ERROR 1452: Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint fails
I have created tables in MySQL Workbench as shown below :
ORDRE table:
CREATE TABLE Ordre (
OrdreID INT NOT NULL,
OrdreDato DATE DEFAULT NULL,
KundeID INT DEFAULT NULL,
CONSTRAINT Ordre_pk PRIMARY KEY (OrdreID),
CONSTRAINT Ordre_fk FOREIGN KEY (KundeID) REFERENCES Kunde (KundeID)
)
ENGINE = InnoDB;
PRODUKT table:
CREATE TABLE Produkt (
ProduktID INT NOT NULL,
ProduktBeskrivelse VARCHAR(100) DEFAULT NULL,
ProduktFarge VARCHAR(20) DEFAULT NULL,
Enhetpris INT DEFAULT NULL,
CONSTRAINT Produkt_pk PRIMARY KEY (ProduktID)
)
ENGINE = InnoDB;
and ORDRELINJE table:
CREATE TABLE Ordrelinje (
Ordre INT NOT NULL,
Produkt INT NOT NULL,
AntallBestilt INT DEFAULT NULL,
CONSTRAINT Ordrelinje_pk PRIMARY KEY (Ordre, Produkt),
CONSTRAINT Ordrelinje_fk FOREIGN KEY (Ordre) REFERENCES Ordre (OrdreID),
CONSTRAINT Ordrelinje_fk1 FOREIGN KEY (Produkt) REFERENCES Produkt (ProduktID)
)
ENGINE = InnoDB;
so when I try to insert values into ORDRELINJE
table i get:
Error Code: 1452. Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint fails (
srdjank
.Ordrelinje
, CONSTRAINTOrdrelinje_fk
FOREIGN KEY (Ordre
) REFERENCESOrdre
(OrdreID
))
I've seen the other posts on this topic, but no luck. Am I overseeing something or any idea what to do?
Taken from Using FOREIGN KEY Constraints
Foreign key relationships involve a parent table that holds the central data values, and a child table with identical values pointing back to its parent. The FOREIGN KEY clause is specified in the child table.
It will reject 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.
So your error Error Code: 1452. Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint fails
essentially means that, you are trying to add a row to your Ordrelinje
table for which no matching row (OrderID) is present in Ordre
table.
You must first insert the row to your Ordre
table.
The Problem is with FOREIGN KEY Constraint. By Default (SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1). FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS option specifies whether or not to check foreign key constraints for InnoDB tables. MySQL - SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS
We can set foreign key check as disable before running Query. Disable Foreign key.
Execute one of these lines before running your query, then you can run your query successfully. :)
1) For Session (recommended)
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
2) Globally
SET GLOBAL FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
You are getting this constraint check because Ordre
table does not have reference OrdreID
provided in insert command.
To insert value in Ordrelinje
, you first have to enter value in Ordre
table and use same OrdreID
in Orderlinje
table.
Or you can remove not null constraint and insert a NULL value in it.
This error generally occurs because we have some values in the referencing field of the child table, which do not exist in the referenced/candidate field of the parent table.
Sometimes, we may get this error when we are applying Foreign Key constraints to existing table(s), having data in them already. Some of the other answers are suggesting to delete the data completely from child table, and then apply the constraint. However, this is not an option when we already have working/production data in the child table. In most scenarios, we will need to update the data in the child table (instead of deleting them).
Now, we can utilize Left Join
to find all those rows in the child table, which does not have matching values in the parent table. Following query would be helpful to fetch those non-matching rows:
SELECT child_table.*
FROM child_table
LEFT JOIN parent_table
ON parent_table.referenced_column = child_table.referencing_column
WHERE parent_table.referenced_column IS NULL
Now, you can generally do one (or more) of the following steps to fix the data.
- Based on your "business logic", you will need to update/match these unmatching value(s), with the existing values in the parent table. You may sometimes need to set them
null
as well. - Delete these rows having unmatching values.
- Add new rows in your parent table, corresponding to the unmatching values in the child table.
Once the data is fixed, we can apply the Foreign key constraint using ALTER TABLE
syntax.