101

How can I drop a constraint in PostgreSQL just by knowing the name?

I have a list of constraints that are auto-generated by a 3rd party script. I need to delete them without knowing the table name just the constraint name.

1
  • What version of PG are you on?
    – Kuberchaun
    Mar 11, 2011 at 14:12

4 Answers 4

166

You need to retrieve the table names by running the following query:

SELECT *
FROM information_schema.constraint_table_usage
WHERE table_name = 'your_table'

Alternatively you can use pg_constraint to retrieve this information

select n.nspname as schema_name,
       t.relname as table_name,
       c.conname as constraint_name
from pg_constraint c
  join pg_class t on c.conrelid = t.oid
  join pg_namespace n on t.relnamespace = n.oid
where t.relname = 'your_table_name';

Then you can run the required ALTER TABLE statement:

ALTER TABLE your_table DROP CONSTRAINT constraint_name;

Of course you can make the query return the complete alter statement:

SELECT 'ALTER TABLE '||table_name||' DROP CONSTRAINT '||constraint_name||';'
FROM information_schema.constraint_table_usage
WHERE table_name in ('your_table', 'other_table')

Don't forget to include the table_schema in the WHERE clause (and the ALTER statement) if there are multiple schemas with the same tables.

0
18

If your on 9.x of PG you could make use of the DO statement to run this. Just do what a_horse_with_no_name did, but apply it to a DO statement.

DO $$DECLARE r record;
    BEGIN
        FOR r IN SELECT table_name,constraint_name
                 FROM information_schema.constraint_table_usage
                 WHERE table_name IN ('your_table', 'other_table')
        LOOP
            EXECUTE 'ALTER TABLE ' || quote_ident(r.table_name)|| ' DROP CONSTRAINT '|| quote_ident(r.constraint_name) || ';';
        END LOOP;
    END$$;
0
14

Drop the right foreign key constraint

ALTER TABLE affiliations
DROP CONSTRAINT affiliations_organization_id_fkey;

NOTE:

affiliations -> Table Name

affiliations_organization_id_fkey ->Constraint name
1

List contraints:

SELECT con.*
FROM pg_catalog.pg_constraint con
INNER JOIN pg_catalog.pg_class     rel ON rel.oid = con.conrelid
INNER JOIN pg_catalog.pg_namespace nsp ON nsp.oid = connamespace
WHERE nsp.nspname = 'your_schema' AND
      rel.relname = 'your_table';

Remove the contraint:

ALTER TABLE your_schema.your_table DROP CONSTRAINT the_constraint_name;

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