Yes, you can enforce the constraint only when the value is not NULL. This can be easily tested with the following example:
CREATE DATABASE t;
USE t;
CREATE TABLE parent (id INT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
) ENGINE=INNODB;
CREATE TABLE child (id INT NULL,
parent_id INT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (parent_id) REFERENCES parent(id)
) ENGINE=INNODB;
INSERT INTO child (id, parent_id) VALUES (1, NULL);
-- Query OK, 1 row affected (0.01 sec)
INSERT INTO child (id, parent_id) VALUES (2, 1);
-- ERROR 1452 (23000): Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key
-- constraint fails (`t/child`, CONSTRAINT `child_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY
-- (`parent_id`) REFERENCES `parent` (`id`))
The first insert will pass because we insert a NULL in the parent_id
. The second insert fails because of the foreign key constraint, since we tried to insert a value that does not exist in the parent
table.
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