The KEY_COLUMN_USAGE table describes
which key columns have constraints.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | def | |
CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | ||
CONSTRAINT_NAME | ||
TABLE_CATALOG | def | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
TABLE_NAME | ||
COLUMN_NAME | ||
ORDINAL_POSITION | ||
POSITION_IN_UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT | ||
REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME | ||
REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME |
Notes:
If the constraint is a foreign key, then this is the column of the foreign key, not the column that the foreign key references.
The value of ORDINAL_POSITION is the
column's position within the constraint, not the column's
position within the table. Column positions are numbered
beginning with 1.
The value of POSITION_IN_UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT
is NULL for unique and primary-key
constraints. For foreign-key constraints, it is the ordinal
position in key of the table that is being referenced.
Suppose that there are two tables name t1
and t3 that have the following definitions:
CREATE TABLE t1
(
s1 INT,
s2 INT,
s3 INT,
PRIMARY KEY(s3)
) ENGINE=InnoDB;
CREATE TABLE t3
(
s1 INT,
s2 INT,
s3 INT,
KEY(s1),
CONSTRAINT CO FOREIGN KEY (s2) REFERENCES t1(s3)
) ENGINE=InnoDB;
For those two tables, the
KEY_COLUMN_USAGE table has two
rows:
One row with CONSTRAINT_NAME =
'PRIMARY',
TABLE_NAME = 't1',
COLUMN_NAME = 's3',
ORDINAL_POSITION =
1,
POSITION_IN_UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT =
NULL.
One row with CONSTRAINT_NAME =
'CO', TABLE_NAME =
't3', COLUMN_NAME =
's2',
ORDINAL_POSITION =
1,
POSITION_IN_UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT =
1.