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What's the difference in a MySQL FK between RESTRICT and NO ACTION? From the doc they seem exactly the same. Is this the case? If so, why have both?

3 Answers 3

59

From MySQL Documentation: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/create-table-foreign-keys.html

Some database systems have deferred checks, and NO ACTION is a deferred check. In MySQL, foreign key constraints are checked immediately, so NO ACTION is the same as RESTRICT.

21

It is to comply with standard SQL syntax. Like the manual says: (emphasis mine)

NO ACTION: A keyword from standard SQL. In MySQL, equivalent to RESTRICT. The MySQL Server rejects the delete or update operation for the parent table if there is a related foreign key value in the referenced table. Some database systems have deferred checks, and NO ACTION is a deferred check. In MySQL, foreign key constraints are checked immediately, so NO ACTION is the same as RESTRICT.

18

They are identical in MySQL.

In the SQL 2003 standard there are 5 different referential actions:

CASCADE
RESTRICT
NO ACTION
SET NULL
SET DEFAULT

The difference between NO ACTION and RESTRICT is that according to the standard, NO ACTION is deferred while RESTRICT acts immediately.

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