How do I specify unique constraint for multiple columns in MySQL?

I have a MySQL table:

CREATE TABLE `content_html` (
  `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
  `id_box_elements` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
  `id_router` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
  `content` mediumtext COLLATE utf8_czech_ci NOT NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
  UNIQUE KEY `my_uniq_id` (`id_box_elements`,`id_router`)
);

and the UNIQUE KEY works just as expected, it allows multiple NULL rows of id_box_elements and id_router.

I am running MySQL 5.1.42, so probably there was some update on the issue discussed above. Fortunately it works and hopefully it will stay that way.


Have you tried this ?

UNIQUE KEY `thekey` (`user`,`email`,`address`)

To add a unique constraint, you need to use two components:

ALTER TABLE - to change the table schema and,

ADD UNIQUE - to add the unique constraint.

You then can define your new unique key with the format 'name'('column1', 'column2'...)

So for your particular issue, you could use this command:

ALTER TABLE `votes` ADD UNIQUE `unique_index`(`user`, `email`, `address`);

Multi column unique indexes do not work in MySQL if you have a NULL value in row as MySQL treats NULL as a unique value and at least currently has no logic to work around it in multi-column indexes. Yes the behavior is insane, because it limits a lot of legitimate applications of multi-column indexes, but it is what it is... As of yet, it is a bug that has been stamped with "will not fix" on the MySQL bug-track...