Reputation: 4632
I dropped some table related to an app. and again tried the syncdb command
python manage.py syncdb
It shows error like
django.db.utils.ProgrammingError: (1146, "Table 'someapp.feed' doesn't exist")
models.py
class feed(models.Model):
user = models.ForeignKey(User,null=True,blank=True)
feed_text = models.CharField(max_length=2000)
date = models.CharField(max_length=30)
upvote = models.IntegerField(default=0)
downvote = models.IntegerField(default=0)
def __str__(self):
return feed.content
What I can do to get the tables for that app ?
Upvotes: 46
Views: 110428
Reputation: 1
I was having the same error "Table Name Doesn't Exist". I was having this problem with one or two models after that I deleted the migration files that were related to my models and then again I created the same models and made migrations and migrated it and it was successfully solved. I hope it will help others too.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 17
If the python manage.py migrate command still doesn't work. Delete your app's migrations and re-run this command.
python manage.py migrate
Upvotes: -3
Reputation: 801
I faced the same issue earlier when I accidentally deleted my migrations folder in an app. I was able to fix it by running manual makemigrations
for that specific app.
Here's the fix for Windows,
py manage.py makemigrations <your_app_name>
py manage.py migrate
For other OS you need to replace py
with python3
or python
I hope this helped fix your issue!
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 51
I faced the same problem, some of the above mentioned answers seemed not to work for me, but here's a simple 4 step solution:
1) Delete the migrations files below __init__.py (don't delete __init__.py) in your specific app.
2) python manage.py makemigrations AppName
3) python manage.py migrate --fake AppName zero
4) python manage.py migrate AppName
Hope these works for you.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 2037
In this solution, your data will be removed. I removed the app and created the app again. I copied the app folder somewhere and delete the app folder from my project. I commented on all lines in urls.py and files similar views.py and admin.py that use this app. also app name in settings.py.
In mysql:
truncate django_migrations;
truncate django_admin_log;
Do this for all models in your app and change n. n is app id.
delete from auth_permission where content_type_id=n
delete from django_content_type where app_label='appname'
python manage.py startapp your_app_name
Then uncomment previous lines and restore files and run
python manage.py makemigrations
python manage.pt migrate
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 89
I had a similar issue.
I had another python (with a class) file which need access to DB.
For some reasons, when running 'makemigrations' this file was processed (I guess this is linked to some import chains).
In this class, I had a method containing a default arg method(defaultModel=Model.get_default())
in the signature which was accessing to the default object in the DB (static method included in the Model class).
A the import time, this default arg was evaluated and as the table is not populated yet, it gives this error.
So I just set None
for the default args and asks for the default model object inside the method. This solved the issue.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 81
I just ran migrations with the name of the app attached, for all the apps I had provisioned and that worked.
e.g. python3 manage.py makemigrations my_custom_app
After running for all of them I ran a migrate command to seal the deal.
python3 manage.py migrate
. That was it. I'm still wondering why django behaves this way sometimes though.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 96
What solved my problem in situation when manage.py setmigration and then migrate to the SQL database is not working properly did is following:
python manage.py migrate --fake MyApp zero
python manage.py migrate MyApp
And the problem that rises with connections.py and and after running correctly the migration command is solved! At least for me.
I'm using Python (3.x), MySQL DB, Django (3.x), and I was in situation when I needed after some time of successfully creating tables in my database, that some error regarding connections.py raises. But, above commands helped. I hope they will help all those who are having these type of problems.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 41
I had this issue where I was playing with same database structure in production vs development. While dropping and recreating tables will probably resolve the issue, its worth checking your database itself and see if the model
is actually correct. For myself I created the development database incorrectly with the table names all in lowercase while in production the first letter of tables were capitalized. I used the python manage.py inspectdb
command on production db, and compared it to the model
and realized that in the model it was trying to insert data to table 'test' instead of 'Test' for example. Hope that helps some of you in future.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 743
I tried all of the above tricks and never worked for me. I commented on all imports and URLs that called a particular Table
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 761
This is linked to the migration data in the scripts inside the project not matching with the migration scripts in the database as far as I could tell. I solved this by the following steps :
__ini__
managed=True
$ ./manage.py makemigrations
$ ./manage.py migrate
This will create the migration scripts again and will apply it to your database.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 59
I have to face same issue and there are a couple of approaches, but the one I think is the most probable one.
Maybe you are loading views or queries to database but you haven´t granted enough time for Django to migrate the models to DB. That's why the "table doesn't exist".
Make sure you use this sort of initialization in you view's code:
Class RegisterForm(forms.Form):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(RegisterForm, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
A second approach is you clean previous migrations, delete the database and start over the migration process.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2467
none of the above solutions worked for me, I finally solved by
sudo systemctl stop mysql.service
sudo apt-get purge mysql-server
sudo apt-get install mysql-server
sudo systemctl stop mysql.service
In my case the code that I pulled had managed = False and I wanted the tables to be maintained by Django.
But when I did makemigrations the custom tables were not being detected or I was getting the error that the app_name.Table_name does not exist
I tried the following:
PS: This solution is only feasible if backup is present or data is not important or you are just started creating the tables, as purging mysql will lead to loss of data
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1056
For those that may still be having trouble (like me), try this out:
Comment out all the URL's in the main app's urls.py
Then go ahead and run migrations:
$ ./manage.py makemigrations
$ ./manage.py migrate
The problem was alleviated by removing the ()
's
solved_time = models.DateTimeField('solved time', default=timezone.now())
to
solved_time = models.DateTimeField('solved time', default=timezone.now)
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 37876
if django version >= 1.7:
python manage.py makemigrations
python manage.py migrate --fake
else
python manage.py schemamigration someapp --auto
python manage.py migrate someapp --fake
Upvotes: 107