Without WITH CHECK OPTION
, updating (INSERT
/UPDATE
/MERGE
/DELETE
etc) a viewed table will cause its underlying base tables to be updated, regardless of the WHERE
clause of the VIEW
(assuming the DBMS considers the view to be updateable). If you INSERT
a row into a VIEW
that didn't satisfy the WHERE
clause then refreshed the VIEW
the newly-inserted row would not be visible in the VIEW
. The WITH CHECK OPTION
would prevent such an 'odd' situation from happening but there is more to it than that.
Consider a VIEW
that is created to allow a certain user (group of users, application, etc) to view only a subset of rows in a table e.g. to allow them to view data for staff while preventing them from viewing the details of executive employees: revoke read privileges on the base table for this user and instead grant them on the view. The WITH CHECK OPTION
allows you to do the same for write privileges, in this case it would prevent an INSERT
to tehe view if it would create a executive employee row.
Similar techniques can be used to enforce 'row-level' constraints e.g. that a company can only have one president by forcing the INSERT
via a VIEW
whose WHERE
clause only allows for one employee per company.
how can you define the condition that " a company can only have one president "
Here's a simple example (no FKs etc) using standard SQL:
CREATE TABLE Employees
( company_id CHAR(8) NOT NULL,
employee CHAR(10) NOT NULL UNIQUE,
job_title VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL );
CREATE VIEW Presidents
AS
SELECT *
FROM Employees
WHERE job_title = 'president'
AND 1 >= ( SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM Employees e
WHERE e.job_title = 'president'
GROUP
BY e.company_id )
WITH CHECK OPTION;
INSERT INTO Employees VALUES ( 'Acme', '1', 'president' );
INSERT INTO Employees VALUES ( 'Acme', '2', 'president' );
The second insert fails because it would make the count of presidents for company Acme
would be greater than one, so the 'subquery' part of the query would cause the new president to be removed from the view's resultset and the transaction is effectively rolled back.