Use the ON DELETE CASCADE option to specify whether you want rows deleted in a child table when corresponding rows are deleted in the parent table. If you do not specify cascading deletes, the default behavior of the database server prevents you from deleting data in a table if other tables reference it.
A foreign key with cascade delete means that if a record in the parent table is deleted, then the corresponding records in the child table will automatically be deleted. This is called a cascade delete in SQL Server.
ON DELETE CASCADE constraint is used in MySQL to delete the rows from the child table automatically, when the rows from the parent table are deleted. For example when a student registers in an online learning platform, then all the details of the student are recorded with their unique number/id.
You can not add ON DELETE CASCADE
to an already existing constraint. You will have to drop
and re-create
the constraint. The documentation shows that the MODIFY CONSTRAINT
clause can only modify the state of a constraint (i-e: ENABLED/DISABLED
...).
First drop
your foreign key and try your above command, put add constraint
instead of modify constraint
.
Now this is the command:
ALTER TABLE child_table_name
ADD CONSTRAINT fk_name
FOREIGN KEY (child_column_name)
REFERENCES parent_table_name(parent_column_name)
ON DELETE CASCADE;
As explained before:
ALTER TABLE TABLEName
drop CONSTRAINT FK_CONSTRAINTNAME;
ALTER TABLE TABLENAME
ADD CONSTRAINT FK_CONSTRAINTNAME
FOREIGN KEY (FId)
REFERENCES OTHERTABLE
(Id)
ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
As you can see those have to be separated commands, first dropping then adding.
Answer for MYSQL USERS:
ALTER TABLE ChildTableName
DROP FOREIGN KEY `fk_table`;
ALTER TABLE ChildTableName
ADD CONSTRAINT `fk_t1_t2_tt`
FOREIGN KEY (`parentTable`)
REFERENCES parentTable (`columnName`)
ON DELETE CASCADE
ON UPDATE CASCADE;
This PL*SQL will write to DBMS_OUTPUT a script that will drop each constraint that does not have delete cascade and recreate it with delete cascade.
NOTE: running the output of this script is AT YOUR OWN RISK. Best to read over the resulting script and edit it before executing it.
DECLARE
CURSOR consCols (theCons VARCHAR2, theOwner VARCHAR2) IS
select * from user_cons_columns
where constraint_name = theCons and owner = theOwner
order by position;
firstCol BOOLEAN := TRUE;
begin
-- For each constraint
FOR cons IN (select * from user_constraints
where delete_rule = 'NO ACTION'
and constraint_name not like '%MODIFIED_BY_FK' -- these constraints we do not want delete cascade
and constraint_name not like '%CREATED_BY_FK'
order by table_name)
LOOP
-- Drop the constraint
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('ALTER TABLE ' || cons.OWNER || '.' || cons.TABLE_NAME || ' DROP CONSTRAINT ' || cons.CONSTRAINT_NAME || ';');
-- Re-create the constraint
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT('ALTER TABLE ' || cons.OWNER || '.' || cons.TABLE_NAME || ' ADD CONSTRAINT ' || cons.CONSTRAINT_NAME
|| ' FOREIGN KEY (');
firstCol := TRUE;
-- For each referencing column
FOR consCol IN consCols(cons.CONSTRAINT_NAME, cons.OWNER)
LOOP
IF(firstCol) THEN
firstCol := FALSE;
ELSE
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT(',');
END IF;
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT(consCol.COLUMN_NAME);
END LOOP;
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT(') REFERENCES ');
firstCol := TRUE;
-- For each referenced column
FOR consCol IN consCols(cons.R_CONSTRAINT_NAME, cons.R_OWNER)
LOOP
IF(firstCol) THEN
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT(consCol.OWNER);
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT('.');
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT(consCol.TABLE_NAME); -- This seems a bit of a kluge.
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT(' (');
firstCol := FALSE;
ELSE
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT(',');
END IF;
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT(consCol.COLUMN_NAME);
END LOOP;
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(') ON DELETE CASCADE ENABLE VALIDATE;');
END LOOP;
end;
If you head into your PHPMYADMIN
webpage and navigate to the table that has the foreign key you want to update, all you have to do is click the Relational view
located in the Structure
tab and change the On delete
select menu option to Cascade
.
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