| ========== |
| Migrations |
| ========== |
|
|
| .. module:: django.db.migrations |
| :synopsis: Schema migration support for Django models |
|
|
| Migrations are Django's way of propagating changes you make to your models |
| (adding a field, deleting a model, etc.) into your database schema. They're |
| designed to be mostly automatic, but you'll need to know when to make |
| migrations, when to run them, and the common problems you might run into. |
|
|
| The Commands |
| ============ |
|
|
| There are several commands which you will use to interact with migrations |
| and Django's handling of database schema: |
|
|
| * :djadmin:`migrate`, which is responsible for applying and unapplying |
| migrations. |
|
|
| * :djadmin:`makemigrations`, which is responsible for creating new migrations |
| based on the changes you have made to your models. |
|
|
| * :djadmin:`sqlmigrate`, which displays the SQL statements for a migration. |
|
|
| * :djadmin:`showmigrations`, which lists a project's migrations and their |
| status. |
|
|
| You should think of migrations as a version control system for your database |
| schema. ``makemigrations`` is responsible for packaging up your model changes |
| into individual migration files - analogous to commits - and ``migrate`` is |
| responsible for applying those to your database. |
|
|
| The migration files for each app live in a "migrations" directory inside |
| of that app, and are designed to be committed to, and distributed as part |
| of, its codebase. You should be making them once on your development machine |
| and then running the same migrations on your colleagues' machines, your |
| staging machines, and eventually your production machines. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| It is possible to override the name of the package which contains the |
| migrations on a per-app basis by modifying the :setting:`MIGRATION_MODULES` |
| setting. |
|
|
| Migrations will run the same way on the same dataset and produce consistent |
| results, meaning that what you see in development and staging is, under the |
| same circumstances, exactly what will happen in production. |
|
|
| Django will make migrations for any change to your models or fields - even |
| options that don't affect the database - as the only way it can reconstruct |
| a field correctly is to have all the changes in the history, and you might |
| need those options in some data migrations later on (for example, if you've |
| set custom validators). |
|
|
| Backend Support |
| =============== |
|
|
| Migrations are supported on all backends that Django ships with, as well |
| as any third-party backends if they have programmed in support for schema |
| alteration (done via the :doc:`SchemaEditor </ref/schema-editor>` class). |
|
|
| However, some databases are more capable than others when it comes to |
| schema migrations; some of the caveats are covered below. |
|
|
| PostgreSQL |
| ---------- |
|
|
| PostgreSQL is the most capable of all the databases here in terms of schema |
| support. |
|
|
| MySQL |
| ----- |
|
|
| MySQL lacks support for transactions around schema alteration operations, |
| meaning that if a migration fails to apply you will have to manually unpick |
| the changes in order to try again (it's impossible to roll back to an |
| earlier point). |
|
|
| In addition, MySQL will fully rewrite tables for almost every schema operation |
| and generally takes a time proportional to the number of rows in the table to |
| add or remove columns. On slower hardware this can be worse than a minute per |
| million rows - adding a few columns to a table with just a few million rows |
| could lock your site up for over ten minutes. |
|
|
| Finally, MySQL has relatively small limits on name lengths for columns, tables |
| and indexes, as well as a limit on the combined size of all columns an index |
| covers. This means that indexes that are possible on other backends will |
| fail to be created under MySQL. |
|
|
| SQLite |
| ------ |
|
|
| SQLite has very little built-in schema alteration support, and so Django |
| attempts to emulate it by: |
|
|
| * Creating a new table with the new schema |
| * Copying the data across |
| * Dropping the old table |
| * Renaming the new table to match the original name |
|
|
| This process generally works well, but it can be slow and occasionally |
| buggy. It is not recommended that you run and migrate SQLite in a |
| production environment unless you are very aware of the risks and |
| its limitations; the support Django ships with is designed to allow |
| developers to use SQLite on their local machines to develop less complex |
| Django projects without the need for a full database. |
|
|
| Workflow |
| ======== |
|
|
| Django can create migrations for you. Make changes to your models - say, add a |
| field and remove a model - and then run :djadmin:`makemigrations`: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: shell |
|
|
| $ python manage.py makemigrations |
| Migrations for 'books': |
| books/migrations/0003_auto.py: |
| - Alter field author on book |
|
|
| Your models will be scanned and compared to the versions currently |
| contained in your migration files, and then a new set of migrations |
| will be written out. Make sure to read the output to see what |
| ``makemigrations`` thinks you have changed - it's not perfect, and for |
| complex changes it might not be detecting what you expect. |
|
|
| Once you have your new migration files, you should apply them to your |
| database to make sure they work as expected: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: shell |
|
|
| $ python manage.py migrate |
| Operations to perform: |
| Apply all migrations: books |
| Running migrations: |
| Rendering model states... DONE |
| Applying books.0003_auto... OK |
|
|
| Once the migration is applied, commit the migration and the models change |
| to your version control system as a single commit - that way, when other |
| developers (or your production servers) check out the code, they'll |
| get both the changes to your models and the accompanying migration at the |
| same time. |
|
|
| If you want to give the migration(s) a meaningful name instead of a generated |
| one, you can use the :option:`makemigrations --name` option: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: shell |
|
|
| $ python manage.py makemigrations --name changed_my_model your_app_label |
|
|
| Version control |
| --------------- |
|
|
| Because migrations are stored in version control, you'll occasionally |
| come across situations where you and another developer have both committed |
| a migration to the same app at the same time, resulting in two migrations |
| with the same number. |
|
|
| Don't worry - the numbers are just there for developers' reference, Django |
| just cares that each migration has a different name. Migrations specify which |
| other migrations they depend on - including earlier migrations in the same |
| app - in the file, so it's possible to detect when there's two new migrations |
| for the same app that aren't ordered. |
|
|
| When this happens, Django will prompt you and give you some options. If it |
| thinks it's safe enough, it will offer to automatically linearize the two |
| migrations for you. If not, you'll have to go in and modify the migrations |
| yourself - don't worry, this isn't difficult, and is explained more in |
| :ref:`migration-files` below. |
|
|
| Transactions |
| ============ |
|
|
| On databases that support DDL transactions (SQLite and PostgreSQL), all |
| migration operations will run inside a single transaction by default. In |
| contrast, if a database doesn't support DDL transactions (e.g. MySQL, Oracle) |
| then all operations will run without a transaction. |
|
|
| You can prevent a migration from running in a transaction by setting the |
| ``atomic`` attribute to ``False``. For example:: |
|
|
| from django.db import migrations |
|
|
|
|
| class Migration(migrations.Migration): |
| atomic = False |
|
|
| It's also possible to execute parts of the migration inside a transaction using |
| :func:`~django.db.transaction.atomic()` or by passing ``atomic=True`` to |
| :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython`. See |
| :ref:`non-atomic-migrations` for more details. |
|
|
| Dependencies |
| ============ |
|
|
| While migrations are per-app, the tables and relationships implied by |
| your models are too complex to be created for one app at a time. When you make |
| a migration that requires something else to run - for example, you add a |
| ``ForeignKey`` in your ``books`` app to your ``authors`` app - the resulting |
| migration will contain a dependency on a migration in ``authors``. |
|
|
| This means that when you run the migrations, the ``authors`` migration runs |
| first and creates the table the ``ForeignKey`` references, and then the migration |
| that makes the ``ForeignKey`` column runs afterward and creates the constraint. |
| If this didn't happen, the migration would try to create the ``ForeignKey`` |
| column without the table it's referencing existing and your database would |
| throw an error. |
|
|
| This dependency behavior affects most migration operations where you |
| restrict to a single app. Restricting to a single app (either in |
| ``makemigrations`` or ``migrate``) is a best-efforts promise, and not |
| a guarantee; any other apps that need to be used to get dependencies correct |
| will be. |
|
|
| Apps without migrations must not have relations (``ForeignKey``, |
| ``ManyToManyField``, etc.) to apps with migrations. Sometimes it may work, but |
| it's not supported. |
|
|
| Swappable dependencies |
| ---------------------- |
|
|
| .. function:: django.db.migrations.swappable_dependency(value) |
|
|
| The ``swappable_dependency()`` function is used in migrations to declare |
| "swappable" dependencies on migrations in the app of the swapped-in model, |
| currently, on the first migration of this app. As a consequence, the swapped-in |
| model should be created in the initial migration. The argument ``value`` is a |
| string ``"<app label>.<model>"`` describing an app label and a model name, e.g. |
| ``"myapp.MyModel"``. |
|
|
| By using ``swappable_dependency()``, you inform the migration framework that |
| the migration relies on another migration which sets up a swappable model, |
| allowing for the possibility of substituting the model with a different |
| implementation in the future. This is typically used for referencing models |
| that are subject to customization or replacement, such as the custom user |
| model (``settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL``, which defaults to ``"auth.User"``) in |
| Django's authentication system. |
|
|
| .. _migration-files: |
|
|
| Migration files |
| =============== |
|
|
| Migrations are stored as an on-disk format, referred to here as |
| "migration files". These files are actually normal Python files with an |
| agreed-upon object layout, written in a declarative style. |
|
|
| A basic migration file looks like this:: |
|
|
| from django.db import migrations, models |
|
|
|
|
| class Migration(migrations.Migration): |
| dependencies = [("migrations", "0001_initial")] |
|
|
| operations = [ |
| migrations.DeleteModel("Tribble"), |
| migrations.AddField("Author", "rating", models.IntegerField(default=0)), |
| ] |
|
|
| What Django looks for when it loads a migration file (as a Python module) is |
| a subclass of ``django.db.migrations.Migration`` called ``Migration``. It then |
| inspects this object for four attributes, only two of which are used |
| most of the time: |
|
|
| * ``dependencies``, a list of migrations this one depends on. |
| * ``operations``, a list of ``Operation`` classes that define what this |
| migration does. |
|
|
| The operations are the key; they are a set of declarative instructions which |
| tell Django what schema changes need to be made. Django scans them and |
| builds an in-memory representation of all of the schema changes to all apps, |
| and uses this to generate the SQL which makes the schema changes. |
|
|
| That in-memory structure is also used to work out what the differences are |
| between your models and the current state of your migrations; Django runs |
| through all the changes, in order, on an in-memory set of models to come |
| up with the state of your models last time you ran ``makemigrations``. It |
| then uses these models to compare against the ones in your ``models.py`` files |
| to work out what you have changed. |
|
|
| You should rarely, if ever, need to edit migration files by hand, but |
| it's entirely possible to write them manually if you need to. Some of the |
| more complex operations are not autodetectable and are only available via |
| a hand-written migration, so don't be scared about editing them if you have to. |
|
|
| Custom fields |
| ------------- |
|
|
| You can't modify the number of positional arguments in an already migrated |
| custom field without raising a ``TypeError``. The old migration will call the |
| modified ``__init__`` method with the old signature. So if you need a new |
| argument, please create a keyword argument and add something like |
| ``assert 'argument_name' in kwargs`` in the constructor. |
|
|
| .. _using-managers-in-migrations: |
|
|
| Model managers |
| -------------- |
|
|
| You can optionally serialize managers into migrations and have them available |
| in :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython` operations. This is done |
| by defining a ``use_in_migrations`` attribute on the manager class:: |
|
|
| class MyManager(models.Manager): |
| use_in_migrations = True |
|
|
|
|
| class MyModel(models.Model): |
| objects = MyManager() |
|
|
| If you are using the :meth:`~django.db.models.from_queryset` function to |
| dynamically generate a manager class, you need to inherit from the generated |
| class to make it importable:: |
|
|
| class MyManager(MyBaseManager.from_queryset(CustomQuerySet)): |
| use_in_migrations = True |
|
|
|
|
| class MyModel(models.Model): |
| objects = MyManager() |
|
|
| Please refer to the notes about :ref:`historical-models` in migrations to see |
| the implications that come along. |
|
|
| Initial migrations |
| ------------------ |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Migration.initial |
|
|
| The "initial migrations" for an app are the migrations that create the first |
| version of that app's tables. Usually an app will have one initial migration, |
| but in some cases of complex model interdependencies it may have two or more. |
|
|
| Initial migrations are marked with an ``initial = True`` class attribute on the |
| migration class. If an ``initial`` class attribute isn't found, a migration |
| will be considered "initial" if it is the first migration in the app (i.e. if |
| it has no dependencies on any other migration in the same app). |
|
|
| When the :option:`migrate --fake-initial` option is used, these initial |
| migrations are treated specially. For an initial migration that creates one or |
| more tables (``CreateModel`` operation), Django checks that all of those tables |
| already exist in the database and fake-applies the migration if so. Similarly, |
| for an initial migration that adds one or more fields (``AddField`` operation), |
| Django checks that all of the respective columns already exist in the database |
| and fake-applies the migration if so. Without ``--fake-initial``, initial |
| migrations are treated no differently from any other migration. |
|
|
| .. _migration-history-consistency: |
|
|
| History consistency |
| ------------------- |
|
|
| As previously discussed, you may need to linearize migrations manually when two |
| development branches are joined. While editing migration dependencies, you can |
| inadvertently create an inconsistent history state where a migration has been |
| applied but some of its dependencies haven't. This is a strong indication that |
| the dependencies are incorrect, so Django will refuse to run migrations or make |
| new migrations until it's fixed. When using multiple databases, you can use the |
| :meth:`allow_migrate` method of :ref:`database routers |
| <topics-db-multi-db-routing>` to control which databases |
| :djadmin:`makemigrations` checks for consistent history. |
|
|
| Adding migrations to apps |
| ========================= |
|
|
| New apps come preconfigured to accept migrations, and so you can add migrations |
| by running :djadmin:`makemigrations` once you've made some changes. |
|
|
| If your app already has models and database tables, and doesn't have migrations |
| yet (for example, you created it against a previous Django version), you'll |
| need to convert it to use migrations by running: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: shell |
|
|
| $ python manage.py makemigrations your_app_label |
|
|
| This will make a new initial migration for your app. Now, run ``python |
| manage.py migrate --fake-initial``, and Django will detect that you have an |
| initial migration *and* that the tables it wants to create already exist, and |
| will mark the migration as already applied. (Without the :option:`migrate |
| --fake-initial` flag, the command would error out because the tables it wants |
| to create already exist.) |
|
|
| Note that this only works given two things: |
|
|
| * You have not changed your models since you made their tables. For migrations |
| to work, you must make the initial migration *first* and then make changes, |
| as Django compares changes against migration files, not the database. |
|
|
| * You have not manually edited your database - Django won't be able to detect |
| that your database doesn't match your models, you'll just get errors when |
| migrations try to modify those tables. |
|
|
| .. _reversing-migrations: |
|
|
| Reversing migrations |
| ==================== |
|
|
| Migrations can be reversed with :djadmin:`migrate` by passing the number of the |
| previous migration. For example, to reverse migration ``books.0003``: |
|
|
| .. console:: |
|
|
| $ python manage.py migrate books 0002 |
| Operations to perform: |
| Target specific migration: 0002_auto, from books |
| Running migrations: |
| Rendering model states... DONE |
| Unapplying books.0003_auto... OK |
|
|
| If you want to reverse all migrations applied for an app, use the name |
| ``zero``: |
|
|
| .. console:: |
|
|
| $ python manage.py migrate books zero |
| Operations to perform: |
| Unapply all migrations: books |
| Running migrations: |
| Rendering model states... DONE |
| Unapplying books.0002_auto... OK |
| Unapplying books.0001_initial... OK |
|
|
| A migration is irreversible if it contains any irreversible operations. |
| Attempting to reverse such migrations will raise ``IrreversibleError``: |
|
|
| .. console:: |
|
|
| $ python manage.py migrate books 0002 |
| Operations to perform: |
| Target specific migration: 0002_auto, from books |
| Running migrations: |
| Rendering model states... DONE |
| Unapplying books.0003_auto...Traceback (most recent call last): |
| django.db.migrations.exceptions.IrreversibleError: Operation <RunSQL sql='DROP TABLE demo_books'> in books.0003_auto is not reversible |
|
|
| .. _historical-models: |
|
|
| Historical models |
| ================= |
|
|
| When you run migrations, Django is working from historical versions of your |
| models stored in the migration files. If you write Python code using the |
| :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython` operation, or if you have |
| ``allow_migrate`` methods on your database routers, you **need to use** these |
| historical model versions rather than importing them directly. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| If you import models directly rather than using the historical models, |
| your migrations *may work initially* but will fail in the future when you |
| try to rerun old migrations (commonly, when you set up a new installation |
| and run through all the migrations to set up the database). |
|
|
| This means that historical model problems may not be immediately obvious. |
| If you run into this kind of failure, it's OK to edit the migration to use |
| the historical models rather than direct imports and commit those changes. |
|
|
| Because it's impossible to serialize arbitrary Python code, these historical |
| models will not have any custom methods that you have defined. They will, |
| however, have the same fields, relationships, managers (limited to those with |
| ``use_in_migrations = True``) and ``Meta`` options (also versioned, so they may |
| be different from your current ones). |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| This means that you will NOT have custom ``save()`` methods called on objects |
| when you access them in migrations, and you will NOT have any custom |
| constructors or instance methods. Plan appropriately! |
|
|
| References to functions in field options such as ``upload_to`` and |
| ``limit_choices_to`` and model manager declarations with managers having |
| ``use_in_migrations = True`` are serialized in migrations, so the functions and |
| classes will need to be kept around for as long as there is a migration |
| referencing them. Any :doc:`custom model fields </howto/custom-model-fields>` |
| will also need to be kept, since these are imported directly by migrations. |
|
|
| In addition, the concrete base classes of the model are stored as pointers, so |
| you must always keep base classes around for as long as there is a migration |
| that contains a reference to them. On the plus side, methods and managers from |
| these base classes inherit normally, so if you absolutely need access to these |
| you can opt to move them into a superclass. |
|
|
| To remove old references, you can :ref:`squash migrations <migration-squashing>` |
| or, if there aren't many references, copy them into the migration files. |
|
|
| .. _migrations-removing-model-fields: |
|
|
| Considerations when removing model fields |
| ========================================= |
|
|
| Similar to the "references to historical functions" considerations described in |
| the previous section, removing custom model fields from your project or |
| third-party app will cause a problem if they are referenced in old migrations. |
|
|
| To help with this situation, Django provides some model field attributes to |
| assist with model field deprecation using the :doc:`system checks framework |
| </topics/checks>`. |
|
|
| Add the ``system_check_deprecated_details`` attribute to your model field |
| similar to the following:: |
|
|
| class IPAddressField(Field): |
| system_check_deprecated_details = { |
| "msg": ( |
| "IPAddressField has been deprecated. Support for it (except " |
| "in historical migrations) will be removed in Django 1.9." |
| ), |
| "hint": "Use GenericIPAddressField instead.", # optional |
| "id": "fields.W900", # pick a unique ID for your field. |
| } |
|
|
| After a deprecation period of your choosing (two or three feature releases for |
| fields in Django itself), change the ``system_check_deprecated_details`` |
| attribute to ``system_check_removed_details`` and update the dictionary similar |
| to:: |
|
|
| class IPAddressField(Field): |
| system_check_removed_details = { |
| "msg": ( |
| "IPAddressField has been removed except for support in " |
| "historical migrations." |
| ), |
| "hint": "Use GenericIPAddressField instead.", |
| "id": "fields.E900", # pick a unique ID for your field. |
| } |
|
|
| You should keep the field's methods that are required for it to operate in |
| database migrations such as ``__init__()``, ``deconstruct()``, and |
| ``get_internal_type()``. Keep this stub field for as long as any migrations |
| which reference the field exist. For example, after squashing migrations and |
| removing the old ones, you should be able to remove the field completely. |
|
|
| .. _data-migrations: |
|
|
| Data Migrations |
| =============== |
|
|
| As well as changing the database schema, you can also use migrations to change |
| the data in the database itself, in conjunction with the schema if you want. |
|
|
| Migrations that alter data are usually called "data migrations"; they're best |
| written as separate migrations, sitting alongside your schema migrations. |
|
|
| Django can't automatically generate data migrations for you, as it does with |
| schema migrations, but it's not very hard to write them. Migration files in |
| Django are made up of :doc:`Operations </ref/migration-operations>`, and |
| the main operation you use for data migrations is |
| :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython`. |
|
|
| To start, make an empty migration file you can work from (Django will put |
| the file in the right place, suggest a name, and add dependencies for you): |
|
|
| .. code-block:: shell |
|
|
| python manage.py makemigrations --empty yourappname |
|
|
| Then, open up the file; it should look something like this:: |
|
|
| # Generated by Django A.B on YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM |
| from django.db import migrations |
|
|
|
|
| class Migration(migrations.Migration): |
| dependencies = [ |
| ("yourappname", "0001_initial"), |
| ] |
|
|
| operations = [] |
|
|
| Now, all you need to do is create a new function and have |
| :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython` use it. |
| :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython` expects a callable as its argument |
| which takes two arguments - the first is an :doc:`app registry |
| </ref/applications/>` that has the historical versions of all your models |
| loaded into it to match where in your history the migration sits, and the |
| second is a :doc:`SchemaEditor </ref/schema-editor>`, which you can use to |
| manually effect database schema changes (but beware, doing this can confuse |
| the migration autodetector!) |
|
|
| Let's write a migration that populates our new ``name`` field with the combined |
| values of ``first_name`` and ``last_name`` (we've come to our senses and |
| realized that not everyone has first and last names). All we need to do is use |
| the historical model and iterate over the rows:: |
|
|
| from django.db import migrations |
|
|
|
|
| def combine_names(apps, schema_editor): |
| # We can't import the Person model directly as it may be a newer |
| # version than this migration expects. We use the historical version. |
| Person = apps.get_model("yourappname", "Person") |
| for person in Person.objects.all(): |
| person.name = f"{person.first_name} {person.last_name}" |
| person.save() |
|
|
|
|
| class Migration(migrations.Migration): |
| dependencies = [ |
| ("yourappname", "0001_initial"), |
| ] |
|
|
| operations = [ |
| migrations.RunPython(combine_names), |
| ] |
|
|
| Once that's done, we can run ``python manage.py migrate`` as normal and the |
| data migration will run in place alongside other migrations. |
|
|
| You can pass a second callable to |
| :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython` to run whatever logic you |
| want executed when migrating backwards. If this callable is omitted, migrating |
| backwards will raise an exception. |
|
|
| Accessing models from other apps |
| -------------------------------- |
|
|
| When writing a ``RunPython`` function that uses models from apps other than the |
| one in which the migration is located, the migration's ``dependencies`` |
| attribute should include the latest migration of each app that is involved, |
| otherwise you may get an error similar to: ``LookupError: No installed app |
| with label 'myappname'`` when you try to retrieve the model in the ``RunPython`` |
| function using ``apps.get_model()``. |
|
|
| In the following example, we have a migration in ``app1`` which needs to use |
| models in ``app2``. We aren't concerned with the details of ``move_m1`` other |
| than the fact it will need to access models from both apps. Therefore we've |
| added a dependency that specifies the last migration of ``app2``:: |
|
|
| class Migration(migrations.Migration): |
| dependencies = [ |
| ("app1", "0001_initial"), |
| # added dependency to enable using models from app2 in move_m1 |
| ("app2", "0004_foobar"), |
| ] |
|
|
| operations = [ |
| migrations.RunPython(move_m1), |
| ] |
|
|
| More advanced migrations |
| ------------------------ |
|
|
| If you're interested in the more advanced migration operations, or want |
| to be able to write your own, see the :doc:`migration operations reference |
| </ref/migration-operations>` and the "how-to" on :doc:`writing migrations |
| </howto/writing-migrations>`. |
|
|
| .. _migration-squashing: |
|
|
| Squashing migrations |
| ==================== |
|
|
| You are encouraged to make migrations freely and not worry about how many you |
| have; the migration code is optimized to deal with hundreds at a time without |
| much slowdown. However, eventually you will want to move back from having |
| several hundred migrations to just a few, and that's where squashing comes in. |
|
|
| Squashing is the act of reducing an existing set of many migrations down to |
| one (or sometimes a few) migrations which still represent the same changes. |
|
|
| Django does this by taking all of your existing migrations, extracting their |
| ``Operation``\s and putting them all in sequence, and then running an optimizer |
| over them to try and reduce the length of the list - for example, it knows |
| that :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.CreateModel` and |
| :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.DeleteModel` cancel each other out, |
| and it knows that :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.AddField` can be |
| rolled into :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.CreateModel`. |
|
|
| Once the operation sequence has been reduced as much as possible - the amount |
| possible depends on how closely intertwined your models are and if you have |
| any :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunSQL` |
| or :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython` operations (which can't |
| be optimized through unless they are marked as ``elidable``) - Django will then |
| write it back out into a new set of migration files. |
|
|
| These files are marked to say they replace the previously-squashed migrations, |
| so they can coexist with the old migration files, and Django will intelligently |
| switch between them depending where you are in the history. If you're still |
| part-way through the set of migrations that you squashed, it will keep using |
| them until it hits the end and then switch to the squashed history, while new |
| installs will use the new squashed migration and skip all the old ones. |
|
|
| This enables you to squash and not mess up systems currently in production |
| that aren't fully up-to-date yet. The recommended process is to squash, keeping |
| the old files, commit and release, wait until all systems are upgraded with |
| the new release (or if you're a third-party project, ensure your users upgrade |
| releases in order without skipping any), and then remove the old files, commit |
| and do a second release. |
|
|
| The command that backs all this is :djadmin:`squashmigrations` - pass it the |
| app label and migration name you want to squash up to, and it'll get to work: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: shell |
|
|
| $ ./manage.py squashmigrations myapp 0004 |
| Will squash the following migrations: |
| - 0001_initial |
| - 0002_some_change |
| - 0003_another_change |
| - 0004_undo_something |
| Do you wish to proceed? [yN] y |
| Optimizing... |
| Optimized from 12 operations to 7 operations. |
| Created new squashed migration /home/andrew/Programs/DjangoTest/test/migrations/0001_squashed_0004_undo_something.py |
| You should commit this migration but leave the old ones in place; |
| the new migration will be used for new installs. Once you are sure |
| all instances of the codebase have applied the migrations you squashed, |
| you can delete them. |
|
|
| Use the :option:`squashmigrations --squashed-name` option if you want to set |
| the name of the squashed migration rather than use an autogenerated one. |
|
|
| Note that model interdependencies in Django can get very complex, and squashing |
| may result in migrations that do not run; either mis-optimized (in which case |
| you can try again with ``--no-optimize``, though you should also report an issue), |
| or with a ``CircularDependencyError``, in which case you can manually resolve it. |
|
|
| To manually resolve a ``CircularDependencyError``, break out one of |
| the ForeignKeys in the circular dependency loop into a separate |
| migration, and move the dependency on the other app with it. If you're unsure, |
| see how :djadmin:`makemigrations` deals with the problem when asked to create |
| brand new migrations from your models. In a future release of Django, |
| :djadmin:`squashmigrations` will be updated to attempt to resolve these errors |
| itself. |
|
|
| Once you've squashed your migration, you should then commit it alongside the |
| migrations it replaces and distribute this change to all running instances |
| of your application, making sure that they run ``migrate`` to store the change |
| in their database. |
|
|
| You must then transition the squashed migration to a normal migration by: |
|
|
| - Deleting all the migration files it replaces. |
| - Updating all migrations that depend on the deleted migrations to depend on |
| the squashed migration instead. |
| - Removing the ``replaces`` attribute in the ``Migration`` class of the |
| squashed migration (this is how Django tells that it is a squashed migration). |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| Once you've squashed a migration, you should not then re-squash that squashed |
| migration until you have fully transitioned it to a normal migration. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Pruning references to deleted migrations |
|
|
| If it is likely that you may reuse the name of a deleted migration in the |
| future, you should remove references to it from Django’s migrations table |
| with the :option:`migrate --prune` option. |
|
|
| .. _migration-serializing: |
|
|
| Serializing values |
| ================== |
|
|
| Migrations are Python files containing the old definitions of your models |
| - thus, to write them, Django must take the current state of your models and |
| serialize them out into a file. |
|
|
| While Django can serialize most things, there are some things that we just |
| can't serialize out into a valid Python representation - there's no Python |
| standard for how a value can be turned back into code (``repr()`` only works |
| for basic values, and doesn't specify import paths). |
|
|
| Django can serialize the following: |
|
|
| - ``int``, ``float``, ``bool``, ``str``, ``bytes``, ``None``, ``NoneType`` |
| - ``list``, ``set``, ``tuple``, ``dict``, ``range``. |
| - ``datetime.date``, ``datetime.time``, and ``datetime.datetime`` instances |
| (include those that are timezone-aware) |
| - ``decimal.Decimal`` instances |
| - ``enum.Enum`` and ``enum.Flag`` instances |
| - ``uuid.UUID`` instances |
| - :func:`functools.partial` and :class:`functools.partialmethod` instances |
| which have serializable ``func``, ``args``, and ``keywords`` values. |
| - Pure and concrete path objects from :mod:`pathlib`. Concrete paths are |
| converted to their pure path equivalent, e.g. :class:`pathlib.PosixPath` to |
| :class:`pathlib.PurePosixPath`. |
| - :class:`os.PathLike` instances, e.g. :class:`os.DirEntry`, which are |
| converted to ``str`` or ``bytes`` using :func:`os.fspath`. |
| - ``LazyObject`` instances which wrap a serializable value. |
| - Enumeration types (e.g. ``TextChoices`` or ``IntegerChoices``) instances. |
| - Any Django field |
| - Any function or method reference (e.g. ``datetime.datetime.today``) (must be in module's top-level scope) |
| - Unbound methods used from within the class body |
| - Any class reference (must be in module's top-level scope) |
| - Anything with a custom ``deconstruct()`` method (:ref:`see below <custom-deconstruct-method>`) |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 4.2 |
|
|
| Serialization support for ``enum.Flag`` was added. |
|
|
| Django cannot serialize: |
|
|
| - Nested classes |
| - Arbitrary class instances (e.g. ``MyClass(4.3, 5.7)``) |
| - Lambdas |
|
|
| .. _custom-migration-serializers: |
|
|
| Custom serializers |
| ------------------ |
|
|
| You can serialize other types by writing a custom serializer. For example, if |
| Django didn't serialize :class:`~decimal.Decimal` by default, you could do |
| this:: |
|
|
| from decimal import Decimal |
|
|
| from django.db.migrations.serializer import BaseSerializer |
| from django.db.migrations.writer import MigrationWriter |
|
|
|
|
| class DecimalSerializer(BaseSerializer): |
| def serialize(self): |
| return repr(self.value), {"from decimal import Decimal"} |
|
|
|
|
| MigrationWriter.register_serializer(Decimal, DecimalSerializer) |
|
|
| The first argument of ``MigrationWriter.register_serializer()`` is a type or |
| iterable of types that should use the serializer. |
|
|
| The ``serialize()`` method of your serializer must return a string of how the |
| value should appear in migrations and a set of any imports that are needed in |
| the migration. |
|
|
| .. _custom-deconstruct-method: |
|
|
| Adding a ``deconstruct()`` method |
| --------------------------------- |
|
|
| You can let Django serialize your own custom class instances by giving the class |
| a ``deconstruct()`` method. It takes no arguments, and should return a tuple |
| of three things ``(path, args, kwargs)``: |
|
|
| * ``path`` should be the Python path to the class, with the class name included |
| as the last part (for example, ``myapp.custom_things.MyClass``). If your |
| class is not available at the top level of a module it is not serializable. |
|
|
| * ``args`` should be a list of positional arguments to pass to your class' |
| ``__init__`` method. Everything in this list should itself be serializable. |
|
|
| * ``kwargs`` should be a dict of keyword arguments to pass to your class' |
| ``__init__`` method. Every value should itself be serializable. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| This return value is different from the ``deconstruct()`` method |
| :ref:`for custom fields <custom-field-deconstruct-method>` which returns a |
| tuple of four items. |
|
|
| Django will write out the value as an instantiation of your class with the |
| given arguments, similar to the way it writes out references to Django fields. |
|
|
| To prevent a new migration from being created each time |
| :djadmin:`makemigrations` is run, you should also add a ``__eq__()`` method to |
| the decorated class. This function will be called by Django's migration |
| framework to detect changes between states. |
|
|
| As long as all of the arguments to your class' constructor are themselves |
| serializable, you can use the ``@deconstructible`` class decorator from |
| ``django.utils.deconstruct`` to add the ``deconstruct()`` method:: |
|
|
| from django.utils.deconstruct import deconstructible |
|
|
|
|
| @deconstructible |
| class MyCustomClass: |
| def __init__(self, foo=1): |
| self.foo = foo |
| ... |
|
|
| def __eq__(self, other): |
| return self.foo == other.foo |
|
|
|
|
| The decorator adds logic to capture and preserve the arguments on their |
| way into your constructor, and then returns those arguments exactly when |
| deconstruct() is called. |
|
|
| Supporting multiple Django versions |
| =================================== |
|
|
| If you are the maintainer of a third-party app with models, you may need to |
| ship migrations that support multiple Django versions. In this case, you should |
| always run :djadmin:`makemigrations` **with the lowest Django version you wish |
| to support**. |
|
|
| The migrations system will maintain backwards-compatibility according to the |
| same policy as the rest of Django, so migration files generated on Django X.Y |
| should run unchanged on Django X.Y+1. The migrations system does not promise |
| forwards-compatibility, however. New features may be added, and migration files |
| generated with newer versions of Django may not work on older versions. |
|
|
| .. seealso:: |
|
|
| :doc:`The Migrations Operations Reference </ref/migration-operations>` |
| Covers the schema operations API, special operations, and writing your |
| own operations. |
|
|
| :doc:`The Writing Migrations "how-to" </howto/writing-migrations>` |
| Explains how to structure and write database migrations for different |
| scenarios you might encounter. |
|
|