Table relationships

Table relationships define how rows can be related to each other in the database. At the simplest level, adding a lookup column to a table creates a new 1:N (one-to-many) relationship between the two tables and lets you put that lookup column in a form. With the lookup column, users can associate multiple child rows of that table to a single parent table row.

Beyond simply defining how rows can be related to other rows, 1:N table relationships also provide data to address the following questions:

  • When I delete a row, should any rows related to that row also be deleted?
  • When I assign a row, do I also need to assign all rows related to that row to the new owner?
  • How can I streamline the data entry process when I create a new related row in the context of an existing row?
  • How should people viewing a row be able to view the associated rows?

Tables can also participate in a N:N (many-to-many) relationship where any number of rows for two tables can be associated with each other.

Decide whether to use table relationships or connections

Table relationships are metadata that make changes to the database. These relationships allow for queries to retrieve related data efficiently. Use table relationships to define formal relationships that define the table or that most rows can use. For example, an opportunity without a potential customer wouldn't be useful. The Opportunity table also has a N:N relationship with the Competitor table. This allows for multiple competitors to be added to the opportunity. You may want to capture this data and create a report that shows the competitors.

There are other less formal kinds of relationships between rows that are called connections. For example, it may be useful to know if two contacts are married, or perhaps they're friends outside of work, or perhaps a contact used to work for another account. Most businesses won't generate reports using this kind of information or require that it's entered, so it's probably not worthwhile to create table relationships. More information: Configure connection roles

Types of table relationships

When you look at the solution explorer you might think that there are three types of table relationships. Actually there are only two, as shown in the following table.

Relationship Type Description
1:N (One-to-Many) A table relationship where one table row for the Primary table can be associated to many other Related table rows because of a lookup column on the related table.

When viewing a primary table row, you can see a list of the related table rows that are associated with it.

In the Power Apps portal, Current table represents the primary table.
N:N (Many-to-Many) A table relationship that depends on a special Relationship table, sometimes called an Intersect table, so that many rows of one table can be related to many rows of another table.

When viewing rows of either table in a N:N relationship, you can see a list of any rows of the other table that are related to it.

The N:1 (many-to-one) relationship type exists in the user interface because the designer shows you a view grouped by tables. 1:N relationships actually exist between tables and refer to each table as either a Primary/Current table or Related table. The related table, sometimes called the child table, has a lookup column that allows storing a reference to a row from the primary table, sometimes called the parent table. A N:1 relationship is just a 1:N relationship viewed from the related table.

Table relationship behavior

Behaviors for related tables is important because it helps ensure data integrity and can automate business processes for your company.

Preserve data integrity

Some tables exist to support other tables. They don't make sense on their own. They'll typically have a required lookup column to link to the primary table they support. What should happen when a primary row is deleted?

You can use the relationship behavior to define what happens to related rows according to the rules for your business. More information: Add advanced relationship behavior

Automate business processes

Let's say that you have a new salesperson and you want to assign them a number of existing accounts currently assigned to another salesperson. Each account row may have a number of task activities associated with it. You can easily locate the active accounts you want to reassign and assign them to the new salesperson. But what should happen for any of the task activities that are associated with the accounts? Do you want to open each task and decide whether they should also be assigned to the new salesperson? Probably not. Instead, you can let the relationship apply some standard rules for you automatically. These rules only apply to task rows associated to the accounts you're reassigning. Your options are:

  • Reassign all active tasks.
  • Reassign all tasks.
  • Reassign none of the tasks.
  • Reassign all tasks currently assigned to the former owner of the accounts.

The relationship can control how actions performed on a row for the primary table row cascade down to any related table rows.

Behaviors

There are several kinds of behaviors that can be applied when certain actions occur.

Behavior Description
Cascade Active Perform the action on all active related table rows.
Cascade All Perform the action on all related table rows.
Cascade None Do nothing.
Remove Link Remove the lookup value for all related rows.
Restrict Prevent the primary table row from being deleted when related table rows exist.
Cascade User Owned Perform the action on all related table rows owned by the same user as the primary table row.

Actions

These are the actions that can trigger certain behaviors:

Column Description Options
Assign What should happen when the primary table row is assigned to someone else? Cascade All
Cascade Active
Cascade User-owned
Cascade None
Reparent What should happen when the lookup value of a related table in a parental relationship is changed?
More information: Parental table relationships
Cascade All
Cascade Active
Cascade User-owned
Cascade None
Share What should happen when the primary table row is shared? Cascade All
Cascade Active
Cascade User-owned
Cascade None
Delete What should happen when the primary table row is deleted? Cascade All
Remove Link
Restrict
Unshare What should happen when a primary table row is unshared? Cascade All
Cascade Active
Cascade User-owned
Cascade None
Merge What should happen when a primary table row is merged? Cascade All
Cascade None
Rollup View What is the desired behavior of the rollup view associated with this relationship? Cascade All
Cascade Active
Cascade User-owned
Cascade None

Note

Assign, Delete, Merge, and Reparent actions will not execute in the following situations:

  • If the original parent row and requested action contain the same values. Example: Attempting to trigger an Assign and choosing a contact that is already the owner of the row
  • Attempting to perform an action on a parent row that is already running a cascading action

Note

When executing an assign, any workflows or business rules that are currently active on the rows will automatically be deactivated when the reassignment occurs. The new owner of the row will need to reactivate the workflow or business rule if they want to continue using it.

Parental table relationships

Each pair of tables that are eligible to have a 1:N relationship can have multiple 1:N relationships between them. Yet usually only one of those relationships can be considered a parental table relationship.

A parental table relationship is any 1:N table relationship where one of the cascading options in the Parental column of the following table is true.

Action Parental Not Parental
Assign Cascade All
Cascade User-owned
Cascade Active
Cascade None
Delete Cascade All RemoveLink
Restrict
Reparent Cascade All
Cascade User-owned
Cascade Active
Cascade None
Share Cascade All
Cascade User-owned
Cascade Active
Cascade None
Unshare Cascade All
Cascade User-owned
Cascade Active
Cascade None

For example, if you create a new custom table and add a 1:N table relationship with the account table where your custom table is the related table, you can configure the actions for that table relationship to use the options in the Parental column. If you later add another 1:N table relationship with your custom table as the referencing table you can only configure the actions to use the options in the Not Parental column.

Usually this means that for each table pair there's only one parental relationship. There are some cases where the lookup on the related table may allow for a relationship to more than one type of table.

For example, if a table has a Customer lookup that can refer to either a contact or account table. There are two separate parental 1:N table relationships.

Any activity table has a similar set of parental table relationships for tables that can be associated using the regarding lookup column.

Limitations on behaviors you can set

Because of parental relationships there are some limitations you should keep in mind when you define table relationships.

  • A custom table can't be the primary table in a relationship with a related system table that cascades. This means you can't have a relationship with any action set to Cascade All, Cascade Active, or Cascade User-Owned between a primary custom table and a related system table.
  • No new relationship can have any action set to Cascade All, Cascade Active, or Cascade User-Owned if the related table in that relationship already exists as a related table in another relationship that has any action set to Cascade All, Cascade Active, or Cascade User-Owned. This prevents relationships that create a multi-parent relationship.

Inherited access rights cleanup

Using Reparent and Share cascading behaviors are helpful when you want to provide access to rows across related tables. But there can be a change in process or design that requires a change of the cascading behavior settings.

When a table relationship uses Reparent or Share, and the cascading behavior is changed to Cascade None, the table relationship prevents any new permission changes from cascading to the related child tables. In addition, inherited permissions that were granted while the cascading behavior was active must be revoked.

Inherited access rights cleanup is a system job that cleans up the legacy inherited access rights that remain after the cascading behavior is changed to Cascade None. This cleanup won't affect any user that was directly granted access to a table, but will remove access from anyone who received access through inheritance only.

This is how inherited access rights cleanup works:

  1. Identifies and collects all the tables that were in a cascading relationship with the updated parent.
  2. Identifies and collects the users that were granted access to the related tables through inherited access.
  3. Checks for users who were given direct access to a related table and removes them from the collection.
  4. Removes inherited access for the collected users on the collected tables.

After the cleanup runs, users who were able to access related tables only because of the cascading feature can no longer access the rows, ensuring greater security. There are cases where the cleanup may not be not successful. Learn more about how to clean up inherited access

See also

Monitor system jobs
Create and edit 1:N (one-to-many) or N:1 (many-to-one) relationships
Create Many-to-many (N:N) table relationships