Foreign Key to non-primary key

SqlSql Server

Sql Problem Overview


I have a table which holds data, and one of those rows needs to exist in another table. So, I want a foreign key to maintain referential integrity.

CREATE TABLE table1
(
   ID INT NOT NULL IDENTITY(1,1) PRIMARY KEY,
   AnotherID INT NOT NULL,
   SomeData VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL
)

CREATE TABLE table2
(
   ID INT NOT NULL IDENTITY(1,1) PRIMARY KEY,
   AnotherID INT NOT NULL,
   MoreData VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,

   CONSTRAINT fk_table2_table1 FOREIGN KEY (AnotherID) REFERENCES table1 (AnotherID)
)

However, as you can see, the table I foreign key to, the column isn't the PK. Is there a way to create this foreign key, or maybe a better way to maintain this referential integrity?

Sql Solutions


Solution 1 - Sql

If you really want to create a foreign key to a non-primary key, it MUST be a column that has a unique constraint on it.

From Books Online:

> A FOREIGN KEY constraint does not have to be linked only to a PRIMARY > KEY constraint in another table; it can also be defined to reference > the columns of a UNIQUE constraint in another table.

So in your case if you make AnotherID unique, it will be allowed. If you can't apply a unique constraint you're out of luck, but this really does make sense if you think about it.

Although, as has been mentioned, if you have a perfectly good primary key as a candidate key, why not use that?

Solution 2 - Sql

As others have pointed out, ideally, the foreign key would be created as a reference to a primary key (usually an IDENTITY column). However, we don't live in an ideal world, and sometimes even a "small" change to a schema can have significant ripple effects to the application logic.

Consider the case of a Customer table with a SSN column (and a dumb primary key), and a Claim table that also contains a SSN column (populated by business logic from the Customer data, but no FK exists). The design is flawed, but has been in use for several years, and three different applications have been built on the schema. It should be obvious that ripping out Claim.SSN and putting in a real PK-FK relationship would be ideal, but would also be a significant overhaul. On the other hand, putting a UNIQUE constraint on Customer.SSN, and adding a FK on Claim.SSN, could provide referential integrity, with little or no impact on the applications.

Don't get me wrong, I'm all for normalization, but sometimes pragmatism wins over idealism. If a mediocre design can be helped with a band-aid, surgery might be avoided.

Solution 3 - Sql

Necromancing.
I assume when somebody lands here, he needs a foreign key to column in a table that contains non-unique keys.

The problem is, that if you have that problem, the database-schema is denormalized.

You're for example keeping rooms in a table, with a room-uid primary key, a DateFrom and a DateTo field, and another uid, here RM_ApertureID to keep track of the same room, and a soft-delete field, like RM_Status, where 99 means 'deleted', and <> 99 means 'active'.

So when you create the first room, you insert RM_UID and RM_ApertureID as the same value as RM_UID. Then, when you terminate the room to a date, and re-establish it with a new date range, RM_UID is newid(), and the RM_ApertureID from the previous entry becomes the new RM_ApertureID.

So, if that's the case, RM_ApertureID is a non-unique field, and so you can't set a foreign-key in another table.

And there is no way to set a foreign key to a non-unique column/index, e.g. in T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung (WHERE RM_UID is actually RM_ApertureID).
But to prohibit invalid values, you need to set a foreign key, otherwise, data-garbage is the result sooner rather than later...

Now what you can do in this case (short of rewritting the entire application) is inserting a CHECK-constraint, with a scalar function checking the presence of the key:

IF  EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.check_constraints WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[dbo].[Check_RM_ApertureIDisValid_T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]') AND parent_object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[dbo].[T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]'))
ALTER TABLE dbo.T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung DROP CONSTRAINT [Check_RM_ApertureIDisValid_T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]
GO


IF  EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.objects WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[dbo].[fu_Constaint_ValidRmApertureId]') AND type in (N'FN', N'IF', N'TF', N'FS', N'FT'))
DROP FUNCTION [dbo].[fu_Constaint_ValidRmApertureId]
GO




CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[fu_Constaint_ValidRmApertureId](
	 @in_RM_ApertureID uniqueidentifier 
	,@in_DatumVon AS datetime 
	,@in_DatumBis AS datetime 
	,@in_Status AS integer 
) 
    RETURNS bit 
AS 
BEGIN   
	DECLARE @bNoCheckForThisCustomer AS bit 
    DECLARE @bIsInvalidValue AS bit 
    SET @bNoCheckForThisCustomer = 'false' 
    SET @bIsInvalidValue = 'false' 
    
    IF @in_Status = 99 
		RETURN 'false' 
    
    
    IF @in_DatumVon > @in_DatumBis 
	BEGIN 
		RETURN 'true' 
	END 
    
    
    IF @bNoCheckForThisCustomer = 'true'
        RETURN @bIsInvalidValue 
    
    
    IF NOT EXISTS
    ( 
		SELECT 
			 T_Raum.RM_UID 
			,T_Raum.RM_Status 
			,T_Raum.RM_DatumVon 
			,T_Raum.RM_DatumBis 
			,T_Raum.RM_ApertureID 
		FROM T_Raum 
		WHERE (1=1) 
		AND T_Raum.RM_ApertureID = @in_RM_ApertureID 
		AND @in_DatumVon >= T_Raum.RM_DatumVon 
		AND @in_DatumBis <= T_Raum.RM_DatumBis 
		AND T_Raum.RM_Status <> 99 	
    ) 
        SET @bIsInvalidValue = 'true' -- IF ! 
        
    RETURN @bIsInvalidValue 
END 



GO



IF  EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.check_constraints WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[dbo].[Check_RM_ApertureIDisValid_T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]') AND parent_object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[dbo].[T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]'))
ALTER TABLE dbo.T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung DROP CONSTRAINT [Check_RM_ApertureIDisValid_T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]
GO


-- ALTER TABLE dbo.T_AP_Kontakte WITH CHECK ADD CONSTRAINT [Check_RM_ApertureIDisValid_T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]  
ALTER TABLE dbo.T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung WITH NOCHECK ADD CONSTRAINT [Check_RM_ApertureIDisValid_T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung] 
CHECK 
( 
    NOT 
    ( 
        dbo.fu_Constaint_ValidRmApertureId(ZO_RMREM_RM_UID, ZO_RMREM_GueltigVon, ZO_RMREM_GueltigBis, ZO_RMREM_Status) = 1 
    ) 
) 
GO


IF  EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.check_constraints WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[dbo].[Check_RM_ApertureIDisValid_T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]') AND parent_object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[dbo].[T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung]')) 
ALTER TABLE dbo.T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung CHECK CONSTRAINT [Check_RM_ApertureIDisValid_T_ZO_REM_AP_Raum_Reinigung] 
GO

Solution 4 - Sql

Primary keys always need to be unique, foreign keys need to allow non-unique values if the table is a one-to-many relationship. It is perfectly fine to use a foreign key as the primary key if the table is connected by a one-to-one relationship, not a one-to-many relationship.

A FOREIGN KEY constraint does not have to be linked only to a PRIMARY KEY constraint in another table; it can also be defined to reference the columns of a UNIQUE constraint in another table.

Solution 5 - Sql

Yes, You would typically at least index it.

create table student(
	id int,
	name varchar(30),
	index inName(id)
);

CREATE TABLE grade(
	id int,
	subject varchar(30),
	mark double,
	foreign key(id) references student(id)
);

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionCraigView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - SqlIan PrestonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - SqlEJSawyerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - SqlStefan SteigerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - SqlAnzeem S NView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - SqlEngr Md. Ashraful HaqueView Answer on Stackoverflow