Schema & Migrations
Migrations are used to build and modify your database tables. This is done through use of migration files and the Schema
class. Migration files are really just wrappers around the Schema
class as well as a way for Masonite to manage which migrations have run and which ones have not.
Creating Migrations
Creating migrations are easy with the migration commands. To create one simply run:
This will create a migration file for you and put it in the databases/migrations
directory.
If you want to create a starter migration, that is a migration with some boilerplate of what you are planning to do, you can use the --table
and --create
flag:
This will setup a migration for you with some boiler plate on creating a new table
This will setup a migration for you for boiler plate on modifying an existing table.
Building Migrations
To start building up your migration, simply modify the up
method and start adding any of the available methods below to your migration.
A simple example would look like this for a new table:
Available Methods
Command
Description
table.string()
The varchar version of the table. Can optional pass in a length table.string('name', length=181)
table.integer()
The INT version of the database. Can also specify a length table.integer('age', length=5)
table.increments()
The auto incrementing version of the table. An unsigned non nullable auto incrementing integer.
table.big_increments()
An unsigned non nullable auto incrementing big integer. Use this if you expect the rows in a table to be very large
table.binary()
BINARY equivalent column. Sometimes is text field on unsupported databases.
table.boolean()
BOOLEAN equivalent column.
table.char()
CHAR equivalent column.
table.date()
DATE equivalent column.
table.datetime()
DATETIME equivalent column.
table.timestamp()
TIMESTAMP equivalent column.
table.timestamps()
Creates created_at
and updated_at
columns on the table with the timestamp
column and defaults to the current time.
table.decimal()
DECIMAL equivalent column. Can also specify the length and decimal position. table.decimal('salary', 17, 6)
table.double()
DOUBLE equivalent column. Can also specify a float length table.double('salary', 17,6)
table.enum()
ENUM equivalent column. You can also specify available options as a list. table.enum('flavor', ['chocolate', 'vanilla'])
. Sometimes defaults to a TEXT field with a constraint on unsupported databases.
table.text()
TEXT equivalent column.
table.unsigned_integer()
UNSIGNED INT equivalent column.
table.unsigned()
Alias for unsigned_integer
table.soft_deletes()
A nullable DATETIME column named deleted_at
. This is used by the SoftDeletes scope.
Rolling Back Migrations
In addition to building up the migration, you should also build onto the down
method which should reverse whatever was done in the up
method. If you create a table in the up method, you should drop the table in the down method.
Command
Description
table.drop_table()
DROP TABLE equivalent statement.
table.drop_table_if_exists()
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS equivalent statement.
table.drop_column()
DROP COLUMN equivalent statement.
table.drop_index()
Drops the constraint. Must pass in the name of the constraint. drop_index('email_index')
table.drop_unique()
Drops the uniqueness constraint. Must pass in the name of the constraint. table.drop_unique('users_email_unique')
table.drop_foreign()
Drops the foreign key. Must specify the index name. table.drop_foreign('users_article_id_foreign')
table.drop_primary()
Drops the primary key constraint. Must pass in the constraint name table.drop_foreign('users_id_primary')
Getting Migration Status
At any time you can get the migrations that have run or need to be ran:
Seeing Migration SQL Dumps
If you would like to see just the SQL that would run instead of running the actual migrations, you can specify the -s
flag (short for --show
). This works on the migrate and migrate:rollback commands.
Refreshing Migrations
Refreshing a database is simply rolling back all migrations and then migrating again. This "refreshes" your database.
You can refresh by running the command:
Modifiers
In addition to the available columns you can use, you can also specify some modifers which will change the behavior of the column:
Command
Description
.nullable()
Allows NULL values to be inserted into the column.
.unique()
Forces all values in the column to be unique.
.after()
Adds the column after another column in the table. Can be used like table.string('is_admin').after('email')
.
.unsigned()
Makes the column unsigned. Used with the table.integer('age').unsigned()
column.
.use_current()
Makes the column use the CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
modifer.
Indexes
In addition to columns, you can also create indexes. Below are the available indexes you can create:
Command
Description
table.primary()
Make the column use the PRIMARY KEY modifer.
table.unique()
Makes a unique index. Can pass in a column table.unique('email')
or list of columns table.unique(['email', 'phone_number'])
.
table.index()
Creates an index on the column. table.index('email')
The default primary key is often set to an auto-incrementing integer, but you can use UUID instead.
Foreign Keys
If you want to create a foreign key you can do so simply as well:
And optionally specify an on_delete
or on_update
method:
You can use these options:
Command
Description
.on_update('set null')
Sets the ON UPDATE SET NULL property on the constraint.
.on_update('cascade')
Sets the ON UPDATE CASCADE property on the constraint.
.on_delete('set null')
Sets the ON DELETE SET NULL property on the constraint.
.on_delete('cascade')
Sets the ON DELETE CASCADE property on the constraint.
Changing Columns
If you would like to change a column you should simply specify the new column and then specify a .change()
method on it.
Here is an example of changing an email field to a nullable field:
Truncating
You can truncate a table:
You can also temporarily disable foreign key checks and truncate a table:
Dropping a Table
You can drop a table:
Dropping a Table If It Exists
You can drop a table if it exists:
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