Reputation: 711
I'm working on a project that has a fairly complex database (150+ tables). To be able to maintain changes, I've decided to add migrations, preferably using Yii or Laravel.
Does anybody know, if it is possible to generate an initial migration from an existing database?
Creating it by hand would:
If there is no way, does anybody know a good PHP-based framework, that supports such functionality?
Upvotes: 16
Views: 13866
Reputation: 81
I think that the answer is: https://github.com/jamband/yii2-schemadump for Yii2 "This command to generate the schema from an existing database."
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 17495
As for Yii 1.x, schmunk has created a wonderful database-command
yiic command.
This command covers only up migrations. You must write your own down migrations.
To use it:
Get the newest version from GitHub and put it's contents into /protected/commands
folder (create one, if it does not exist). Note, that you need to put contents as is (without subfolder for this particular command), which is contrary to what we do for example for extensions.
Rename EDatabaseCommand.php
file (and class inside) to DatabaseCommand.php
, if you want to use yiic database
command (as suggested in docs). Without this fix, you'll have to use yiic edatabase
command, as there's slight inconsistency between docs and the code (at least in the newest version, as of writing this; maybe schmunk is going to fix this).
Having this, navigate back to protected
folder in your console and execute yiic database dump migration_name --prefix=table_name
.
This will create a migration protected/runtime/migration_name.php
file with proper date and time in the beginning of file name, filled with series of CDbMigration
commands to recreate your database schema. Visit "Usage" section in the docs to read more about customizing command.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 251
Instructions for accomplishing this in Yii:
Add your database connection settings to protected/config/console.php
.
Run yiic migrate create initial
to create the stub code for the migration.
Copy contents of this gist to protected/commands/InitialDbMigrationCommand.php
.
Run yiic initialdbmigration 'name_of_your_database' > initial_migration.php
to generate up()
and down()
methods for initial database migration.
Copy and paste up()
and down()
methods from initial_migration.php
to the file created in the protected/migrations
folder in step 2.
Upvotes: 25
Reputation: 9
There is one now for Yii:
This allows a distributed team to easily update the db locally and then distribute it's updates with thee other developers automatically with the rest of the code via a versioning control system (I used git). It also performs a full initial db dump to xml and to a migration file.
project home: https://code.google.com/p/yii-automatically-generated-migration-files/
source code: https://code.google.com/p/yii-automatically-generated-migration-files/source/checkout
I've created it from scratch as I was annoyed with the fact that I had to do this manually in order to distribute it to my team.
Hope it helps!
Feel free to share bugs, improvements and comments.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1156
Here is a Laravel package I created that does exactly that. It automatically generates clean and accurate Laravel migrations from your existing database.
As it doesn't make any assumptions of the database, it should work on any database structure while even keeping the original index and foreign key names.
https://github.com/Xethron/migrations-generator
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 3656
After doing some research, here's what you're going to need for Laravel: https://github.com/XCMer/larry-four-generator
(version 4 at least, who knows how long this will work, Laravel changes too fast and has too many breaking changes)
You'll want to run php artisan larry:fromdb
and it'll show you the tables...You can also exclude or only process certain tables (look at the readme).
Again, super super useful if you like to build your schema in something like MySQL Workbench. I also saw mention of a package that would parse the workbench files...But the link was dead.
You may also wish to use this larry package with: https://github.com/JeffreyWay/Laravel-4-Generators
You can then create scaffolding a la CakePHP style.
Alternatively, try this package: https://github.com/barryvdh/laravel-migration-generator
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2128
'Doctrine Project' (aka Doctrine) has the ability to create DB migrations for existing DB structures, so you can recreate the existing structure. It can be easily implemented in Symfony, Laravel, also in Yii and many frameworks.
Sample from:
http://symfony.com/legacy/doc/doctrine/1_2/en/07-Migrations
From Database
If you have an existing database you can build a set of migration classes that will re-create your database by running the following command.
$ ./symfony doctrine:generate-migrations-db
From Models
If you have an existing set of models you can build a set of migration classes that will create your database by running the following command.
$ ./symfony doctrine:generate-migrations-models
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 9357
I use both Yii and Laravel and I could not find what you require for either of them. They both create empty files and you need to create the migration script yourself. For a table of 150 tables it will be challenge to create the migrations yourself, but it is not quite as hard as you imagine. Because you already have the information on the fields it should not take so long to create.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2539
Well since migration is about setting up your database structure and make changes to it, not to reflect a current database there is no such way.
And this is also not a step you have to make. You can start from where you are at the moment, which will make you able to rollback up to this point. Which means you can make migrations for your current tables without having to specify their entire structure, but just the changes only.
Let's say you have a table called user and want to add their firstname to it.
php artisan migrate:make add_firstname_to_user
Now go into application/migrations
and find the migration file, add this
public function up()
{
Schema::table('user', function($table)
{
$table->string('firstname');
});
}
public function down() {
Schema::table('user', function($table)
{
$table->drop_column('firstname');
});
}
Now you can add migrate it
php artisan migrate:install // if you haven't run this, should only be once
php artisan migrate
.. and rollback using
php artisan migrate:rollback
This will add or drop the column firstname, without affecting your table in any other way.
Upvotes: 1