392

I have 2 tables: T1 and T2, they are existing tables with data. We have a one to many relationship between T1 and T2. How do I alter the table definitions to perform cascading delete in SQL Server when a record from T1 is deleted, all associated records in T2 also deleted.

The foreign constraint is in place between them. I don't want to drop the tables or create a trigger to do the deletion for T2. For example, when I delete an employee, all the review record should be gone, too.

T1 - Employee,

Employee ID      
Name
Status

T2 - Performance Reviews,

Employee ID - 2009 Review
Employee ID - 2010 Review

8 Answers 8

433

To add "Cascade delete" to an existing foreign key in SQL Server Management Studio:

First, select your Foreign Key, and open it's "DROP and Create To.." in a new Query window.

enter image description here

Then, just add ON DELETE CASCADE to the ADD CONSTRAINT command:

n And hit the "Execute" button to run this query.

By the way, to get a list of your Foreign Keys, and see which ones have "Cascade delete" turned on, you can run this script:

SELECT 
   OBJECT_NAME(f.parent_object_id) AS 'Table name',
   COL_NAME(fc.parent_object_id,fc.parent_column_id) AS 'Field name',
   delete_referential_action_desc AS 'On Delete'
FROM sys.foreign_keys AS f,
     sys.foreign_key_columns AS fc,
     sys.tables t 
WHERE f.OBJECT_ID = fc.constraint_object_id
AND t.OBJECT_ID = fc.referenced_object_id
ORDER BY 1

And if you ever find that you can't DROP a particular table due to a Foreign Key constraint, but you can't work out which FK is causing the problem, then you can run this command:

sp_help 'TableName'

The SQL in that article lists all FKs which reference a particular table.

Hope all this helps.

Apologies for the long finger. I was just trying to make a point.

4
  • 9
    I've just clicked through to here from a search engine results page's "Images for on delete cascade" section, purely because of the finger. What is up with that thing.
    – Alex
    Nov 12, 2020 at 19:31
  • 1
    Thanks for mentioning sp_help, never seen this before, but obviously very useful! Sep 23, 2021 at 13:44
  • 2
    I'm unable to extend my index finger with my thumb in that position... Impressive. Dec 30, 2022 at 17:24
  • 1
    I know the topic is kinda old but instead of using specific query to check which Foreign Key has cascade delete enabled, you can just select table name in your query tab and press LAlt+F1, then in result window look for constraints and column called 'delete_action', if cascade it enabled it will simply have 'Cascade' value.
    – Tafari
    Jan 30 at 11:27
411

You will need to,

  • Drop the existing foreign key constraint,
  • Add a new one with the ON DELETE CASCADE setting enabled.

Something like:

ALTER TABLE dbo.T2
   DROP CONSTRAINT FK_T1_T2   -- or whatever it's called

ALTER TABLE dbo.T2
   ADD CONSTRAINT FK_T1_T2_Cascade
   FOREIGN KEY (EmployeeID) REFERENCES dbo.T1(EmployeeID) ON DELETE CASCADE
3
  • 4
    My team and I just did this. We had to DROP our constraints and re add them. This worked for us. May 10, 2018 at 15:23
  • 2
    How is this in favor of a hard delete? A soft delete would never have a constraint issue. Seems quite the opposite to me.
    – Maxx
    Dec 4, 2018 at 19:53
  • 3
    @Maxx In hard delete, you delete one record and don't need to worry about orphaned registers, whereas in soft delete you need to do it manually. May 21, 2019 at 16:01
181

You can do this with SQL Server Management Studio.

→ Right click the table design and go to Relationships and choose the foreign key on the left-side pane and in the right-side pane, expand the menu "INSERT and UPDATE specification" and select "Cascade" as Delete Rule.

SQL Server Management Studio

5
  • hi, what is the difference between the 4, does turning cascade on make it easy to delete all data in a table. How can I view all the dependencies/fk keys on this table, not from this table. Even after deleting all FK's I still get an error
    – aggie
    Nov 30, 2015 at 19:29
  • @aggie - You can check the dependencies by - Right click the table -> "View Dependencies" Also sql server will give you the detailed error with table name and column name like this "The DELETE statement conflicted with the REFERENCE constraint "FK_Child1_Parent1". The conflict occurred in database "TESTDB", table "dbo.Child1", column 'Parent1ID'." Dec 1, 2015 at 5:59
  • @aggie - Also the 4th case "Set Default" is, You have to set default constraint in Foreign Key column , when we delete the parent then the default value will be replaced in child tables. (Note: The default value must match with parent table.) For more info visit mssqltips.com/sqlservertip/2365/… Dec 1, 2015 at 6:18
  • This is very helpful. I wonder, why is there not an Insert Rule? In other words, when I add a row to T1, I want the corresponding entry in T2 to be created automatically.
    – Robert M.
    Nov 21, 2016 at 19:15
  • @RobertM. Because that makes no sense. How would it know what values to INSERT? You may be able to use INSERT triggers to generate the children rows, try researching that. Apr 26, 2017 at 17:55
53

Use something like

ALTER TABLE T2
ADD CONSTRAINT fk_employee
FOREIGN KEY (employeeID)
REFERENCES T1 (employeeID)
ON DELETE CASCADE;

Fill in the correct column names and you should be set. As mark_s correctly stated, if you have already a foreign key constraint in place, you maybe need to delete the old one first and then create the new one.

2
  • 41
    @marc_s - actually, you can add a second foreign key against exactly the same columns on both sides, and it will work correctly. If working in a production environment with no downtime, it may be preferable to introduce the new FK with cascade, and then drop the older FK, rather than leave a window on the table when no FK is in place. (Just tested on SQL 2008) Jun 7, 2011 at 7:50
  • This is correct. I tried this, and it works. There is no need to drop the first foreign key constraints. Thanks for the reply. Jun 8, 2011 at 3:39
25

ON DELETE CASCADE
It specifies that the child data is deleted when the parent data is deleted.

CREATE TABLE products
( product_id INT PRIMARY KEY,
  product_name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
  category VARCHAR(25)
);

CREATE TABLE inventory
( inventory_id INT PRIMARY KEY,
  product_id INT NOT NULL,
  quantity INT,
  min_level INT,
  max_level INT,
  CONSTRAINT fk_inv_product_id
    FOREIGN KEY (product_id)
    REFERENCES products (product_id)
    ON DELETE CASCADE
);

For this foreign key, we have specified the ON DELETE CASCADE clause which tells SQL Server to delete the corresponding records in the child table when the data in the parent table is deleted. So in this example, if a product_id value is deleted from the products table, the corresponding records in the inventory table that use this product_id will also be deleted.

16

First To Enable ONCascade property:

1.Drop the existing foreign key constraint

2.add a new one with the ON DELETE CASCADE setting enabled

Ex:

IF EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM sys.foreign_keys WHERE parent_object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'dbo.Response'))
 BEGIN 

ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Response] DROP CONSTRAINT [FK_Response_Request]  

ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Response] WITH CHECK ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_Response_Request]  FOREIGN KEY([RequestId])
REFERENCES [dbo].[Request] ([RequestId])
ON DELETE CASCADE
END

ELSE

 BEGIN 
 ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Response] WITH CHECK ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_Response_Request]  FOREIGN KEY([RequestId])
REFERENCES [dbo].[Request] ([RequestId])
ON DELETE CASCADE
END

Second To Disable ONCascade property:

1.Drop the existing foreign key constraint

2.Add a new one with the ON DELETE NO ACTION setting enabled

Ex:

IF EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM sys.foreign_keys WHERE parent_object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'dbo.Response'))
 BEGIN 
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Response] DROP CONSTRAINT [FK_Response_Request]  

ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Response] WITH CHECK ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_Response_Request]  FOREIGN KEY([RequestId])
REFERENCES [dbo].[Request] ([RequestId])
ON DELETE CASCADE
END

ELSE

 BEGIN 
 ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Response] WITH CHECK ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_Response_Request]  FOREIGN KEY([RequestId])
REFERENCES [dbo].[Request] ([RequestId])
ON DELETE NO ACTION 
END
-5

If the one to many relationship is from T1 to T2 then it doesn't represent a function and therefore cannot be used to deduce or infer an inverse function that guarantees the resulting T2 value doesn't omit tuples of T1 join T2 that are deductively valid, because there is no deductively valid inverse function. ( representing functions was the purpose of primary keys. ) The answer in SQL think is yes you can do it. The answer in relational think is no you can't do it. See points of ambiguity in Codd 1970. The relationship would have to be many-to-one from T1 to T2.

-15

I think you cannot just delete the tables property what if this is actual production data, just delete the contents that dont affect the table schema.

1
  • 1
    This is re-iterating OP's point of not wanting to drop the table, OP wants to find a way to Implement cascade delete for an existing table. If you want to question the validity of such a request it should be done as a comment on the original post. If you don't have enough rep, then provide a solution to OPs issue. Mar 9, 2021 at 2:19

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