For efficiency, InnoDB requires an index to exist on
foreign key columns so that UPDATE and
DELETE operations on a “parent”
table can easily check for the existence or non-existence of
corresponding rows in the “child” table. To ensure
that there is an appropriate index for such checks, MySQL will
sometimes implicitly create or drop such indexes as a side-effect
of CREATE TABLE, CREATE
INDEX, and ALTER TABLE
statements.
When you explicitly DROP an index,
InnoDB will check that an index suitable for referential
integrity checking will still exist following the
DROP of the index. InnoDB will prevent you
from dropping the last usable index for enforcing any given
referential constraint. Users have been confused by this
behavior, as reported in MySQL Bug#21395.
In releases prior to InnoDB Plugin 1.0.2, attempts to drop the only usable index would result in an error message such as
ERROR 1025 (HY000): Error on rename of './db2/#sql-18eb_3' to './db2/foo'(errno: 150)
Beginning with InnoDB Plugin 1.0.2, this error condition is reported with a more friendly message:
ERROR 1553 (HY000): Cannot drop index 'fooIdx':
needed in a foreign key constraint
As a related matter, because all user data in InnoDB is
maintained in the so-called “clustered index” (or
primary key index), InnoDB ensures that there is such an index
for every table, even if the user does not declare an explicit
PRIMARY KEY. In such cases, InnoDB will
create an implicit clustered index using the first columns of the
table that have been declared UNIQUE and
NOT NULL.
When the InnoDB Plugin is used with a MySQL version
earlier than 5.1.29, an attempt to drop an implicit clustered
index (the first UNIQUE NOT NULL index) will
fail if the table does not contain a PRIMARY
KEY. This has been reported as MySQL Bug#31233. Attempts to use the DROP INDEX or ALTER TABLE
command to drop such an index will generate this error:
ERROR 42000: This table type requires a primary key
Beginning with MySQL 5.1.29 when using the
InnoDB Plugin, attempts to drop such an index will copy the
table, rebuilding the index using a different UNIQUE NOT
NULL group of columns or a system-generated key. Note
that all indexes will be re-created by copying the table, as
described in Section 2.3, “Implementation”.
In those versions of MySQL that are affected by this bug,
one way to change an index of this type is to create a new table
and copy the data into it using INSERT INTO
, and then
newtable SELECT * FROM
oldtableDROP the old table and rename the new
table.
However, if there are existing tables with references to the
table whose index you are dropping, you will first need to use the
ALTER TABLE command to remove foreign key references from or to
other tables. Unfortunately, MySQL does not support dropping or
creating FOREIGN KEY constraints, even though dropping a
constraint would be trivial. Therefore, if you use ALTER TABLE
to add or remove a REFERENCES constraint, the
child table will be copied, rather than using “Fast Index
Creation”.
This is the User’s Guide for InnoDB Plugin 1.0.6 for MySQL 5.1, generated on March 4, 2010 (rev 673:680M).
