To define a constraint, you must have Oracle Rdb READ access to the database and Oracle Rdb READ and DEFINE access to all relations to which the constraint refers. When the DEFINE CONSTRAINT statement executes, the constraint definition is added to the physical database. If you have invoked the database using the PATHNAME argument, the constraint definition is also stored in the data dictionary. The DEFINE CONSTRAINT statement includes a record selection expression. Therefore, it is more flexible for checking values on input than the VALID IF clause. For example: o VALID IF must be part of a DEFINE FIELD statement. Therefore, a VALID IF criterion applies to all the fields that use the definition. You can define a constraint that refers to only one of several relations that use a global field definition. o VALID IF refers only to a range of literal values. You cannot use VALID IF to check a value against values of fields stored in the database. With DEFINE CONSTRAINT, you can check values from one relation against other database values, either in the same or another relation. o You can use DEFINE CONSTRAINT to check for such conditions as existence, uniqueness, and nonexistence. Oracle Rdb evaluates constraints by validating existing data against the RSE specified by the constraint. If there is no existing data for Oracle Rdb to validate, the constraint will be defined without being evaluated. Oracle Rdb evaluates constraints at definition time; therefore, you cannot define a new constraint that violates an existing constraint. You can also specify that a constraint be checked when the STORE or MODIFY statement executes (CHECK ON UPDATE) or when the COMMIT statement executes (CHECK ON COMMIT). In this way, you can include interlocking constraints. For example, you might define two constraints to ensure that a department cannot exist without employees and an employee must belong to a department. However, if these two constraints were checked on UPDATE, there would be no way to create a new department. Instead, they should be checked on COMMIT. You can then create a department and give it members inside a single transaction, and check the constraints when the COMMIT statement ends the transaction. You can define a constraint only after you have invoked the database. See the INVOKE statement. You must execute this statement in a read/write transaction. If there is no active transaction and you issue this statement, Oracle Rdb starts a read/write transaction implicitly. Other users are allowed to be attached to the database when you issue the DEFINE CONSTRAINT statement.