I'm using PostgreSQL and I'm trying to list all the tables that have a particular column from a table as a foreign-key/reference. Can this be done? I'm sure this information is stored somewhere in information_schema but I have no idea how to start querying it.
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Possible duplicate of Postgres: SQL to list table foreign keys – amphetamachine Mar 29 at 14:21
select R.TABLE_NAME
from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.CONSTRAINT_COLUMN_USAGE u
inner join INFORMATION_SCHEMA.REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS FK
on U.CONSTRAINT_CATALOG = FK.UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_CATALOG
and U.CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA = FK.UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA
and U.CONSTRAINT_NAME = FK.UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_NAME
inner join INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE R
ON R.CONSTRAINT_CATALOG = FK.CONSTRAINT_CATALOG
AND R.CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA = FK.CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA
AND R.CONSTRAINT_NAME = FK.CONSTRAINT_NAME
WHERE U.COLUMN_NAME = 'a'
AND U.TABLE_CATALOG = 'b'
AND U.TABLE_SCHEMA = 'c'
AND U.TABLE_NAME = 'd'
This uses the full catalog/schema/name triplet to identify a db table from all 3 information_schema views. You can drop one or two as required.
The query lists all tables that have a foreign key constraint against the column 'a' in table 'd'
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1I must be doing something wrong, when I try your query I just get the name of table 'd' repeated over and over. – Anomie Mar 18 '11 at 1:47
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@Anomie are you using the updated query? I changed it - yes I had it the wrong way around – RichardTheKiwi Mar 18 '11 at 1:48
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2I see the problem.
Rshould beINFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE, notINFORMATION_SCHEMA.CONSTRAINT_COLUMN_USAGE. – Anomie Mar 18 '11 at 2:22 -
2Older schemas will not work with this, as PostgreSQL used to not name constraints in a unique way. See my PostgreSQL-specific answer. – Tony K. Jan 14 '14 at 23:09
The other solutions are not guaranteed to work in postgresql, as the constraint_name is not guaranteed to be unique; thus you will get false positives. PostgreSQL used to name constraints silly things like '$1', and if you've got an old database you've been maintaining through upgrades, you likely still have some of those around.
Since this question was targeted AT PostgreSQL and that is what you are using, then you can query the internal postgres tables pg_class and pg_attribute to get a more accurate result.
NOTE: FKs can be on multiple columns, thus the referencing column (attnum of pg_attribute) is an ARRAY, which is the reason for using array_agg in the answer.
The only thing you need plug in is the TARGET_TABLE_NAME:
select
(select r.relname from pg_class r where r.oid = c.conrelid) as table,
(select array_agg(attname) from pg_attribute
where attrelid = c.conrelid and ARRAY[attnum] <@ c.conkey) as col,
(select r.relname from pg_class r where r.oid = c.confrelid) as ftable
from pg_constraint c
where c.confrelid = (select oid from pg_class where relname = 'TARGET_TABLE_NAME');
If you want to go the other way (list all of the things a specific table refers to), then just change the last line to:
where c.conrelid = (select oid from pg_class where relname = 'TARGET_TABLE_NAME');
Oh, and since the actual question was to target a specific column, you can specify the column name with this one:
select (select r.relname from pg_class r where r.oid = c.conrelid) as table,
(select array_agg(attname) from pg_attribute
where attrelid = c.conrelid and ARRAY[attnum] <@ c.conkey) as col,
(select r.relname from pg_class r where r.oid = c.confrelid) as ftable
from pg_constraint c
where c.confrelid = (select oid from pg_class where relname = 'TARGET_TABLE_NAME') and
c.confkey @> (select array_agg(attnum) from pg_attribute
where attname = 'TARGET_COLUMN_NAME' and attrelid = c.confrelid);
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5I think this is the proper answer - this is a more accurate answer than the one selected. – alphanumeric character Jan 14 '14 at 23:19
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Any way to include the source column(s)? I'm tinkering with the query now, will post if I find a solution. – Jmoney38 May 22 '15 at 17:12
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I submitted an edit to include the new selection - For some reason, S.E. doesn't like me submitting the SQL in a comment. – Jmoney38 May 22 '15 at 17:22
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@Tony K. Is there any way to know (by querying the catalog tables) if a specific row is being referenced in other tables, not just the entire column? Thanks. – dml Dec 23 '15 at 22:20
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2If you have tables with same name but in different schemas you need to filter in where condition:
where c.confrelid = ( select oid from pg_class where relname = 'TARGET_TABLE_NAME' AND relnamespace = (select oid from pg_namespace where nspname = 'SCHEMA_NAME'))– piotrekkr Sep 27 '17 at 11:03
Personally, I prefer to query based on the referenced unique constraint rather than the column. That would look something like this:
SELECT rc.constraint_catalog,
rc.constraint_schema||'.'||tc.table_name AS table_name,
kcu.column_name,
match_option,
update_rule,
delete_rule
FROM information_schema.referential_constraints AS rc
JOIN information_schema.table_constraints AS tc USING(constraint_catalog,constraint_schema,constraint_name)
JOIN information_schema.key_column_usage AS kcu USING(constraint_catalog,constraint_schema,constraint_name)
WHERE unique_constraint_catalog='catalog'
AND unique_constraint_schema='schema'
AND unique_constraint_name='constraint name';
Here is a version that allows querying by column name:
SELECT rc.constraint_catalog,
rc.constraint_schema||'.'||tc.table_name AS table_name,
kcu.column_name,
match_option,
update_rule,
delete_rule
FROM information_schema.referential_constraints AS rc
JOIN information_schema.table_constraints AS tc USING(constraint_catalog,constraint_schema,constraint_name)
JOIN information_schema.key_column_usage AS kcu USING(constraint_catalog,constraint_schema,constraint_name)
JOIN information_schema.key_column_usage AS ccu ON(ccu.constraint_catalog=rc.unique_constraint_catalog AND ccu.constraint_schema=rc.unique_constraint_schema AND ccu.constraint_name=rc.unique_constraint_name)
WHERE ccu.table_catalog='catalog'
AND ccu.table_schema='schema'
AND ccu.table_name='name'
AND ccu.column_name='column';
This query requires only the referenced table name and column name, and produces a result set containing both sides of the foreign key.
select confrelid::regclass, af.attname as fcol,
conrelid::regclass, a.attname as col
from pg_attribute af, pg_attribute a,
(select conrelid,confrelid,conkey[i] as conkey, confkey[i] as confkey
from (select conrelid,confrelid,conkey,confkey,
generate_series(1,array_upper(conkey,1)) as i
from pg_constraint where contype = 'f') ss) ss2
where af.attnum = confkey and af.attrelid = confrelid and
a.attnum = conkey and a.attrelid = conrelid
AND confrelid::regclass = 'my_table'::regclass AND af.attname = 'my_referenced_column';
Example result set:
confrelid | fcol | conrelid | col
----------+----------------------+---------------+-------------
my_table | my_referenced_column | some_relation | source_type
my_table | my_referenced_column | some_feature | source_type
All credit to Lane and Krogh at the PostgreSQL forum.
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2
SELECT
main_table.table_name AS main_table_table_name,
main_table.column_name AS main_table_column_name,
main_table.constraint_name AS main_table_constraint_name,
info_other_table.table_name AS info_other_table_table_name,
info_other_table.constraint_name AS info_other_table_constraint_name,
info_other_table.column_name AS info_other_table_column_name
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.CONSTRAINT_COLUMN_USAGE main_table
INNER JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS other_table
ON other_table.unique_constraint_name = main_table.constraint_name
INNER JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE info_other_table
ON info_other_table.constraint_name = other_table.constraint_name
WHERE main_table.table_name = 'MAIN_TABLE_NAME';
A simple request for recovered the names of foreign key as well as the names of the tables:
SELECT CONSTRAINT_NAME, table_name
FROM
information_schema.table_constraints
WHERE table_schema='public' and constraint_type='FOREIGN KEY'
If you use the psql client, you can simply issue the \d table_name command to see which tables reference the given table. From the linked documentation page:
\d[S+] [ pattern ]For each relation (table, view, materialized view, index, sequence, or foreign table) or composite type matching the
pattern, show all columns, their types, the tablespace (if not the default) and any special attributes such asNOT NULLor defaults. Associated indexes, constraints, rules, and triggers are also shown. For foreign tables, the associated foreign server is shown as well.