TL; DR: Referential integrity violation triggered when no violation happened.
I run H2 in cluster mode with 2 nodes.
I have two tables in a H2 database (v1.4.189), a parent and a child. The child contains a foreign key to the ID of a row of parent table.
Usually, I don't get any errors when inserting a row in child table.
But after a while, I'm getting this error when inserting :
Referential integrity constraint violation: "CONSTRAINT_1FE: PUBLIC.CHILD FOREIGN KEY(fkey)
REFERENCES PUBLIC.PARENT(ID) (86)"
The strange thing is that the INSERT INTO data that produced the error was successfully inserted, and that there is no foreign key constraint violation !
I've tried to document the exact steps to reproduce the error, but with a fresh database, the error never happens :
drop table CHILD;
drop table PARENT;
create table CHILD(id int auto_increment, name varchar(255), fkey int);
create table PARENT(id int auto_increment, name varchar(255));
ALTER TABLE `CHILD` ADD FOREIGN KEY (fkey) REFERENCES `PARENT` (`id`);
insert into PARENT(name) values('hello');
insert into PARENT(name) values('world');
select * from PARENT;
insert into CHILD(name, fkey) values('hello', 1);
-- this works for a while, but someday the Referential integrity error
-- will pop, but data will be added anyway (wtf?)
insert into CHILD(name, fkey) values('world', 2);
On the database, I'm only doing simple things like selecting, inserting, deleting...
The amusing fact is that after this error happened once, I get another strange errors : when deleting (or updating) rows of the CHILD table, the DELETE FROM or UPDATE functions always return 0, even if some rows have been deleted... (also jdbc executeUpdate() always returns 0)
Is the database corrupted at some point ?
The only workaroud I found to fix this error, is to delete all tables and recreate the tables, which is not what I want to do.
auto_increment
generated different values than those that you have hardcoded in your insert statement for the child table.