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Hi folks,

I've got two tables and I've added a foreign key constraint. Kewl - works great. Now, is it possible to further constrain that relationship against some data in the parent table?

Basically, I have animals in the parent table, and for the child table wishto only contain data where the parent data are .... um .. mammals.

eg.

Animals
^^^^^^^
AnimalId INT PK NOT NULL IDENTITY
AnimalType TINYINT NOT NULL -- 1: Mammal, 2:Reptile, etc..
Name

Mammals
^^^^^^^
AnimalId INT PK FK NOT NULL
NumberOfMammaryGlads TINYINT NOT NULL

So, i wishto make sure that the AnimalId can only be of type Animals.AnimalType = 1

Is this possible??

I don't want to allow someone to try and insert some info against a reptile, in the child table...

Cheers :)

Edit:

I thought I had to use a Check Constraint (confirmed below from my first two answers - cheers!), but I wasn't sure how to (eg. the sql syntax to refer to the Animals table).

Update:

Alex has a very good post (below) that benchmarks some of the suggestions.... a very good read!

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5 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

I ran a small benchmark - in this case the approach with a UDF runs almost 100 times slower.

The overhead of an FK in CPU time = 375 ms - 297 ms = 78 ms

The overhead of an UDF in CPU time = 7750 ms - 297 ms = 7453 ms

Here's the Sql code...

-- set up an auxiliary table Numbers with 128K rows:

CREATE TABLE dbo.Numbers(n INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY)
GO
DECLARE @i INT;
SET @i = 1;
INSERT INTO dbo.Numbers(n) SELECT 1;
WHILE @i<128000 BEGIN
  INSERT INTO dbo.Numbers(n)
    SELECT n + @i FROM dbo.Numbers;
  SET @i = @i * 2;
END;
GO

-- the tables

CREATE TABLE dbo.Animals
(AnimalId INT NOT NULL IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY,
AnimalType TINYINT NOT NULL, -- 1: Mammal, 2:Reptile, etc..
Name VARCHAR(30))
GO
ALTER TABLE dbo.Animals
ADD CONSTRAINT UNQ_Animals UNIQUE(AnimalId, AnimalType)
GO
CREATE FUNCTION dbo.GetAnimalType(@AnimalId INT)
RETURNS TINYINT
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE @ret TINYINT;
SELECT @ret = AnimalType FROM dbo.Animals
  WHERE AnimalId = @AnimalId;
RETURN @ret;
END
GO
CREATE TABLE dbo.Mammals
(AnimalId INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
SomeOtherStuff VARCHAR(10),
CONSTRAINT Chk_AnimalType_Mammal CHECK(dbo.GetAnimalType(AnimalId)=1)
);
GO

--- populating with UDF:

INSERT INTO dbo.Animals
  (AnimalType, Name)
SELECT 1, 'some name' FROM dbo.Numbers;
GO
SET STATISTICS IO ON
SET STATISTICS TIME ON
GO
INSERT INTO dbo.Mammals
(AnimalId,SomeOtherStuff)
SELECT n, 'some info' FROM dbo.Numbers;

results are:

SQL Server parse and compile time: 
CPU time = 0 ms, elapsed time = 2 ms.
Table 'Mammals'. Scan count 0, logical reads 272135, 
    physical reads 0, read-ahead reads 0, lob logical reads 0, 
    lob physical reads 0, lob read-ahead reads 0.
Table 'Numbers'. Scan count 1, logical reads 441, physical reads 0, 
    read-ahead reads 0, lob logical reads 0, lob physical reads 0, 
    lob read-ahead reads 0.

SQL Server Execution Times:
    CPU time = 7750 ms,  elapsed time = 7830 ms.

(131072 row(s) affected)

--- populating with FK:

CREATE TABLE dbo.Mammals2
(AnimalId INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
AnimalType TINYINT NOT NULL,
SomeOtherStuff VARCHAR(10),
CONSTRAINT Chk_Mammals2_AnimalType_Mammal CHECK(AnimalType=1),
CONSTRAINT FK_Mammals_Animals FOREIGN KEY(AnimalId, AnimalType)
  REFERENCES dbo.Animals(AnimalId, AnimalType)
);

INSERT INTO dbo.Mammals2
(AnimalId,AnimalType,SomeOtherStuff)
SELECT n, 1, 'some info' FROM dbo.Numbers;

results are:

SQL Server parse and compile time: 
   CPU time = 93 ms, elapsed time = 100 ms.
Table 'Animals'. Scan count 1, logical reads 132, physical reads 0,
    read-ahead reads 0, lob logical reads 0, lob physical reads 0, 
    lob read-ahead reads 0.
Table 'Mammals2'. Scan count 0, logical reads 275381, physical reads 0,
   read-ahead reads 0, lob logical reads 0, lob physical reads 0, 
   lob read-ahead reads 0.
Table 'Numbers'. Scan count 1, logical reads 441, physical reads 0,
   read-ahead reads 0, lob logical reads 0, lob physical reads 0, 
   lob read-ahead reads 0.

SQL Server Execution Times:
   CPU time = 375 ms,  elapsed time = 383 ms.

-- populating without any integrity:

CREATE TABLE dbo.Mammals3
(AnimalId INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
SomeOtherStuff VARCHAR(10)
);
INSERT INTO dbo.Mammals3
(AnimalId,SomeOtherStuff)
SELECT n,  'some info' FROM dbo.Numbers;

results are:
SQL Server parse and compile time: CPU time = 1 ms, elapsed time = 1 ms.

SQL Server Execution Times:
   CPU time = 0 ms,  elapsed time = 66 ms.
Table 'Mammals3'. Scan count 0, logical reads 272135, physical reads 0,
    read-ahead reads 0, lob logical reads 0, lob physical reads 0,
    lob read-ahead reads 0.
Table 'Numbers'. Scan count 1, logical reads 441, physical reads 0, 
    read-ahead reads 0, lob logical reads 0, lob physical reads 0, 
    lob read-ahead reads 0.

SQL Server Execution Times:
   CPU time = 297 ms,  elapsed time = 303 ms.

(131072 row(s) affected)

The overhead of an FK in CPU time = 375 ms - 297 ms = 78 ms
The overhead of an UDF in CPU time = 7750 ms - 297 ms = 7453 ms

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1  
Upvote for the effort – Tetraneutron Jun 25 at 2:19
So it looks like the fastest solution is to have no relationship/constraint. This is not good for a data integrity perspective. Next is to have th FK solution. Even though this seems like we're doubling up the data on the FK field, the cost of this seems to be worth it over the performance benefits, vs having a check contraint that calls a UDF. Do other people agree with me (and AlexK) on this summary? – Pure.Krome Jun 25 at 5:20
vote up 0 vote down

To give a strong guarantee, you'll need two check constraints going both ways. If you only constrain Mammals someone could update Animals.AnimalType and get the data in an inconsistent state.

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vote up 4 vote down

Have a unique constraint on Animals(AnimalId, AnimalType) Add AnimalType to Mammals, and use a check constraint to make sure it is always 1. Have a FK refer to (AnimalId, AnimalType).

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Duplicating the animalType column on the Mammals table is not advisable, as this increases the table size and goes against data normalization best practices. – Jeff Meatball Yang Jun 24 at 3:40
The increase in size is minor, and all your logic gets much much simpler. You'll save a lot in CPU cycles and development time. – AlexKuznetsov Jun 24 at 3:48
Denormalizing to enforce business rules also described here: devx.com/dbzone/Article/34479/1954 and here: sqlblog.com/blogs/alexander_kuznetsov/… – AlexKuznetsov Jun 24 at 3:50
@Alex: it's still a bad idea, whena trigger or UDF could do it. – gbn Jun 24 at 4:31
1  
Jeff, databases are all about managing data, including its integrity. Enforcing data integrity rules outside of the database makes no sense whatsoever! Creating a UNIQUE constraint like this to propagate the subtype down into the child table is a common practice and is relatively harmless in terms of normalisation and performance. – Tony Andrews Jun 24 at 6:41
show 9 more comments
vote up 2 vote down

You can create a CHECK CONSTRAINT on the column.

ALTER TABLE Mammals
ADD CONSTRAINT CHK_AnimalType CHECK (dbo.fnGetAnimalType(animalId) = 1 );

Now you need a function fnGetAnimalType that will return the animalType of the given animalId.

Here is more info from MSDN.

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Ah... i need to do this via a FUNCTION! ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh... brb :) – Pure.Krome Jun 24 at 3:15
It will surely run very slowly – AlexKuznetsov Jun 24 at 3:25
@Alex, a check constraint will affect performance, but your claim that it will run very slowly is very premature. – Jeff Meatball Yang Jun 24 at 3:37
@Alex: it checks only on insert or update: your denormalised solution would still need a lookup onto Animals. The udf approach is cleaner – gbn Jun 24 at 4:33
vote up 0 vote down

I think you want to use a Check constraint within the Mammals table.

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms188258.aspx

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@Tet: I don't wish to check against the AnimalId value, but against the Animals.AnimalTypeId value. – Pure.Krome Jun 24 at 3:23
Ah - true - I reverted it to my original answer - to check against the AnimalType - you will need to call a function - which as Alex says in another comment may have an affect on performance. – Tetraneutron Jun 24 at 3:28

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