Constraints

TiDB supports almost the same constraints as MySQL.

NOT NULL

NOT NULL constraints supported by TiDB are the same as those supported by MySQL.

For example:

CREATE TABLE users ( id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT, age INT NOT NULL, last_login TIMESTAMP );
INSERT INTO users (id,age,last_login) VALUES (NULL,123,NOW());
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.02 sec)
INSERT INTO users (id,age,last_login) VALUES (NULL,NULL,NOW());
ERROR 1048 (23000): Column 'age' cannot be null
INSERT INTO users (id,age,last_login) VALUES (NULL,123,NULL);
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.03 sec)
  • The first INSERT statement succeeds because it is possible to assign NULL to the AUTO_INCREMENT column. TiDB generates sequence numbers automatically.
  • The second INSERT statement fails because the age column is defined as NOT NULL.
  • The third INSERT statement succeeds because the last_login column is not explicitly defined as NOT NULL. NULL values ​​are allowed by default.

CHECK

TiDB parses but ignores CHECK constraints. This is MySQL 5.7 compatible behavior.

For example:

DROP TABLE IF EXISTS users; CREATE TABLE users ( id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT, username VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL, UNIQUE KEY (username), CONSTRAINT min_username_length CHECK (CHARACTER_LENGTH(username) >=4) ); INSERT INTO users (username) VALUES ('a'); SELECT * FROM users;

UNIQUE KEY

Depending on the value of tidb_constraint_check_in_place, TiDB might check UNIQUE constraints lazily. This helps improve performance by batching network access.

For example:

DROP TABLE IF EXISTS users; CREATE TABLE users ( id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT, username VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL, UNIQUE KEY (username) ); INSERT INTO users (username) VALUES ('dave'), ('sarah'), ('bill');

With the default of tidb_constraint_check_in_place=0:

BEGIN; INSERT INTO users (username) VALUES ('jane'), ('chris'), ('bill');
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) Query OK, 3 rows affected (0.00 sec) Records: 3 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
INSERT INTO users (username) VALUES ('steve'),('elizabeth');
Query OK, 2 rows affected (0.00 sec) Records: 2 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
COMMIT;
ERROR 1062 (23000): Duplicate entry 'bill' for key 'username'

In this second example, the unique check was delayed until the transaction is committed. This resulted in a duplicate key error, because the value bill was already present.

When tidb_constraint_check_in_place=1, the unique constraint is checked when the statement is executed.

For example:

DROP TABLE IF EXISTS users; CREATE TABLE users ( id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT, username VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL, UNIQUE KEY (username) ); INSERT INTO users (username) VALUES ('dave'), ('sarah'), ('bill');
SET tidb_constraint_check_in_place = 1;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
BEGIN;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
INSERT INTO users (username) VALUES ('jane'), ('chris'), ('bill');
ERROR 1062 (23000): Duplicate entry 'bill' for key 'username' ..

The first INSERT statement caused a duplicate key error. This causes additional network communication overhead and might reduce the throughput of INSERT operations.

PRIMARY KEY

Like MySQL, primary key constraints contain unique constraints, that is, creating a primary key constraint is equivalent to having a unique constraint. In addition, other primary key constraints of TiDB are also similar to those of MySQL.

For example:

CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.12 sec)
CREATE TABLE t2 (a INT NULL PRIMARY KEY);
ERROR 1171 (42000): All parts of a PRIMARY KEY must be NOT NULL; if you need NULL in a key, use UNIQUE instead
CREATE TABLE t3 (a INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, b INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY);
ERROR 1068 (42000): Multiple primary key defined
CREATE TABLE t4 (a INT NOT NULL, b INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (a,b));
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.10 sec)
  • Table t2 failed to be created, because column a is defined as the primary key and does not allow NULL values.
  • Table t3 failed to be created, because a table can only have one primary key.
  • Table t4 was created successfully, because even though there can be only one primary key, TiDB supports defining multiple columns as the composite primary key.

In addition to the rules above, by default, TiDB has an additional restriction that once a table is successfully created, its primary key cannot be changed. If you need to add or remove the primary key, set alter-primary-key to true in the TiDB configuration file, and restart the TiDB instance to make it effective.

When the feature of adding or deleting the primary key is enabled, TiDB allows adding the primary key to or deleting the primary key from the table. However, if a table with an integer type primary key has been created before the feature is enabled, you cannot delete its primary key constraint even when you enable the adding or deleting primary key feature.

FOREIGN KEY

TiDB supports creating FOREIGN KEY constraints in DDL commands.

For example:

CREATE TABLE users ( id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT, doc JSON ); CREATE TABLE orders ( id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT, user_id INT NOT NULL, doc JSON, FOREIGN KEY fk_user_id (user_id) REFERENCES users(id) );
SELECT table_name, column_name, constraint_name, referenced_table_name, referenced_column_name FROM information_schema.key_column_usage WHERE table_name IN ('users', 'orders');
+------------+-------------+-----------------+-----------------------+------------------------+ | table_name | column_name | constraint_name | referenced_table_name | referenced_column_name | +------------+-------------+-----------------+-----------------------+------------------------+ | users | id | PRIMARY | NULL | NULL | | orders | id | PRIMARY | NULL | NULL | | orders | user_id | fk_user_id | users | id | +------------+-------------+-----------------+-----------------------+------------------------+ 3 rows in set (0.00 sec)

TiDB also supports the DROP FOREIGN KEY and ADD FOREIGN KEY syntax via the ALTER TABLE command.

ALTER TABLE orders DROP FOREIGN KEY fk_user_id; ALTER TABLE orders ADD FOREIGN KEY fk_user_id (user_id) REFERENCES users(id);

Notes

  • TiDB supports foreign keys to avoid errors caused by this syntax when you migrate data from other databases to TiDB.

    However, TiDB does not perform constraint checking on foreign keys in DML statements. For example, even if there is no record with id=123 in the users table, the following transactions can be submitted successfully.

    START TRANSACTION; INSERT INTO orders (user_id, doc) VALUES (123, NULL); COMMIT;