On Sat, 2006-02-25 at 16:35 -0500, Clark C. Evans wrote: > On Sat, Feb 25, 2006 at 12:51:51PM -0800, Stephan Szabo wrote: > | > > * for foreign-key and check constraints, the default names > | > > are $1, $2, etc.; it would be great if they were "upgraded" > | > > to use the default names given by primary and unique key > | > > constraints: table_uk_1stcol, table_pk > | > > | > Err... what version are you using? I get constraint names like tt_a_fkey > | > from devel, and I thought at least 8.1 does the same. > > 7.4.8, so it's a bit old -- glad to hear this made it! > > | > > * when creating a foreign key constraint on two columns, say > | > > from A (x, y) to B (x, y), if the unique index on B is (x,y) > | > > you can make a foreign key from A->B using (y,x) > | > > | > I don't understand which particular case you're complaining about, but as > | > far as I can see, we have to allow that case by the rest of the spec. > > To be clear, I'm talking about... > > CREATE TABLE x (y text, z text, PRIMARY KEY(y,z)); > CREATE TABLE a (b text, c text); > ALTER TABLE a ADD FOREIGN KEY (b, c) REFERENCES x(z, y); > > For this case, the information schema details: > > 1. the foreign key constraint as a reference to the > primary key constraint and lists the tuple (b,c) > > 2. the primary key constraint lists the keys (y,z)
I'm afraid I don't follow what the issue is. Can out point it out in the below psql output? k=# CREATE TABLE x (y text, z text, PRIMARY KEY(y,z)); NOTICE: CREATE TABLE / PRIMARY KEY will create implicit index "x_pkey" for table "x" CREATE TABLE k=# CREATE TABLE a (b text, c text); CREATE TABLE k=# ALTER TABLE a ADD FOREIGN KEY (b, c) REFERENCES x(z, y); ALTER TABLE k=# \d x Table "public.x" Column | Type | Modifiers --------+------+----------- y | text | not null z | text | not null Indexes: "x_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (y, z) k=# \d a Table "public.a" Column | Type | Modifiers --------+------+----------- b | text | c | text | Foreign-key constraints: "a_b_fkey" FOREIGN KEY (b, c) REFERENCES x(z, y) k=# insert into x values ('foo', 'bar'); INSERT 0 1 k=# insert into a values ('foo', 'bar'); ERROR: insert or update on table "a" violates foreign key constraint "a_b_fkey" DETAIL: Key (b,c)=(foo,bar) is not present in table "x". k=# insert into a values ('bar', 'foo'); INSERT 0 1 -- ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq