Ecto v2.2.8 Ecto.Migration View Source
Migrations are used to modify your database schema over time.
This module provides many helpers for migrating the database, allowing developers to use Elixir to alter their storage in a way that is database independent.
Here is an example:
defmodule MyRepo.Migrations.AddWeatherTable do
use Ecto.Migration
def up do
create table("weather") do
add :city, :string, size: 40
add :temp_lo, :integer
add :temp_hi, :integer
add :prcp, :float
timestamps()
end
end
def down do
drop table("weather")
end
end
Note migrations have an up/0
and down/0
instructions, where
up/0
is used to update your database and down/0
rolls back
the prompted changes.
Ecto provides some mix tasks to help developers work with migrations:
mix ecto.gen.migration add_weather_table
- generates a migration that the user can fill in with particular commandsmix ecto.migrate
- migrates a repositorymix ecto.rollback
- rolls back a particular migration
Run the mix help COMMAND
for more information.
Change
Migrations can also be automatically reversible by implementing
change/0
instead of up/0
and down/0
. For example, the
migration above can be written as:
defmodule MyRepo.Migrations.AddWeatherTable do
use Ecto.Migration
def change do
create table("weather") do
add :city, :string, size: 40
add :temp_lo, :integer
add :temp_hi, :integer
add :prcp, :float
timestamps()
end
end
end
Notice not all commands are reversible though. Trying to rollback
a non-reversible command will raise an Ecto.MigrationError
.
Field Types
The Ecto primitive types are mapped to the appropriate database
type by the various database adapters. For example, :string
is converted to
:varchar
, :binary
to :bits
or :blob
, and so on.
Similarly, you can pass any field type supported by your database
as long as it maps to an Ecto type. For instance, you can use :text
,
:varchar
or :char
in your migrations as add :field_name, :text
.
In your Ecto schema, they will all map to the same :string
type.
Remember, atoms can contain arbitrary characters by enclosing in
double quotes the characters following the colon. So, if you want to use
field type with your database specific options, you can pass atoms containing
these options like :"int unsigned"
, :"time without time zone"
.
Prefixes
Migrations support specifying a table prefix or index prefix which will target either a schema if using Postgres, or a different database if using MySQL. If no prefix is provided, the default schema or database is used.
Any reference declared in the table migration refers by default to the table with the same declared prefix. The prefix is specified in the table options:
def up do
create table("weather", prefix: "north_america") do
add :city, :string, size: 40
add :temp_lo, :integer
add :temp_hi, :integer
add :prcp, :float
add :group_id, references(:groups)
timestamps()
end
create index("weather", [:city], prefix: "north_america")
end
Note: if using MySQL with a prefixed table, you must use the same prefix for the references since cross database references are not supported.
For both MySQL and Postgres with a prefixed table, you must use the same prefix for the index field to ensure you index the prefix qualified table.
Transactions
By default, Ecto runs all migrations inside a transaction. That’s not always ideal: for example, PostgreSQL allows to create/drop indexes concurrently but only outside of any transaction (see the PostgreSQL docs).
Migrations can be forced to run outside a transaction by setting the
@disable_ddl_transaction
module attribute to true
:
defmodule MyRepo.Migrations.CreateIndexes do
use Ecto.Migration
@disable_ddl_transaction true
def change do
create index("posts", [:slug], concurrently: true)
end
end
Since running migrations outside a transaction can be dangerous, consider performing very few operations in such migrations.
See the index/3
function for more information on creating/dropping indexes
concurrently.
Comments
Migrations where you create or alter a table support specifying table and column comments, the same can be done when creating constraints and indexes. At the moment there is support only for Postgres.
def up do
create index("posts", [:name], comment: "Index Comment")
create constraint("products", "price_must_be_positive", check: "price > 0", comment: "Index Comment")
create table("weather", prefix: "north_america", comment: "Table Comment") do
add :city, :string, size: 40, comment: "Column Comment"
timestamps()
end
end
Repo configuration
The following migration configurations are available for under a given repository.
:migration_source
- Version numbers of migrations will be saved inschema_migrations
table but you can configure the table via:config :app, App.Repo, migration_source: "my_migrations"
:migration_primary_key
- Ecto uses the:id
column with type:bigserial
but you can configure it via:config :app, App.Repo, migration_primary_key: [id: :uuid, type: :binary_id]
:migration_timestamps
- Ecto uses type:naive_datetime
but you can configure it via:config :app, App.Repo, migration_timestamps: [type: :utc_datetime]
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Adds a column when creating or altering a table
Alters a table
Defines a constraint (either a check constraint or an exclusion constraint) to be evaluated by the database when a row is inserted or updated
Creates one of the following
Creates a table
Creates an index or a table with only :id
field if one does not yet exist
Creates a table if it does not exist
Gets the migrator direction
Drops one of the following
Drops a table or index if it exists
Executes arbitrary SQL or a keyword command
Executes reversible SQL commands
Executes queue migration commands
Generates a fragment to be used as default value
Returns an index struct that can be used on create
, drop
, etc
Modifies the type of column when altering a table
Gets the migrator prefix
Defines a foreign key
Removes a column when altering a table
Renames a table
Renames a column outside of the alter
statement
Returns a table struct that can be given on create, alter, etc
Adds :inserted_at
and :updated_at
timestamps columns
Shortcut for creating a unique index
Link to this section Functions
Adds a column when creating or altering a table.
This function also accepts Ecto primitive types as column types
and they are normalized by the database adapter. For example,
:string
is converted to :varchar
, :binary
to :bits
or :blob
,
and so on.
However, the column type is not always the same as the type used in your
schema. For example, a schema that has a :string
field,
can be supported by columns of types :char
, :varchar
, :text
and others.
For this reason, this function also accepts :text
and other columns,
which are sent as is to the underlying database.
To sum up, the column type may be either an Ecto primitive type,
which is normalized in cases the database does not understand it,
like :string
or :binary
, or a database type which is passed as is.
Custom Ecto types, like Ecto.UUID
, are not supported because
they are application level concern and may not always map to the
database.
Examples
create table("posts") do
add :title, :string, default: "Untitled"
end
alter table("posts") do
add :summary, :text # Database type
add :object, :map # Elixir type which is handled by the database
end
Options
:primary_key
- when true, marks this field as the primary key:default
- the column’s default value. can be a string, number or a fragment generated byfragment/1
:null
- whenfalse
, the column does not allow null values:size
- the size of the type (for example the numbers of characters). Default is no size, except for:string
that defaults to 255.:precision
- the precision for a numeric type. Required whenscale
is specified.:scale
- the scale of a numeric type. Default is 0 scale
Alters a table.
Examples
alter table("posts") do
add :summary, :text
modify :title, :text
remove :views
end
Defines a constraint (either a check constraint or an exclusion constraint) to be evaluated by the database when a row is inserted or updated.
Examples
create constraint("users", :price_must_be_positive, check: "price > 0")
create constraint("size_ranges", :no_overlap, exclude: ~s|gist (int4range("from", "to", '[]') WITH &&)|)
drop constraint("products", "price_must_be_positive")
Options
:check
- A check constraint expression. Required when creating a check constraint.:exclude
- An exclusion constraint expression. Required when creating an exclusion constraint.
Creates one of the following:
- an index
- a table with only an
:id
field - a constraint
When reversing (in change
running backward) indexes are only dropped if they
exist and no errors are raised. To enforce dropping an index use drop/1
.
Examples
create index("posts", [:name])
create table("version")
create constraint("products", "price_must_be_positive", check: "price > 0")
Creates a table.
By default, the table will also include a primary_key of name :id
and type :bigserial
. Check table/2
docs for more information.
Examples
create table(:posts) do
add :title, :string, default: "Untitled"
add :body, :text
timestamps()
end
Creates an index or a table with only :id
field if one does not yet exist.
Examples
create_if_not_exists index("posts", [:name])
create_if_not_exists table("version")
Creates a table if it does not exist.
Works just like create/2
but does not raise an error when table
already exists.
Gets the migrator direction.
Drops one of the following:
- an index
- a table
- a constraint
Examples
drop index("posts", [:name])
drop table("posts")
drop constraint("products", "price_must_be_positive")
Drops a table or index if it exists.
Does not raise an error if table or index does not exist.
Examples
drop_if_exists index("posts", [:name])
drop_if_exists table("posts")
Executes arbitrary SQL or a keyword command.
Reversible commands can be defined by calling execute/2
.
Examples
execute "CREATE EXTENSION postgres_fdw"
execute create: "posts", capped: true, size: 1024
Executes reversible SQL commands.
This is useful for database-specific functionality that does not warrant special support in Ecto, for example, creating and dropping a PostgreSQL extension, and avoids having to define up/down blocks.
Examples
execute "CREATE EXTENSION postgres_fdw", "DROP EXTENSION postgres_fdw"
Executes queue migration commands.
Reverses the order commands are executed when doing a rollback on a change/0 function and resets commands queue.
Generates a fragment to be used as default value.
Examples
create table("posts") do
add :inserted_at, :naive_datetime, default: fragment("now()")
end
Returns an index struct that can be used on create
, drop
, etc.
Expects the table name as first argument and the index fields as second. The field can be an atom, representing a column, or a string representing an expression that is sent as is to the database.
Indexes are non-unique by default.
Options
:name
- the name of the index. Defaults to “#{table}_#{column}_index”:unique
- if the column(s) is unique or not:concurrently
- if the index should be created/dropped concurrently:using
- configures the index type:prefix
- prefix for the index:where
- the conditions for a partial index
Adding/dropping indexes concurrently
PostgreSQL supports adding/dropping indexes concurrently (see the
docs).
In order to take advantage of this, the :concurrently
option needs to be set
to true
when the index is created/dropped.
Note: in order for the :concurrently
option to work, the migration must
not be run inside a transaction. See the Ecto.Migration
docs for more
information on running migrations outside of a transaction.
Index types
PostgreSQL supports several index types like B-tree, Hash or GiST. When
creating an index, the index type defaults to B-tree, but it can be specified
with the :using
option. The :using
option can be an atom or a string; its
value is passed to the USING
clause as is.
More information on index types can be found in the PostgreSQL docs.
Partial indexes
Databases like PostgreSQL and MSSQL supports partial indexes.
A partial index is an index built over a subset of a table. The subset
is defined by a conditional expression using the :where
option.
The :where
option can be an atom or a string; its value is passed
to the WHERE
clause as is.
More information on partial indexes can be found in the PostgreSQL docs.
Examples
# Without a name, index defaults to products_category_id_sku_index
create index("products", [:category_id, :sku], unique: true)
# Name can be given explicitly though
drop index("products", [:category_id, :sku], name: :my_special_name)
# Indexes can be added concurrently
create index("products", [:category_id, :sku], concurrently: true)
# The index type can be specified
create index("products", [:name], using: :hash)
# Create a partial index
create index("products", [:user_id], where: "price = 0", name: :free_products_index)
Indexes also support custom expressions. Some databases may require the index expression to be written between parens:
# Create an index on custom expressions
create index("products", ["(lower(name))"], name: :products_lower_name_index)
# To create a tsvector index with GIN on Postgres
create index("products", ["(to_tsvector('english', name))"],
name: :products_name_vector, using: "GIN")
Modifies the type of column when altering a table.
This command is not reversible as Ecto does not know what is the current type to revert it back to.
See add/3
for more information on supported types.
Examples
alter table("posts") do
modify :title, :text
end
Options
:null
- sets to null or not null:default
- changes the default:size
- the size of the type (for example the numbers of characters). Default is no size.:precision
- the precision for a numeric type. Required whenscale
is specified.:scale
- the scale of a numeric type. Default is 0 scale.
Gets the migrator prefix.
Defines a foreign key.
Examples
create table("products") do
add :group_id, references("groups")
end
Options
:name
- The name of the underlying reference, defaults to “#{table}_#{column}_fkey”:column
- The foreign key column, default is:id
:type
- The foreign key type, default is:bigserial
:on_delete
- What to perform if the referenced entry is deleted. May be:nothing
,:delete_all
,:nilify_all
or:restrict
. Defaults to:nothing
.:on_update
- What to perform if the referenced entry is updated. May be:nothing
,:update_all
,:nilify_all
or:restrict
. Defaults to:nothing
.
Removes a column when altering a table.
This command is not reversible as Ecto does not know what is the current type to add the column back as.
Examples
alter table("posts") do
remove :title
end
Renames a column outside of the alter
statement.
Examples
rename table("posts"), :title, to: :summary
Returns a table struct that can be given on create, alter, etc.
Examples
create table("products") do
add :name, :string
add :price, :decimal
end
drop table("products")
create table("products", primary_key: false) do
add :name, :string
add :price, :decimal
end
Options
:primary_key
- when false, does not generate primary key on table creation:engine
- customizes the table storage for supported databases. For MySQL, the default is InnoDB:prefix
- the prefix for the table:options
- provide custom options that will be appended after generated statement, for example “WITH”, “INHERITS” or “ON COMMIT” clauses
Adds :inserted_at
and :updated_at
timestamps columns.
Those columns are of :naive_datetime
type, and by default
cannot be null. opts
can be given to customize the generated
fields.
Options
:inserted_at
- the name of the column for insertion times, providingfalse
disables column:updated_at
- the name of the column for update times, providingfalse
disables column:type
- column type, defaults to:naive_datetime
Shortcut for creating a unique index.
See index/3
for more information.