Constraints

Constraints

In modern database systems, ensuring data integrity and reducing redundancy is paramount. Constraints play a pivotal role, ensuring that only valid data is entered into the database upon commit. The following chapters delve deep into two fundamental types of constraints, existence and uniquness.

The existence constraint ensures the presence of specific data within the database, while the uniqueness constraint ensures that specific label-property pairs remain unique across entries.

Existence constraint

Existence constraint enforces that each node with a specific label also must have a certain property. Only one label and property can be supplied at a time.

This constraint can be enforced using the following language construct:

CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:label) ASSERT EXISTS (n.property);

To confirm that the constraint was successfully created use the following query:

SHOW CONSTRAINT INFO;

Trying to modify the database in a way that violates the constraint will yield an error.

Constraints are dropped using the DROP clause:

DROP CONSTRAINT ON (n:label) ASSERT EXISTS (n.property);

Example

If the database is used to hold basic employee information, each employee should have a first name and a last name. You can enforce this by running the following queries:

CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT EXISTS (n.first_name);
CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT EXISTS (n.last_name);

The SHOW CONSTRAINT INFO; should return the following result:

+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
| constraint type | label           | properties      |
+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
| exists          | Employee        | first_name      |
| exists          | Employee        | last_name       |
+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+

To drop the created constraints use the following queries:

DROP CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT EXISTS (n.first_name);
DROP CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT EXISTS (n.last_name);

Now, SHOW CONSTRAINT INFO; returns an empty set.

Uniqueness constraint

Uniqueness constraint enforces that each label-property pair is unique. You can also specify multiple properties when creating uniqueness constraints.

Adding a uniqueness constraint does not create a label-property index, it needs to be added manually.

The uniqueness constraint can be enforced using the following language construct:

CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:label) ASSERT n.property1, n.property2, ..., IS UNIQUE;

To confirm that the constraint was successfully created use the following query:

SHOW CONSTRAINT INFO;

Trying to modify the database in a way that violates the constraint will yield an error Unable to commit due to unique constraint violation on :Label(property).

Constraints are dropped using the DROP clause:

DROP CONSTRAINT ON (n:label) ASSERT n.property IS UNIQUE;

Example

If the database is used to hold basic employee information, each employee should have a unique id and email. You can enforce this by running the following query:

CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT n.id IS UNIQUE;
CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT n.email IS UNIQUE;

The SHOW CONSTRAINT INFO; should return the following result:

+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
| constraint type | label           | properties      |
+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
| unique          | Employee        | id              |
| unique          | Employee        | email           |
+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+

To specify multiple properties when creating uniqueness constraints, list them one after the other:

CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT n.name, n.address IS UNIQUE;

At this point, SHOW CONSTRAINT INFO; yields the following result:

+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
| constraint type | label           | properties      |
+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
| unique          | Employee        | id              |
| unique          | Employee        | email           |
| unique          | Employee        | name, address   |
+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+

This means that two employees could have the same name or the same address, but they can not have the same name and the same address.

To drop the created constraints use the following queries:

DROP CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT n.id IS UNIQUE;
DROP CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT n.email IS UNIQUE;
DROP CONSTRAINT ON (n:Employee) ASSERT n.name, n.address IS UNIQUE;

Now, SHOW CONSTRAINT INFO; returns an empty set.

Schema-related procedures

You can also modify the constraints using the schema.assert() procedure.

Recovery

Existence and unique constraints, and indexes can be recovered in parallel. To enable this behaviour, set the storage-parallel-schema-recovery configuration flag to true.