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genfkey.READMED03-May-20246.3 KiB138104

genfkey.testD03-May-20248 KiB355335

lemon.cD03-May-2024144.4 KiB4,9293,903

lempar.cD03-May-202427.1 KiB851476

mkkeywordhash.cD03-May-202421.4 KiB603531

mkopts.tclD03-May-20241.1 KiB5242

mkspeedsql.tclD03-May-20245.4 KiB238134

mksqlite3c.tclD03-May-20247.8 KiB316236

mksqlite3h.tclD03-May-20243 KiB10446

mksqlite3internalh.tclD03-May-20243.8 KiB14791

omittest.tclD03-May-20248.6 KiB287220

opcodeDoc.awkD03-May-2024507 2420

restore_jrnl.tclD03-May-20246.3 KiB234150

rollback-test.cD03-May-20244.3 KiB156136

shell1.testD03-May-202421.9 KiB715650

shell2.testD03-May-20245.1 KiB223198

shell3.testD03-May-20242.9 KiB125109

shell4.testD03-May-20243 KiB130112

shell5.testD03-May-20246.7 KiB244215

showdb.cD03-May-202414.7 KiB558482

showjournal.cD03-May-20243.5 KiB140115

showwal.cD03-May-20249.2 KiB356299

soak1.tclD03-May-20242.7 KiB10475

space_used.tclD03-May-20243.3 KiB11285

spaceanal.tclD03-May-202420.9 KiB627420

speedtest.tclD03-May-20246.7 KiB276207

speedtest16.cD03-May-20244.7 KiB170121

speedtest2.tclD03-May-20245.1 KiB208165

speedtest8.cD03-May-20247.1 KiB261202

speedtest8inst1.cD03-May-20245.3 KiB217156

split-sqlite3c.tclD03-May-20242 KiB8354

vdbe-compress.tclD03-May-20244.4 KiB12675

genfkey.README

1
2OVERVIEW
3
4  The SQLite library is capable of parsing SQL foreign key constraints
5  supplied as part of CREATE TABLE statements, but it does not actually
6  implement them. However, most of the features of foreign keys may be
7  implemented using SQL triggers, which SQLite does support. This text
8  file describes a feature of the SQLite shell tool (sqlite3) that
9  extracts foreign key definitions from an existing SQLite database and
10  creates the set of CREATE TRIGGER statements required to implement
11  the foreign key constraints.
12
13CAPABILITIES
14
15  An SQL foreign key is a constraint that requires that each row in
16  the "child" table corresponds to a row in the "parent" table. For
17  example, the following schema:
18
19    CREATE TABLE parent(a, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(a, b));
20    CREATE TABLE child(d, e, f, FOREIGN KEY(d, e) REFERENCES parent(a, b));
21
22  implies that for each row in table "child", there must be a row in
23  "parent" for which the expression (child.d==parent.a AND child.e==parent.b)
24  is true. The columns in the parent table are required to be either the
25  primary key columns or subject to a UNIQUE constraint. There is no such
26  requirement for the columns of the child table.
27
28  At this time, all foreign keys are implemented as if they were
29  "MATCH NONE", even if the declaration specified "MATCH PARTIAL" or
30  "MATCH FULL". "MATCH NONE" means that if any of the key columns in
31  the child table are NULL, then there is no requirement for a corresponding
32  row in the parent table. So, taking this into account, the expression that
33  must be true for every row of the child table in the above example is
34  actually:
35
36      (child.d IS NULL) OR
37      (child.e IS NULL) OR
38      (child.d==parent.a AND child.e==parent.b)
39
40  Attempting to insert or update a row in the child table so that the
41  affected row violates this constraint results in an exception being
42  thrown.
43
44  The effect of attempting to delete or update a row in the parent table
45  so that the constraint becomes untrue for one or more rows in the child
46  table depends on the "ON DELETE" or "ON UPDATE" actions specified as
47  part of the foreign key definition, respectively. Three different actions
48  are supported: "RESTRICT" (the default), "CASCADE" and "SET NULL". SQLite
49  will also parse the "SET DEFAULT" action, but this is not implemented
50  and "RESTRICT" is used instead.
51
52    RESTRICT: Attempting to update or delete a row in the parent table so
53              that the constraint becomes untrue for one or more rows in
54              the child table is not allowed. An exception is thrown.
55
56    CASCADE:  Instead of throwing an exception, all corresponding child table
57              rows are either deleted (if the parent row is being deleted)
58              or updated to match the new parent key values (if the parent
59              row is being updated).
60
61    SET NULL: Instead of throwing an exception, the foreign key fields of
62              all corresponding child table rows are set to NULL.
63
64LIMITATIONS
65
66  Apart from those limitiations described above:
67
68    * Implicit mapping to composite primary keys is not supported. If
69      a parent table has a composite primary key, then any child table
70      that refers to it must explicitly map each column. For example, given
71      the following definition of table "parent":
72
73        CREATE TABLE parent(a, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(a, b));
74
75      only the first of the following two definitions of table "child"
76      is supported:
77
78        CREATE TABLE child(d, e, f, FOREIGN KEY(d, e) REFERENCES parent(a, b));
79        CREATE TABLE child(d, e, f, FOREIGN KEY(d, e) REFERENCES parent);
80
81      An implicit reference to a composite primary key is detected as an
82      error when the program is run (see below).
83
84    * SQLite does not support recursive triggers, and therefore this program
85      does not support recursive CASCADE or SET NULL foreign key
86      relationships. If the parent and the child tables of a CASCADE or
87      SET NULL foreign key are the same table, the generated triggers will
88      malfunction. This is also true if the recursive foreign key constraint
89      is indirect (for example if table A references table B which references
90      table A with a CASCADE or SET NULL foreign key constraint).
91
92      Recursive CASCADE or SET NULL foreign key relationships are *not*
93      detected as errors when the program is run. Buyer beware.
94
95USAGE
96
97  The functionality is accessed through an sqlite3 shell tool "dot-command":
98
99    .genfkey ?--no-drop? ?--ignore-errors? ?--exec?
100
101  When this command is run, it first checks the schema of the open SQLite
102  database for foreign key related errors or inconsistencies. For example,
103  a foreign key that refers to a parent table that does not exist, or
104  a foreign key that refers to columns in a parent table that are not
105  guaranteed to be unique. If such errors are found and the --ignore-errors
106  option was not present, a message for each one is printed to stderr and
107  no further processing takes place.
108
109  If errors are found and the --ignore-errors option is passed, then
110  no error messages are printed. No "CREATE TRIGGER" statements are generated
111  for foriegn-key definitions that contained errors, they are silently
112  ignored by subsequent processing.
113
114  All triggers generated by this command have names that match the pattern
115  "genfkey*". Unless the --no-drop option is specified, then the program
116  also generates a "DROP TRIGGER" statement for each trigger that exists
117  in the database with a name that matches this pattern. This allows the
118  program to be used to upgrade a database schema for which foreign key
119  triggers have already been installed (i.e. after new tables are created
120  or existing tables dropped).
121
122  Finally, a series of SQL trigger definitions (CREATE TRIGGER statements)
123  that implement the foreign key constraints found in the database schema are
124  generated.
125
126  If the --exec option was passed, then all generated SQL is immediately
127  executed on the database. Otherwise, the generated SQL strings are output
128  in the same way as the results of SELECT queries are. Normally, this means
129  they will be printed to stdout, but this can be configured using other
130  dot-commands (i.e. ".output").
131
132  The simplest way to activate the foriegn key definitions in a database
133  is simply to open it using the shell tool and enter the command
134  ".genfkey --exec":
135
136    sqlite> .genfkey --exec
137
138