Hi Pedro,

I would assume the problem is in your migration process. Do you face the
same thing on a fresh new database? If no, then you need to check what went
wrong with your migration.

Taher Alkhateeb

On Mon, Dec 28, 2015 at 6:59 PM, Pedro Lopes <ge...@pedropalacios.net>
wrote:

> Hello all,
>
> Taher, thank you very much for your reply.
>
> OK, is that relationship supposed to be on the database also? I migrated to
> mysql and did not find it there.
>
> Thank you for your attention,
>
> Pedro
>
> On Mon, Dec 28, 2015 at 1:24 PM, Taher Alkhateeb <
> slidingfilame...@gmail.com
> > wrote:
>
> > Hi Pedro,
> >
> > The SecurityGroupPermission entity has a foreign key to both
> > SecurityPermission and SecurityGroup. You can check the entity definition
> > in framework/security/entitydef/entitymodel.xml. This is because the
> > SecurityGroupPermissions is a relationship entity (many to many)
> >
> > Taher Alkhateeb
> >
> > On Mon, Dec 28, 2015 at 3:15 PM, Pedro Lopes <ge...@pedropalacios.net>
> > wrote:
> >
> > > Hello all,
> > >
> > > Data model question: There isn't a foreign key between the tables
> > > SECURITY_PERMISSION and SECURITY_GROUP_PERMISSION, is this table not to
> > > relate the table SECURITY_PERMISSION with SECURITY_GROUP?
> > >
> > > Thank you all very much,
> > >
> > > Pedro
> > >
> >
>

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