Cannot change column used in a foreign key constraint

后端 未结 3 2024
北荒
北荒 2020-11-28 02:01

I got this error when i was trying to alter my table.

Error Code: 1833. Cannot change column \'person_id\': used in a foreign key constraint \'fk_fav_food_p         


        
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  • 2020-11-28 02:12

    The type and definition of foreign key field and reference must be equal. This means your foreign key disallows changing the type of your field.

    One solution would be this:

    LOCK TABLES 
        favorite_food WRITE,
        person WRITE;
    
    ALTER TABLE favorite_food
        DROP FOREIGN KEY fk_fav_food_person_id,
        MODIFY person_id SMALLINT UNSIGNED;
    

    Now you can change you person_id

    ALTER TABLE person MODIFY person_id SMALLINT UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT;
    

    recreate foreign key

    ALTER TABLE favorite_food
        ADD CONSTRAINT fk_fav_food_person_id FOREIGN KEY (person_id)
              REFERENCES person (person_id);
    
    UNLOCK TABLES;
    

    EDIT: Added locks above, thanks to comments

    You have to disallow writing to the database while you do this, otherwise you risk data integrity problems.

    I've added a write lock above

    All writing queries in any other session than your own ( INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ) will wait till timeout or UNLOCK TABLES; is executed

    http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/lock-tables.html

    EDIT 2: OP asked for a more detailed explanation of the line "The type and definition of foreign key field and reference must be equal. This means your foreign key disallows changing the type of your field."

    From MySQL 5.5 Reference Manual: FOREIGN KEY Constraints

    Corresponding columns in the foreign key and the referenced key must have similar internal data types inside InnoDB so that they can be compared without a type conversion. The size and sign of integer types must be the same. The length of string types need not be the same. For nonbinary (character) string columns, the character set and collation must be the same.

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  • 2020-11-28 02:17

    You can turn off foreign key checks:

    SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;
    
    /* DO WHAT YOU NEED HERE */
    
    SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
    

    Please make sure to NOT use this on production and have a backup.

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  • 2020-11-28 02:19

    When you set keys (primary or foreign) you are setting constraints on how they can be used, which in turn limits what you can do with them. If you really want to alter the column, you could re-create the table without the constraints, although I'd recommend against it. Generally speaking, if you have a situation in which you want to do something, but it is blocked by a constraint, it's best resolved by changing what you want to do rather than the constraint.

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