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,ALLOW_INVALID_DATES';
CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS `mydb` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci ;
USE `mydb` ;
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Table `mydb`.`restaurants`
-- -----------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `mydb`.`restaurants` (
`id` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT ,
`name` VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL ,
`description` VARCHAR(1024) NOT NULL ,
`address` VARCHAR(1024) NOT NULL ,
`phone` VARCHAR(16) NOT NULL ,
`url` VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL ,
`min_order` INT NOT NULL ,
`food_types` SET('pizza', 'sushi', 'osetian_pie') NOT NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ,
UNIQUE INDEX `name_UNIQUE` (`name` ASC) ,
UNIQUE INDEX `id_UNIQUE` (`id` ASC) )
ENGINE = InnoDB;
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Table `mydb`.`regions`
-- -----------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `mydb`.`regions` (
`id` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT ,
`restaurant` INT NOT NULL ,
`name` VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ,
INDEX `restaurant_idx` (`restaurant` ASC) ,
UNIQUE INDEX `id_UNIQUE` (`id` ASC) ,
CONSTRAINT `restaurant`
FOREIGN KEY (`restaurant` )
REFERENCES `mydb`.`restaurants` (`id` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
ENGINE = InnoDB;
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Table `mydb`.`food`
-- -----------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `mydb`.`food` (
`id` INT NOT NULL ,
`type` ENUM('pizza', 'sushi', 'osetian_pie') NOT NULL ,
`name` VARCHAR(45) NOT NULL ,
`ingredients` VARCHAR(256) NULL ,
`image` VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ,
UNIQUE INDEX `id_UNIQUE` (`id` ASC) )
ENGINE = InnoDB;
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Table `mydb`.`food_variant`
-- -----------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `mydb`.`food_variant` (
`id` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT ,
`size` VARCHAR(16) NOT NULL ,
`weight` VARCHAR(16) NOT NULL ,
`price` INT NOT NULL ,
`food` INT NOT NULL ,
`restaurant` INT NOT NULL ,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ,
UNIQUE INDEX `id_UNIQUE` (`id` ASC) ,
INDEX `food_idx` (`food` ASC) ,
INDEX `restaurant_idx` (`restaurant` ASC) ,
CONSTRAINT `food`
FOREIGN KEY (`food` )
REFERENCES `mydb`.`food` (`id` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION,
CONSTRAINT `restaurant`
FOREIGN KEY (`restaurant` )
REFERENCES `mydb`.`restaurants` (`id` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
ENGINE = InnoDB;
SET SQL_MODE=@OLD_SQL_MODE;
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS;
SET UNIQUE_CHECKS=@OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS;
Error is:
Executing SQL script in server
ERROR: Error 1005: Can't create table 'mydb.food_variant' (errno: 121)
I see no duplicate constraints. Where is it?
This is likely because you have named at least one constraint with the same identifier as a column:
/* You already have a column named `restaurant` in this table,
but are naming the FK CONSTRAINT `restaurant` also... */
CONSTRAINT `restaurant`
FOREIGN KEY (`restaurant` )
REFERENCES `mydb`.`restaurants` (`id` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
Should use a different identifier for the constraint like fk_restaurant
as in :
CONSTRAINT `fk_restaurant`
FOREIGN KEY (`restaurant` )
REFERENCES `mydb`.`restaurants` (`id` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
And same thing in the food
table:
/* Name it fk_food */
CONSTRAINT `fk_food`
FOREIGN KEY (`food` )
REFERENCES `mydb`.`food` (`id` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION,
/* Name it fk_restaurant */
CONSTRAINT `fk_restaurant`
FOREIGN KEY (`restaurant` )
REFERENCES `mydb`.`restaurants` (`id` )
ON DELETE NO ACTION
ON UPDATE NO ACTION)
Those are the only three I see, but there could be others I missed.
This answer comes from the comment to the answer from @Michael Berkowski. I post it as an answer as it actually worked for me:
I was getting the errno 121 even after changing the constraint names across multiple tables. The problem was that even across different tables you cannot have the same constraint name. I was using
fk_entryid
intable1
andtable2
and had to change them tofk_table1_entryid
andfk_table2_entryid
respectively to make it work.
All the answers above are superb but didn't solve my problem even after i dropped all my tables, but everything worked perfectly and the migration ran smoothly after i dropped my DB and created it again.... It seems the keys are cached and aren't cleared after tables are dropped.
Note : This is not an answer to the question but my experience that i felt might help another person.
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