CHECK Constraints - Teradata Vantage

Teradata® VantageCloud Lake

Deployment
VantageCloud
Edition
Lake
Product
Teradata Vantage
Published
January 2023
Language
English (United States)
Last Update
2024-04-03
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CHECK constraints are the most general type of SQL constraint specification. Depending on its position in the CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE SQL text, a CHECK constraint can apply either to an individual column or to an entire table.

Vantage derives a table-level partitioning CHECK constraint from the partitioning expression for a partitioned table. The text for this derived constraint cannot exceed 16,000 characters. Otherwise, the system returns an error to the requestor. For more information, see Rules and Usage Notes for Partitioned Tables.

The following rules apply to all CHECK constraints.
  • You can define CHECK constraints at either the column level or the table level.
  • You can define multiple CHECK constraints for a table.
  • You can define CHECK constraints at column-level or at table-level.
  • The specified predicate for a CHECK constraint can be any simple boolean search condition.

    Subqueries, aggregate expressions, and CASE expressions are not valid search conditions for CHECK constraint definitions.

  • You cannot invoke an SQL UDF from a CHECK constraint expression.
  • You cannot specify CHECK constraints at any level for volatile tables or global temporary trace tables.
  • A combination of table-level, column-level, and WITH CHECK OPTION on view constraints can create a constraint expression that is too large to be parsed for INSERT and UPDATE statements.
  • Vantage tests CHECK constraints for character columns using the current session collation.

    Therefore, a CHECK constraint may be met for one session collation, but violated for another, even though the identical data is inserted or updated.

    The following is an example of the potential importance of this. A CHECK constraint is checked on insert and update of a base table character column, and may affect whether a sparse join index defined with that character column is updated for different session character collations, in which case different request results may occur if the index is used in a query plan compared to the case where there is no sparse join index to use.

  • Vantage considers unnamed CHECK constraints specified with identical text and case to be duplicates, and returns an error when you submit such constraints as part of a CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE statement.

    For example, the following CREATE TABLE statement is valid because the case of f1 and the case of F1 are different.

    CREATE TABLE t1 (f1 INTEGER, CHECK (f1>0), CHECK (F1>0));

    The following CREATE TABLE statement, however, is not valid because the case of the 2 unnamed f1 constraints is identical. This request returns an error to the requestor.

    CREATE TABLE t1 (f1 INTEGER, CHECK (f1>0), CHECK (f1>0));
  • The principal difference between defining a CHECK constraint at column-level or at table-level is that column-level constraints cannot reference other columns in their table, while table-level constraints, by definition, must reference other columns in their table.
  • Columns defined with a data type from the following list cannot be a component of a CHECK constraint.
    • BLOB
    • CLOB
    • UDT
    • ARRAY
    • VARRAY
    • Period
    • Geospatial
  • You cannot define a CHECK constraint on a row-level security constraint column of a row-level security-protected table.
  • 1If a row-level security-protected table is defined with 1 or more CHECK constraints, the enforcement of those constraints does not run any UDF security policies that are defined for the table. The enforcement of the CHECK constraint applies to the entire table. Therefore, CHECK constraints apply to all of the rows in a table, not only to the rows that are user-visible.
The following rules apply only to column-level CHECK constraints.
  • You can specify multiple column-level CHECK constraints on a single column.

    If you define more than one unnamed distinct CHECK constraint for a column, Vantage combines these constraints into a single column-level constraint.

    However, Vantage handles each named column-level CHECK constraint separately, as a table-level named CHECK constraint.

  • A column-level CHECK constraint cannot reference any other columns in its table.
The following rules apply only to table-level CHECK constraints.
  • A table-level constraint typically references at least 2 columns from its table.
  • Table-level CHECK constraint predicates cannot reference columns from other tables.
  • You can define a maximum of 100 table-level constraints for a table at one time.