I am writing a c# unit test that validates string properties for an ORM class against the target database, always SQL 2008, and the class that the data maps to.
Checking that a specified foreign key is valid in the DB is easy:
static private bool ConstraintExsits(string table, string column, ConstraintType constraintType)
{
string constraintTypeWhereClause;
switch (constraintType)
{
case ConstraintType.PrimaryKey:
constraintTypeWhereClause = "PRIMARY KEY";
break;
case ConstraintType.ForeignKey:
constraintTypeWhereClause = "FOREIGN KEY";
break;
default:
throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException("constraintType");
}
var cmd = new SqlCommand(
@"SELECT a.CONSTRAINT_NAME
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS a
JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.CONSTRAINT_COLUMN_USAGE b on a.CONSTRAINT_NAME = b.CONSTRAINT_NAME
WHERE a.TABLE_NAME = @table AND b.COLUMN_NAME = @column AND a.CONSTRAINT_TYPE = '" + constraintTypeWhereClause + "'",
Connection);
cmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@table", table.Trim('[').Trim(']'));
cmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@column", column.Trim('[').Trim(']'));
return !string.IsNullOrEmpty((string)cmd.ExecuteScalar());
}
Now take the following Foreign Key Relationships:
My question: How do I query the relationship from the 'Primary/Unique Key Base Table' and 'Primary/Unique Key Columns' side? I开发者_开发技巧 cannot see these referenced in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA views.
Thanks J
This is the SQL that I was after!
SELECT
FK_Table = FK.TABLE_NAME,
FK_Column = CU.COLUMN_NAME,
PK_Table = PK.TABLE_NAME,
PK_Column = PT.COLUMN_NAME,
Constraint_Name = C.CONSTRAINT_NAME
FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS C
INNER JOIN
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS FK
ON C.CONSTRAINT_NAME = FK.CONSTRAINT_NAME
INNER JOIN
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS PK
ON C.UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_NAME = PK.CONSTRAINT_NAME
INNER JOIN
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE CU
ON C.CONSTRAINT_NAME = CU.CONSTRAINT_NAME
INNER JOIN
(
SELECT
i1.TABLE_NAME, i2.COLUMN_NAME
FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS i1
INNER JOIN
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE i2
ON i1.CONSTRAINT_NAME = i2.CONSTRAINT_NAME
WHERE i1.CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'PRIMARY KEY'
) PT
ON PT.TABLE_NAME = PK.TABLE_NAME
Jaimie's answer fails to correctly return all the foreign keys if the referred table (the table that the foreign key is looking against) has a unique key because it uses the UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_NAME column. I suggest:
SELECT
FK = fk.name,
FKTable = QUOTENAME(OBJECT_SCHEMA_NAME(fkcol.[object_id]))
+ '.' + QUOTENAME(OBJECT_NAME(fkcol.[object_id])),
FKCol = fkcol.name,
' references => ',
PKTable = QUOTENAME(OBJECT_SCHEMA_NAME(pkcol.[object_id]))
+ '.' + QUOTENAME(OBJECT_NAME(pkcol.[object_id])),
PKCol = pkcol.name
FROM sys.foreign_keys AS fk
INNER JOIN sys.foreign_key_columns AS fkc
ON fk.[object_id] = fkc.constraint_object_id
INNER JOIN sys.columns AS fkcol
ON fkc.parent_object_id = fkcol.[object_id]
AND fkc.parent_column_id = fkcol.column_id
INNER JOIN sys.columns AS pkcol
ON fkc.referenced_object_id = pkcol.[object_id]
AND fkc.referenced_column_id = pkcol.column_id
ORDER BY fkc.constraint_column_id;
Source:
- The case against INFORMATION_SCHEMA views
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