I need to create the database schema and include it in my software requirements specification for my school project, however, when I try to create a relationship between 2 tables, I get Error: Missing index on column(s).
I think #HazarathChillara has this right; you need to create primary, unique, or index keys.
You said every table has an primary key, but did you make each foreign and referenced key an index as well? It sounds like you neglected to properly set up your table structure; I only get the error when I don't have a primary key or index on the particular columns I'm working with.
"MySQL requires indexes on foreign keys and referenced keys so that foreign key checks can be fast and not require a table scan"
You can just put an INDEX on the foreign key (often my referenced key is a primary key anyway, so I don't need any additional key on that column).
This error appears only when you neglect table structure. Make sure that you Indexed a foreign key as well. you can see i marked how could i select my foreign key as index.In this Image I am indexing selected, 'sr' my foreign key
As Usman Khan said you have to go to the structure tab of the particular table and clicked on more options and select 'INDEX' for the foreign key.
the below image will help you how to do it
I think i have another simple solve,
thing is, phpMyAdmin wont allow the addition of foreign keys to an already available data entry, so here is the my simple solve,
1. ensure to backup your database
2. confirm that your data was backed-up securely, recommended Offline backups
4. delete all data entries in all tables that will be part of the new relationship.
5. now Create the relevant relationships.
6. be sure you have created all required and preferred relations to avoid the need to
export data again
I'm new to programming so please forgive my ignorance. I'm trying to get MySQL tables to update each other. For example: When I insert data into a Primary Key column in one table, it does not appear in it's Foreign Key column in another table.
Does anyone have any advice on this issue?
Thank you!
Additional Information: I used phpMyAdmin to create my tables and then added SQL code to create the Foreign Keys. Example of code is below.
ALTER TABLE CourseSchedule
ADD FOREIGN KEY (CourseId)
REFERENCES Course(CourseId)
I believe what we have here is a slight misunderstanding of the documentation.
For storage engines supporting foreign keys, MySQL rejects any INSERT
or UPDATE operation that attempts to create a foreign key value in a
child table if there is no a matching candidate key value in the
parent table.
When an UPDATE or DELETE operation affects a key value in the parent
table that has matching rows in the child table, the result depends on
the referential action specified using ON UPDATE and ON DELETE
subclauses of the FOREIGN KEY clause. MySQL supports five options
regarding the action to be taken, listed here
What your foreign key actually does is to make sure that you cannot insert values into your CourseSchedule table that do not correspond to an entry in the Courses table.
To give you an example, suppose you were to try to enter schedule a python course for every wednesday at 9:00 but you dont' actually have an entry for python in your Courses table. Then mysql will refuse to create that entry. Mysql cannot do the reverse. It doesn't know details about your python course. So it cannot automatically create a entry in the Courses table for you. Similarly, if oyu created an entr in the courses table. Mysql cannot automatically create a CourseSchedule for you because it doesn't know at what time it should be scheduled.
I have just discovered my database which has been moved between a few servers in the last few months was, in one of the database dumps, converted to myisam and all the foreign key constraints nuked (not impressed). I've converted all the tables back to innodb with a php script but now I'm finding half the constraints are failing to add.
Error Code: 1452. Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint fails (`identicar2`.<result 2 when explaining filename '#sql-2a7_c0'>, CONSTRAINT `#sql-2a7_c0_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`feature_sk`) REFERENCES `tbl_feature_list` (`feature_sk`))
I'm lost now, I can't go through thousands of records manually. what is the best thing to do in order to get my database back into shape?
I can provide table structures if you want but I imagine any solution will be independant of the exact structure anyway
The simplest solution: (containing the obvious danger of losing data you may want to keep)
UPDATE table
SET fkColumn = NULL
WHERE fkColumn NOT IN (SELECT referenceColumn FROM referencedTable)
If you just want to find them:
SELECT *
FROM table
WHERE fkColumn NOT IN (SELECT referenceColumn FROM referencedTable)
I m trying to import data from one table to another table across the schema.but foreign key constraint is giving issue.
Suppose i m having schema one and schema two.
schema one has tables -->
user
behavior
userbehavior(id from user and behavior table are foreign keys in
userbehavior table)
same way i have tables structure in schema two.
schema 2 has tables-->
user1
behavior1
userbehavior1(id from user and behavior table are foreign keys in userbehavior table)
I have successfully imported records from user to user1 and behavior to behavior1 but when I m trying to import data from userbehavior to userbehavior1 i m getting following error::
cannot add or update a child row.foreign key constraint fails.
wat could be an issue?
Thanks in advance.
You have inconsistent data, which the database refuses to import, and for a good reason.
I'd create TEMPORARY tables (i.e. tables that are automatically deleted after the session ends, import the data there, use a few queries that show me the rows from userbehaviour that violate the FOREIGN KEY constraint, clear these up manually and then use SELECT INTO to copy the data to the real tables.
cause : There is at least one row in table userbehaviour which have no parent in other table
todo: first remove all foreign key constraints from both schema and Insert and then set constraint back
In case of exporting
open exported sql file and write
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; on the top of the file
and SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS==1; on the bottom of file
or
export through phpMyAdmin then check Disable foreign key checks
I tried this in mysql:
mysql> alter table region drop column country_id;
And got this:
ERROR 1025 (HY000): Error on rename of './product/#sql-14ae_81' to
'./product/region' (errno: 150)
Any ideas? Foreign key stuff?
You usually get this error if your tables use the InnoDB engine. In that case you would have to drop the foreign key, and then do the alter table and drop the column.
But the tricky part is that you can't drop the foreign key using the column name, but instead you would have to find the name used to index it. To find that, issue the following select:
SHOW CREATE TABLE region;
This should show you the name of the index, something like this:
CONSTRAINT region_ibfk_1 FOREIGN
KEY (country_id) REFERENCES
country (id) ON DELETE NO
ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION
Now simply issue an:
alter table region drop foreign key
region_ibfk_1;
And finally an:
alter table region drop column
country_id;
And you are good to go!
It is indeed a foreign key error, you can find out using perror:
shell$ perror 150
MySQL error code 150: Foreign key constraint is incorrectly formed
To find out more details about what failed, you can use SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS and look for the LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR section it contains details about what is wrong.
In your case, it is most likely cause something is referencing the country_id column.
You can get also get this error trying to drop a non-existing foreign key. So when dropping foreign keys, always make sure they actually exist.
If the foreign key does exist, and you are still getting this error try the following:
SET #OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS=##UNIQUE_CHECKS, UNIQUE_CHECKS=0;
SET #OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=##FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS, FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
SET #OLD_SQL_MODE=##SQL_MODE, SQL_MODE='TRADITIONAL';
// Drop the foreign key here!
SET SQL_MODE=#OLD_SQL_MODE;
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=#OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS;
SET UNIQUE_CHECKS=#OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS;
This always does the trick for me :)
Simply run the alter table query using 'KEY' instead of 'FOREIGN KEY' in the drop statement. I hope it will help to solve the issue, and will drop the foreign key constraint and you can change the table columns and drop the table.
ALTER TABLE slide_image_sub DROP KEY FK_slide_image_sub;
here in DROP KEY instead of DROP FOREIGN KEY,
hope it will help.
Thanks
I know, this is an old post, but it's the first hit on everyone's favorite search engine if you are looking for error 1025.
However, there is an easy "hack" for fixing this issue:
Before you execute your command(s) you first have to disable the foreign key constraints check using this command:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;
Then you are able to execute your command(s).
After you are done, don't forget to enable the foreign key constraints check again, using this command:
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
Good luck with your endeavor.
I had a similar issues once. I deleted the primary key from TABLE A but when I was trying to delete the foreign key column from table B I was shown the above same error.
You can't drop the foreign key using the column name and to bypass this in PHPMyAdmin or with MySQL, first remove the foreign key constraint before renaming or deleting the attribute.
Take a look in error file for your mysql database. According to Bug #26305 my sql do not give you the cause. This bug exists since MySQL 4.1 ;-)
If you are using a client like MySQL Workbench, right click the desired table from where a foreign key is to be deleted, then select the foreign key tab and delete the indexes.
Then you can run the query like this:
alter table table_name drop foreign_key_col_name;
There is probably another table with a foreign key referencing the primary key you are trying to change.
To find out which table caused the error you can run SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS and then look at the LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR section
Use SHOW CREATE TABLE categories to show the name of constraint.
Most probably it will be categories_ibfk_1
Use the name to drop the foreign key first and the column then:
ALTER TABLE categories DROP FOREIGN KEY categories_ibfk_1;
ALTER TABLE categories DROP COLUMN assets_id;
I got this error with MySQL 5.6 but it had nothing to do with Foreign keys. This was on a Windows 7 Professional machine acting as a server on a small LAN.
The client application was doing a batch operation that creates a table fills it with some external data then runs a query joining with permanent tables then dropping the "temporary" table. This batch does this approximately 300 times and this particular routine had been running week in week out for several years when suddenly we get the Error 1025 Unable to rename problem at a random point in the batch.
In my case the application was using 4 DDL statements a CREATE TABLE followed by 3 CREATE INDEX, there is no foreign key. However only 2 of the indexes actually get created and the actual table .frm file was renamed, at the point of failure.
My solution was to get rid of the separate CREATE INDEX statements and create them using the CREATE TABLE statement. This at the time of writing has solved the issue for me and my help someone else scratching their head when they find this thread.
I'd guess foreign key constraint problem. Is country_id used as a foreign key in another table?
I'm not DB guru but I think I solved a problem like this (where there was a fk constraint) by removing the fk, doing my alter table stuff and then redoing the fk stuff.
I'll be interested to hear what the outcome is - sometime mysql is pretty cryptic.
In my case, I was using MySQL workbench and I faced the same issue while dropping one of my columns in a table. I could not find the name of the foreign key. I followed the following steps to resolve the issue:
Rt. click on your schema and select 'schema inspector'. This gives you various tables, columns, indexes, ect.
Go to the tab named 'Indexes' and search the name of the column under the column named 'Column'. Once found check the name of the table for this record under the column name 'Table'. If it matches the name of the table you want, then note down the name of the foreign key from the column named 'Name'.
Now execute the query : ALTER table tableNamexx DROP KEY foreignKeyName;
Now you can execute the drop statement which shall execute successfully.
Doing
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
before the Operation can also do the trick.
averageRatings= FOREACH groupedRatings GENERATE group AS movieID, AVG(ratings.rating) AS avgRating, COUNT(ratings.rating) AS numRatings;
If you are using any command like above you must use group in small letters. This may solve your problem it solved mine. At least in PIG script.