not satisfied, MySQL returns Error 1005 and refers to Error 150 in the error message, which means that a foreign key constraint was not correctly formed. Similarly, if an ALTER TABLE fails due to Error 150, this means that a foreign key definition would be incorrectly formed for the altered table.
Error 150 means you have a problem with your foreign key. Possibly the key on the foreign table isn't the exact same type?
You can get the actual error message by running SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS; and then looking for LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR in the output.
Source: answer from another user in a similar question
Data types must match exactly. If you are dealing with varchar types, the tables must use the same collation.
I think all these answers while correct are misleading to the question.
The actual answer is this before you start a restore, if you're restoring a dump file with foreign keys:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
because naturally the restore will be creating some constraints before the foreign table even exists.
In some cases, you may encounter this error message if there are different engines between the relating tables. For example, a table may be using InnoDB while the other uses MyISAM. Both need to be same
Error no. 150 means a foreign key constraint failure. You are probably creating this table before the table the foreign key depends on (table keywords). Create that table first and it should work fine.
If it doesn't, remove the foreign key statement and add it after the table is created - you will get a more meaningful error message about the specific constraint failure.
There are quite a few things that can cause errno 150, so for people searching this topic, here is what I think is a close to exhaustive list (source Causes of Errno 150):
For errno 150 or errno 121, simply typing in SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS, there is a section called "LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR". Under that it will give you a very helpful error message, which typically will tell you right away what is the matter. You need SUPER privileges to run it, so if you don't have that, you'll just have to test out the following scenarios.
1) Data Types Don't Match: The types of the columns have to be the same
2) Parent Columns Not Indexed (Or Indexed in Wrong Order)
3) Column Collations Don't Match
4) Using SET NULL on a NOT NULL Column
5) Table Collations Don't Match: even if the column collations match, on some MySQL versions this can be a problem.
6) Parent Column Doesn't Actually Exist In Parent Table. Check spelling (and perhaps a space at the beginning or end of column)
7) One of the indexes on one of the columns is incomplete, or the column is too long for a complete index. Note that MySQL (unless you tweak it) has a maximum single column key length of 767 bytes (this corresponds to a varchar(255) UTF column)
In case you get an errno 121, here are a couple of causes:
1) The constraint name you chose is already taken
2) On some systems if there is a case difference in your statement and table names. This can bite you if you go from one server to another that have different case handling rules.
Sometimes MySQL is just super stupid - i can understand the reason cause of foreign-keys.. but in my case, i have just dropped the whole database, and i still get the error... why? i mean, there is no database anymore... and the sql-user i'm using has no access to any other db's on the server... i mean, the server is "empty" for the current user and i still get this error? Sorry but i guess MySQL is lying to me... but i can deal with it :) Just add these two lines of SQL around your fucky statement:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;
# some code that gives you errno: 150
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
Now the sql should be executed... If you really have a foreign-key problem, it would show up to you by the line where you will enable the checks again - this will fail then.. but my server is just quiet :)
usually, the mismatch between foreign key & primary key causes the
error:150.
The foreign key must have the same datatype as the primary key. Also, if the primary key is unsigned then the foreign key must also be unsigned.
I had same issue. It was related to table's column Collation and Character Set.
Make sure Character Set and Collation must be same for both columns on two tables. If you want to set a foreign key on that.
Example- If you put foreign key on userID column of userImage table referencing userID column of users table.Then Collation must be same that is utf8_general_ci and Character set utf8 for both columns of tables. Generally when you create a table mysql takes these two configuration from server settings.
After cruising through the answers above, and experimenting a bit, this is an effective way to solve Foreign Key errors in MySQL (1005 - error 150).
For the foreign key to be properly created, all MySQL asks for is:
All referenced keys MUST have either PRIMARY or UNIQUE index.
Referencing Column again MUST have identical data type to the Referenced column.
Satisfy these requirements and all will be well.
I experienced this error when have ported Windows application to Linux. In Windows, database table names are case-insensitive, and in Linux they are case-sensitive, probably because of file system difference. So, on Windows table Table1 is the same as table1, and in REFERENCES both table1 and Table1 works. On Linux, when application used table1 instead of Table1 when it created database structure I saw error #150; when I made correct character case in Table1 references, it started to work on Linux too. So, if nothing else helps, make you sure that in REFERENCES you use correct character case in table name when you on Linux.
Change the engines of your tables, only innoDB supports foreign keys
If the PK table is created in one CHARSET and then you create FK table in another CHARSET..then also you might get this error...I too got this error but after changing the charset to PK charset then it got executed without errors
create table users
(
------------
-------------
)DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
create table Emp
(
---------
---------
---------
FOREIGN KEY (userid) REFERENCES users(id) on update cascade on delete cascade)ENGINE=InnoDB, DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
This error can occur if two tables have a reference, for example, one table is Student and another table is Education, and we want the Education table to have a foreign key reference of Student table. In this instance the column data type for both tables should be same, otherwise it will generate an error.
In most of the cases the problem is because of the ENGINE dIfference .If the parent is created by InnoDB then the referenced tables supposed to be created by MyISAM & vice versa
In my case. I had problems with engine and charset because my Hosting server change settings and my new tables was MyISAM but my old tables are InnoDB. Just i changed.
Please make sure both your primary key column and referenced column have the same data types and attributes (unsigned, binary, unsigned zerofill etc).
A real edge case is where you have used an MySQL tool, (Sequel Pro in my case) to rename a database. Then created a database with the same name.
This kept foreign key constraints to the same database name, so the renamed database (e.g. my_db_renamed) had foreign key constraints in the newly created database (my_db)
Not sure if this is a bug in Sequel Pro, or if some use case requires this behaviour, but it cost me best part of a morning :/
The column of PARENT table to which you are referring to from child table has to be unique. If it is not, cause an error no 150.
I had the same error. In my case the reason for the error was that I had a ON DELETE SET NULL statement in the constraint while the field on which I put the constraint in its definition had a NOT NULL statement. Allowing NULL in the field solved the problem.
I faced this kind of issue while creating DB from the textfile.
mysql -uroot -padmin < E:\important\sampdb\createdb.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\create_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\create_absence.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\insert_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\insert_absence.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\load_student.sql
mysql -uroot -padmin sampdb < E:\important\sampdb\load_absence.sql
I just wrote the above lines in Create.batand run the bat file.
My mistake is in the sequence order of execution in my sql files. I tried to create table with primary key and also foreign key. While its running it will search for the reference table but tables are not there.
So it will return those kind of error.
If you creating tables with foreign key then check the reference
tables were present or not. And also check the name of the reference
tables and fields.
I had a similar problem but mine was because i was adding a new field to an existing table that had data , and the new field was referencing another field from the parent table and also had the Defination of NOT NULL and without any DEFAULT VALUES. - I found out the reason things were not working was because
My new field needed to autofill the blank fields with a value from the parent table on each record, before the constraint could be applied. Every time the constraint is applied it needs to leave the Integrity of the table data intact. Implementing the Constraint (Foreign Key) yet there were some database records that did not have the values from the parent table would mean the data is corrupt so MySQL would NEVER ENFORCE YOUR CONSTRAINT
It is important to remember that under normal circumstances if you planned your database well ahead of time, and implemented constraints before data insertion this particular scenario would be avoided
The easier Approach to avoid this gotcha is to
Save your database tables data
Truncate the table data (and table artifacts i.e indexes etc)
Apply the Constraints
Import Your Data
I Hope this helps someone
Create the table without foreign key, then set the foreign key separately.
Perhaps this will help? The definition of the primary key column should be exactly the same as the foreign key column.
Make sure that the all tables can support foreign key - InnoDB engine
I had a similar problem when dumping a Django mysql database with a single table. I was able to fix the problem by dumping the database to a text file, moving the table in question to the end of the file using emacs and importing the modified sql dump file into the new instance.
HTH Uwe
I've corrected the problem by making the variable accept null
ALTER TABLE `ajout_norme`
CHANGE `type_norme_code` `type_norme_code` VARCHAR( 2 ) CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_general_ci NULL
I got the same problem when executing a series of MySQL commands. Mine occurs during creating a table when referencing a foreign key to other table which was not created yet. It's the sequence of table existence before referencing.
The solution: Create the parent tables first before creating a child table which has a foreign key.