You would have to have a copy of a1
appear in B
in order to enforce this as a constraint. If you don't want this visible to your users, you would create a table (say, _B
) that contains all of B
s columns + a1
, and then create a view (with suitable insert triggers to populate a1
) called B
that hides this column.
You should also create a superkey of A
over id
and a1
, and use a foreign key constraint (possibly with ON UPDATE CASCADE
) from B
over both of these columns to ensure that this copied column correctly matches the corresponding value in A
.
Whether you then decide that this should be the only foreign key, or continue to maintain the "correct" one (over just id
) in addition is a matter of taste.
E.g.:
CREATE TABLE dbo.A (ID int not null,a1 int not null,a2 int not null,
constraint PK_A PRIMARY KEY (id),
constraint UQ_A_a1_check UNIQUE (id,a1)
)
CREATE TABLE dbo._B (ID int not null,a1 int not null,b1 int not null,b2 int not null,
constraint PK_B PRIMARY KEY (a1,b1,b2),
constraint FK_B_A FOREIGN KEY (id) references A (id),
constraint DRI_B_A_a1_check FOREIGN KEY (id,a1) references A (id,a1) on update cascade
)
GO
CREATE VIEW dbo.B
WITH SCHEMABINDING
AS
select id,b1,b2 from dbo._B
GO
CREATE TRIGGER T_B_I on dbo.B instead of insert
AS
INSERT INTO dbo._B (id,a1,b1,b2)
SELECT i.id,a.a1,i.b1,i.b2
FROM
inserted i
inner join
dbo.A a
on
i.id = a.id
GO