The following bug has been logged online: Bug reference: 2119 Logged by: Fred Pernià Email address: [EMAIL PROTECTED] PostgreSQL version: 8.02 Operating system: Suse Linux 9.1 Description: FOREIGN KEY ON DELETE RESTRICT Details:
I have 2 tables CREATE TABLE depot ( dkt_id int4 NOT NULL DEFAULT nextval('"depot_dkt_id_seq"'::text), dkt_kto_id int4 CONSTRAINT depot_pkey PRIMARY KEY (dkt_id) ) WITH OIDS; CREATE TABLE p_kto ( kto_id int4 NOT NULL DEFAULT nextval('"p_kto_kto_id_seq"'::text) ) WITH OIDS; And I have a foreign key ALTER TABLE depot ADD CONSTRAINT c_dkt_kto_id FOREIGN KEY (dkt_kto_id) REFERENCES p_kto (kto_id) ON UPDATE RESTRICT ON DELETE RESTRICT; If I delete a dataset from p_kto then is also delete the referenced sets in depot. Normaly the RESTRICT should prevents deletion. Or? Restricting and cascading deletes are the two most common options. RESTRICT prevents deletion of a referenced row. NO ACTION means that if any referencing rows still exist when the constraint is checked, an error is raised; this is the default behavior if you do not specify anything. (The essential difference between these two choices is that NO ACTION allows the check to be deferred until later in the transaction, whereas RESTRICT does not.) CASCADE specifies that when a referenced row is deleted, row(s) referencing it should be automatically deleted as well. There are two other options: SET NULL and SET DEFAULT. These cause the referencing columns to be set to nulls or default values, respectively, when the referenced row is deleted. Note that these do not excuse you from observing any constraints. For example, if an action specifies SET DEFAULT but the default value would not satisfy the foreign key, the operation will fail. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster