In MySQL, how do I get a list of all foreign key constraints pointing to a particular table? a particular column? This is the same thing as this Oracle question, but for MySQL.
16 Answers
For a Table:
SELECT
TABLE_NAME,COLUMN_NAME,CONSTRAINT_NAME, REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME,REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME
FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
WHERE
REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA = '<database>' AND
REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME = '<table>';
For a Column:
SELECT
TABLE_NAME,COLUMN_NAME,CONSTRAINT_NAME, REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME,REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME
FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
WHERE
REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA = '<database>' AND
REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME = '<table>' AND
REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME = '<column>';
Basically, change REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME
with REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME
in the WHERE
clause.
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37this always gives me an empty set, while query proposed by Node below works fine– moriestaMay 17, 2012 at 10:36
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7@Acute: Are you sure you are asking about the correct table? If Node's query work, then you are likely asking about the other direction (i.e., keys FROM mytable, not keys TO mytable.) This expecting you wrote '<table>' with the table name and without the '<' and '>'?– Vinko Vrsalovic ♦May 17, 2012 at 11:27
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4Seems like I misunderstood you query, because I was querying for keys referencing FROM the <table> :) (yes, I wrote table name instead of "<table>" XD)– moriestaMay 20, 2012 at 1:12
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4Unless you are sure your table name is unique, you'll probably want to restrict your query to a particular database as well. Change the where clause to this:
where REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA = 'mydatabase' and REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME = 'mytable'
Jul 2, 2014 at 3:10 -
1I added
TABLE_SCHEMA
to the list of columns (SELECT TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_NAME, …
) which is useful in case of there are multiple databases that have tables relating to our table/column of interest.– ArvidJan 8, 2019 at 15:38
EDIT: As pointed out in the comments, this is not the correct answer to the OPs question, but it is useful to know this command. This question showed up in Google for what I was looking for, and figured I'd leave this answer for the others to find.
SHOW CREATE TABLE `<yourtable>`;
I found this answer here: MySQL : show constraints on tables command
I needed this way because I wanted to see how the FK functioned, rather than just see if it existed or not.
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49This shows all the constraints in
<yourtable>
, not all the constraints that point to<yourtable>
.– BarmarApr 21, 2014 at 21:30 -
24As @Barmar says, this is entirely wrong; it will show the foreign keys belonging to the specified table, but will not show foreign keys pointing TO the table, which is what the question asks for. No idea how this got 50 upvotes; I guess people ended up here when really they were looking for the answer to the opposite question, found their answer here anyway, and didn't bother reading the original question (or even its title) before upvoting. Sep 4, 2014 at 15:25
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5@MarkAmery : this is first result of
display foreign keys mysql
in google, may be that is why ;)– JigarJun 15, 2015 at 10:27 -
1thisi actually shows all the constraints that exist, phpmyadmin will only show you the one pointing to your table. seems good enough to avoid duplicates with an ORM tool Oct 1, 2015 at 19:13
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4This is what I was looking for, so thanks for posting it even though it didn't answer OP's question. Never hurts to know how to look in both directions in a relationship! Dec 8, 2015 at 22:45
If you use InnoDB and defined FK's you could query the information_schema database e.g.:
SELECT * FROM information_schema.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS
WHERE information_schema.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS.CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY'
AND information_schema.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS.TABLE_SCHEMA = 'myschema'
AND information_schema.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS.TABLE_NAME = 'mytable';
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21actually, that points the wrong direction. that query shows all the foreign keys pointing FROM 'mytable', not all foreign keys pointing TO 'mytable'. Oct 14, 2008 at 15:29
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1This one works better in my case. I need to drop every foreign key constraint (and only those) from a table to be able to change the InnoDB engine MyISAM or NDB. Jul 26, 2012 at 4:11
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You can get foreign keys in both directions from the REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS table – I have added another answer with the query.– ChrisVDec 12, 2013 at 12:04
Posting on an old answer to add some useful information.
I had a similar problem, but I also wanted to see the CONSTRAINT_TYPE along with the REFERENCED table and column names. So,
To see all FKs in your table:
USE '<yourschema>'; SELECT i.TABLE_NAME, i.CONSTRAINT_TYPE, i.CONSTRAINT_NAME, k.REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME, k.REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME FROM information_schema.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS i LEFT JOIN information_schema.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE k ON i.CONSTRAINT_NAME = k.CONSTRAINT_NAME WHERE i.CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY' AND i.TABLE_SCHEMA = DATABASE() AND i.TABLE_NAME = '<yourtable>';
To see all the tables and FKs in your schema:
USE '<yourschema>'; SELECT i.TABLE_NAME, i.CONSTRAINT_TYPE, i.CONSTRAINT_NAME, k.REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME, k.REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME FROM information_schema.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS i LEFT JOIN information_schema.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE k ON i.CONSTRAINT_NAME = k.CONSTRAINT_NAME WHERE i.CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY' AND i.TABLE_SCHEMA = DATABASE();
To see all the FKs in your database:
SELECT i.TABLE_SCHEMA, i.TABLE_NAME, i.CONSTRAINT_TYPE, i.CONSTRAINT_NAME, k.REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME, k.REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME FROM information_schema.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS i LEFT JOIN information_schema.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE k ON i.CONSTRAINT_NAME = k.CONSTRAINT_NAME WHERE i.CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY';
Remember!
This is using the InnoDB storage engine. If you can't seem to get any foreign keys to show up after adding them it's probably because your tables are using MyISAM.
To check:
SELECT * TABLE_NAME, ENGINE FROM information_schema.TABLES WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = '<yourschema>';
To fix, use this:
ALTER TABLE `<yourtable>` ENGINE=InnoDB;
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8Those queries run much faster (from 2 secs to 0.0015 secs) if you specify k.TABLE_SCHEMA = DATABASE() and k.TABLE_NAME = '<table>' on the WHERE clause, as documented here dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/…– guigouzJan 21, 2013 at 20:13
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2
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2MyISAM does not support foreign keys, unfortunately. dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/myisam-storage-engine.html– AndyMar 24, 2015 at 21:23
As an alternative to Node’s answer, if you use InnoDB and defined FK’s you could query the information_schema database e.g.:
SELECT CONSTRAINT_NAME, TABLE_NAME, REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME
FROM information_schema.REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS
WHERE CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA = '<schema>'
AND TABLE_NAME = '<table>'
for foreign keys from <table>, or
SELECT CONSTRAINT_NAME, TABLE_NAME, REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME
FROM information_schema.REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS
WHERE CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA = '<schema>'
AND REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME = '<table>'
for foreign keys to <table>
You can also get the UPDATE_RULE and DELETE_RULE if you want them.
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2I personally prefer this answer as using the REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS table gives you the update and cascade rule. +1 Oct 6, 2014 at 13:54
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Doing discovery about a table you shouldn't forget that foreign keys can be established BOTH ways!– EncoderJan 3, 2015 at 17:39
Constraints in SQL are the rules defined for the data in a table. Constraints also limit the types of data that go into the table. If new data does not abide by these rules the action is aborted.
select * from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS where CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY';
You can view all constraints by using select * from information_schema.table_constraints;
(This will produce a lot of table data).
You can also use this for MySQL:
show create table tableName;
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1Please add an explanation for long term value and to turn it into a quality answer that will be more likely to be upvoted. Answers should be able to help future visitors learn something and quickly determine if elements from your solution would apply to their own coding issues. Aug 12, 2020 at 19:10
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Knowing names of the foreign keys doesn't really help in any meaningful way, shape or form. Apr 30, 2022 at 18:18
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This helped tremendously. Other answers require you to supply names. This allows you to find all the foreign keys generically. It's exactly what I was looking for. Jun 1, 2022 at 1:41
This solution will not only display all relations but also the constraint name, which is required in some cases (e.g. drop contraint):
select
concat(table_name, '.', column_name) as 'foreign key',
concat(referenced_table_name, '.', referenced_column_name) as 'references',
constraint_name as 'constraint name'
from
information_schema.key_column_usage
where
referenced_table_name is not null;
If you want to check tables in a specific database, at the end of the query add the schema name:
select
concat(table_name, '.', column_name) as 'foreign key',
concat(referenced_table_name, '.', referenced_column_name) as 'references',
constraint_name as 'constraint name'
from
information_schema.key_column_usage
where
referenced_table_name is not null
and table_schema = 'database_name';
Likewise, for a specific column name, add
and table_name = 'table_name
at the end of the query.
Inspired by this post here
Using REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME does not always work and can be a NULL value. The following query can work instead:
select * from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE where TABLE_NAME = '<table>';
I'm reluctant to add yet another answer, but I've had to beg, borrow and steal from the others to get what I want, which is a complete list of all the FK relationships on tables in a given schema, INCLUDING FKs to tables in other schemas. The two crucial recordsets are information_schema.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE and information_schema.referential_constraints. If an attribute you want is missing, just uncomment the KCU., RC. to see what's available
SELECT DISTINCT KCU.TABLE_NAME, KCU.COLUMN_NAME, REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA, KCU.REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME, KCU.REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME, UPDATE_RULE, DELETE_RULE #, KCU.*, RC.*
FROM information_schema.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE KCU
INNER JOIN information_schema.referential_constraints RC ON KCU.CONSTRAINT_NAME = RC.CONSTRAINT_NAME
WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = (your schema name)
AND KCU.REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME IS NOT NULL
ORDER BY KCU.TABLE_NAME, KCU.COLUMN_NAME;
A quick way to list your FKs (Foreign Key references) using the
KEY_COLUMN_USAGE view:
SELECT CONCAT( table_name, '.',
column_name, ' -> ',
referenced_table_name, '.',
referenced_column_name ) AS list_of_fks
FROM information_schema.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
WHERE REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA = (your schema name here)
AND REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME is not null
ORDER BY TABLE_NAME, COLUMN_NAME;
This query does assume that the constraints and all referenced and referencing tables are in the same schema.
Add your own comment.
Source: the official mysql manual.
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I don't think the footnote "This query does assume that the constraints and all referenced and referencing tables are in the same schema." is necessarily true? I have just used KEY_COLUMN_USAGE view (very helpful) to see cross-schema constraints– DJDaveJul 23, 2020 at 8:18
It's often helpful to know the update and delete behaviour, which the other answers don't provide. So here goes.
SELECT cu.table_name,
cu.column_name,
cu.constraint_name,
cu.referenced_table_name,
cu.referenced_column_name,
IF(rc.update_rule = 'NO ACTION', 'RESTRICT', rc.update_rule) AS update_rule,-- See: https://stackoverflow.com/a/1498015/2742117
IF(rc.delete_rule = 'NO ACTION', 'RESTRICT', rc.delete_rule) AS delete_rule -- See: https://stackoverflow.com/a/1498015/2742117
FROM information_schema.key_column_usage cu
INNER JOIN information_schema.referential_constraints rc ON rc.constraint_schema = cu.table_schema
AND rc.table_name = cu.table_name
AND rc.constraint_name = cu.constraint_name
WHERE cu.referenced_table_schema = '<your schema>'
AND cu.referenced_table_name = '<your table>';
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Super helpful when you are trying to debug cascade deletes, because the delete will fail on the first one it encounters and not report others that may also fail. This proactively shows you all the FKs that would block a row delete. Dec 9, 2022 at 17:15
I had a "myprodb" MySql database and for checking all foreign keys in this data base I used the following simple command.
select * from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS where CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA = 'myprodb' AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY';
I hope it help.
The solution I came up with is fragile; it relies on django's naming convention for foreign keys.
USE information_schema;
tee mysql_output
SELECT * FROM TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY' AND TABLE_SCHEMA = 'database_name';
notee
Then, in the shell,
grep 'refs_tablename_id' mysql_output
If you also want to get the name of the foreign key column:
SELECT i.TABLE_SCHEMA, i.TABLE_NAME,
i.CONSTRAINT_TYPE, i.CONSTRAINT_NAME,
k.COLUMN_NAME, k.REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME, k.REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME
FROM information_schema.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS i
LEFT JOIN information_schema.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE k
ON i.CONSTRAINT_NAME = k.CONSTRAINT_NAME
WHERE i.TABLE_SCHEMA = '<TABLE_NAME>' AND i.CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY'
ORDER BY i.TABLE_NAME;
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Thanks great solution! I needed the column name as well, to get it add: 'k.COLUMN_NAME'– AndreasJun 17, 2019 at 22:07
To find all tables containing a particular foreign key such as employee_id
SELECT DISTINCT TABLE_NAME
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE COLUMN_NAME IN ('employee_id')
AND TABLE_SCHEMA='table_name';
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This shows tables with those columns. The columns aren't necessarily foreign keys.– Noel YapSep 2, 2022 at 15:14
I needed a bird's-eye-view on the relationships among the tables (to use in an ORM). Using the suggestions from this page, and after experimenting, I've put together the following query:
SELECT
KCU.CONSTRAINT_NAME,
KCU.TABLE_NAME,
KCU.COLUMN_NAME,
KCU.REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME,
KCU.REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME
FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE AS KCU
JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS AS COLS
ON
COLS.TABLE_SCHEMA = KCU.TABLE_SCHEMA
AND COLS.TABLE_NAME = KCU.TABLE_NAME
AND COLS.COLUMN_NAME = KCU.COLUMN_NAME
WHERE
KCU.CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA = {YOUR_SCHEMA_NAME}
AND KCU.REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME IS NOT NULL
ORDER BY
KCU.TABLE_NAME,
COLS.ORDINAL_POSITION
It returns just what I need, and in the order that I want.
I also do little processing on the result (turn it into a some kind of dictionary), so that it's ready to be used for creating an aggregate.