A table's primary key must be made from a column or columns in the table itself, so your question doesn't really make sense.
If you have this table in the database called DB_ONE
A
C1 PK
C2
C3
and this table in the database called DB_TWO
B
C1 FK to column C1 in Table DB_ONE.A
X1
X2
you can define the primary key of table B
as (C1, X1)
if you wish. But the column C1
must be in table B
. A particular column in any table can serve as both a foreign key (FK) and all or part of a primary key (PK).
If your tables are in different database schemas on the same Oracle instance you can try to use the schema-qualified table name (DB_ONE.A
) when creating a foreign key. DDL like this might do the trick for you.
ALTER TABLE DB_TWO.B
ADD CONSTRAINT fk_my_favorite_name
FOREIGN KEY (C1)
REFERENCES DB_ONE.A (C1);
If they are on different Oracle instances, you are out of luck trying to set up a foreign key.
(c1, c2, c3) = (1, 2, 3), (4, 5, 6)
and in DB2.B you have two rows:(x1, x2, x3) = ('A', 'B', 'C'),('D', 'E', 'F')
- how do you know which row in DB2.B matches to which row in DB1.A? You can only know that if DB2.B contains columns that also appear in DB1.A (a.k.a a foreign key). Because they're on different dbs, you can't enforce that fk though.