When we create parent-child tables, does the child table need its own primary key, or should the foreign key of the parent be used as the primary key?
Example:
I have a table that stores users, which is defined like:
CREATE TABLE users (
'id' bigint(20) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
'username' varchar(32),
PRIMARY KEY ('id'))
I want to make a second table that stores some more information about a user, like their favorite animals. Should that table have its own 'id' column as well as a separate foreign key for the linked user?:
CREATE TABLE users_extra_info (
'id' bigint(20) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
'fk_user_id' bigint(20) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
'fav_mammal' varchar(32),
'fav_reptile' varchar(32),
...
PRIMARY KEY ('id'),
KEY 'fk_user_id' ('fk_user_id'))
or do you usually just drop the 'id' column since the foreign key has to be unique?:
CREATE TABLE users_extra_info (
'fk_user_id' bigint(20) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
'fav_mammal' varchar(32),
'fav_reptile' varchar(32),
...
PRIMARY KEY ('fk_user_id'))
Thanks
users
table contains login credentials or other sensitive information.