self referencing table structure and constraints

Started by Matthew Hixsonover 21 years ago3 messagesgeneral
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#1Matthew Hixson
hixson@poindextrose.org

I have a categories table that contains a FK to another category in the
same table, creating a hierarchy. At the very top is this row:

category_id | name | description | parent_id
-------------+------+-------------------------+-----------
1 | ROOT | The top level category. | 0

There is no record with category_id 0 because ROOT is at the top of the
tree. I'd like to set up a constraint on this table so that every
category has to have a parent_id and it would be impossible to delete a
category if it had subcategories. The problem is that this root
category violates that constraint. Is there a way to setup the
constraint so that it constrains every record except for forcing the
root category to point at a real parent category?
I thought of pointing ROOT to itself, but since we have some
recursive code that starts at a given category id and moves up the tree
it will hit the ROOT category and loop forever. I'd like to fix this
by constraining the database so that even working from psql it would be
difficult to damage this table by hand.
Are there any widely used techniques for dealing with this type of
constraint?
Thanks,
-M@

#2Stephan Szabo
sszabo@megazone23.bigpanda.com
In reply to: Matthew Hixson (#1)
Re: self referencing table structure and constraints

On Thu, 23 Sep 2004, Matthew Hixson wrote:

I have a categories table that contains a FK to another category in the
same table, creating a hierarchy. At the very top is this row:

category_id | name | description | parent_id
-------------+------+-------------------------+-----------
1 | ROOT | The top level category. | 0

There is no record with category_id 0 because ROOT is at the top of the
tree. I'd like to set up a constraint on this table so that every
category has to have a parent_id and it would be impossible to delete a
category if it had subcategories. The problem is that this root
category violates that constraint. Is there a way to setup the
constraint so that it constrains every record except for forcing the
root category to point at a real parent category?

Well, to simply have the root category not error, you could use NULL for
the parent_id if you're using a foreign key. However, it sounds like your
full problem is more complicated.

If you want to force that there always exists exactly 1 such row, it's
harder. Forcing that there's no more than 1 should be possible without
writing triggers (maybe a unique index on ((1)) where parent_id is null)
but I'm not sure how else to guarantee that there's at least 1 besides a
trigger.

I thought of pointing ROOT to itself, but since we have some
recursive code that starts at a given category id and moves up the tree
it will hit the ROOT category and loop forever. I'd like to fix this
by constraining the database so that even working from psql it would be
difficult to damage this table by hand.

Well, in that case you also may need to watch out for cycles. You can do
this with triggers, but handling concurrent changes might get tricky.

#3Matthew Hixson
hixson@poindextrose.org
In reply to: Stephan Szabo (#2)
Re: self referencing table structure and constraints

On Sep 23, 2004, at 6:36 PM, Stephan Szabo wrote:

On Thu, 23 Sep 2004, Matthew Hixson wrote:

I have a categories table that contains a FK to another category in
the
same table, creating a hierarchy. At the very top is this row:

category_id | name | description | parent_id
-------------+------+-------------------------+-----------
1 | ROOT | The top level category. | 0

There is no record with category_id 0 because ROOT is at the top of
the
tree. I'd like to set up a constraint on this table so that every
category has to have a parent_id and it would be impossible to delete
a
category if it had subcategories. The problem is that this root
category violates that constraint. Is there a way to setup the
constraint so that it constrains every record except for forcing the
root category to point at a real parent category?

Well, to simply have the root category not error, you could use NULL
for
the parent_id if you're using a foreign key.

Okay, now I just feel silly. For some reason I was thinking that the
parent id couldn't be NULL either.
Thanks, this is exactly what I needed.
-M@