Here is my issue: (Using MySQL)
I have 2 entities called 'shops' and 'clients'. I also have a M:M table between 'clients' and 'shops' called 'clients_shops' (CakePHP naming convention). The reason I am doing it this way is that this is a SaaS application where 'clients' may have many 'shops' and 'shops'开发者_StackOverflow社区 will definitely have many 'clients'.
However, I don't want to give a shop the ability to UPDATE/DELETE a 'client' record since what really needs to happen is that the 'shop' will EDIT/DELETE that 'client' from their own records, rather than from a master 'clients' table which is managed by the 'clients'.
Anyway, using this structure a 'shop' can run a query on the 'clients_shops' table to get a list of their clients and a 'client' can run a query a get a list of their 'shops'. Good so far...
So far, the database looks like this:
table.clients
client_id (PK, AI, NN)
table.shops
shop_id (PK, AI, NN)
table.clients_shops
clients_shops_id (PK,AI,NN)
client_id (FK)
shop_id (FK)
The ORM looks like this:
shops hasMany clients_shops
clients hasMany clients_shops
So far so good (I think...) but here is my question. Let's say that there is a third table named 'trips'. The 'trips' table stores information on individual bookings whereby a 'client' will make reservations for a 'trip' that is provided by a 'shop'. This is where my brain is getting mushy. How should I set this relationship up?
Is it this way:
table.trips
trips_id (PK,AI,NN)
clients_shops_id (FK) [which would contain keys for both the shop and the client]
Or is there a better way to do this, like another table that uses clients.client_id
AND clients_shops.clients_shops_id
.
Thanks in advance to anyone that actually read this whole thing!
Unless it's required by your ORM
, you don't need a surrogate foreign key for clients/shops and everything that refers to it.
Make a composite PRIMARY KEY
instead and refer to it from elsewhere:
CREATE TABLE clients_shops
(
client_id INT NOT NULL,
shop_id INT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (client_id, shop_id)
);
CREATE TABLE trips
(
trip_id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
client_id INT NOT NULL,
shop_id INT NOT NULL,
trip_data …,
CONSTRAINT fk_trips_clients_shops
FOREIGN KEY (client_id, shop_id)
REFERENCES clients_shops
);
This model assumes that you maintain clients/shops relationships separately from the clients' transactions and not let clients buy from the shops unless they are "related".
Probably you want the relationship to appear automatically whenever a trip is ordered by a client from a shop. In this case, you only need the second table, and the first table is a mere
SELECT DISTINCT client_id, shop_id
FROM trips
Here is the Logical Diagram to handle what you are looking for. Depending on your requirements you can change the non-identying relationships (Client::Trip & Shop::Trip) to identifying relationships. If you do though I would limit it to only changing the Shop::Trip to identifying though. Also make changes to the Cardinality as you see fit.
I would probably make the trips table like this:
table.trips
trip_id (PK)
shop_id (FK to shops)
client_id (FK to clients)
other_trip_column_etc
I would not reference the m-m table clients_shops from the trips table - just reference the shop and client tables with individual foreign keys.
The clients_shops table represents the current relationship between a client and a shop. The trip should not depend on these relationships, because they could potentially change in the future, and you probably wouldn't want the trip's data to change over time - it should be a transactional record that specifies exactly what shop, client, and trip was scheduled at that given time, regardless of the current relationship between that client and shop.
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