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I've been looking around on here for the answer but nothing seems to work. I've done a base install of Laravel and Sentry 2. Firstly i've added this migration to add a client_id column to the users table.

Schema::table('users', function(Blueprint $table)
    {
        $table->integer('client_id')->unique;
    });

Then next i created my clients table with the following in a different migration.

Schema::create('clients', function(Blueprint $table)
    {
        $table->increments('id');
        $table->timestamps();
        $table->integer('client_id')->unique;
        $table->string('client_name');
        $table->date('expiry');
        $table->integer('cals');
    });

Finally i created a migration with the following in.

Schema::table('users', function(Blueprint $table)
    {
        $table->foreign('client_id')
            ->references('client_id')->on('clients')
            ->onDelete('cascade');
    });

The error im getting is the following;

SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 1215 Cannot add foreign key constraint (SQL: alter table `users` add constraint use
rs_client_id_foreign foreign key (`client_id`) references `clients` (`client_id`) on delete cascade)

I'm a little stuck on what i should be looking for, should they both be indexes?

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  • Do the queries work when you run them manually (ie. using the MySQL client or phpmyadmin)?
    – Kryten
    Mar 24, 2014 at 20:49
  • in phpmyadmin is says no indexes defined.
    – Nathan
    Mar 24, 2014 at 20:51

1 Answer 1

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$table->integer('client_id')->unique;

This line should read:

$table->integer('client_id')->unique();

Regardless, if you're actually trying to reference the 'id' column on the 'clients' table with a foreign key constraint on the 'users' table, then do the following:

Schema::table('users', function(Blueprint $table)
{
    $table->integer('client_id')->unsigned();

    $table->foreign('client_id')
        ->references('id')->on('clients')
        ->onDelete('cascade');
});

Schema::create('clients', function(Blueprint $table)
{
    $table->increments('id');
    $table->timestamps();
    $table->string('client_name');
    $table->date('expiry');
    $table->integer('cals');
});
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  • It was the unique bit, i'm not sure how i missed it. Would the second bit actually work though as your trying to create a constraint to a table that does exist yet? (as you create it afterwards)
    – Nathan
    Mar 24, 2014 at 21:03
  • Yep, the second bit should work. Regardless if the table exists or not I always create one migration per table and include any foreign key constraints in that migration.
    – seeARMS
    Mar 24, 2014 at 23:40

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