Mirage
Mirage

Reputation: 31548

What is the easiest way to clear a database from the CLI with manage.py in Django?

I am using Django to build a website with MySQL. Now as I am learning so I need to change the Model very often so I want that all tables get cleared and new table get created.

But syncdb doesn't touch existing tables. Is there any better way to handle this problem?

Upvotes: 116

Views: 183512

Answers (5)

Mahbub Ul Islam
Mahbub Ul Islam

Reputation: 1059

You can use the Django-Truncate library to delete all data of a table without destroying the table structure.

Example:

  1. First, install django-turncate using your terminal/command line:
pip install django-truncate
  1. Add "django_truncate" to your INSTALLED_APPS in the settings.py file:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'django_truncate',
]
  1. Use this command in your terminal to delete all data of the table from the app.
python manage.py truncate --apps app_name --models table_name

Upvotes: 1

Anupam
Anupam

Reputation: 15610

I think Django docs explicitly mention that if the intent is to start from an empty DB again (which seems to be OP's intent), then just drop and re-create the database and re-run migrate (instead of using flush):

If you would rather start from an empty database and re-run all migrations, you should drop and recreate the database and then run migrate instead.

So for OP's case, we just need to:

  1. Drop the database from MySQL
  2. Recreate the database
  3. Run python manage.py migrate

Upvotes: 5

mrmagooey
mrmagooey

Reputation: 4982

Using Django Extensions, running:

./manage.py reset_db

Will clear the database tables, then running:

./manage.py syncdb

Will recreate them (south may ask you to migrate things).

Upvotes: 6

manojlds
manojlds

Reputation: 301037

If you don't care about data:

Best way would be to drop the database and run syncdb again. Or you can run:

For Django >= 1.5

python manage.py flush

For Django < 1.5

python manage.py reset appname

(you can add --no-input to the end of the command for it to skip the interactive prompt.)

If you do care about data:

From the docs:

syncdb will only create tables for models which have not yet been installed. It will never issue ALTER TABLE statements to match changes made to a model class after installation. Changes to model classes and database schemas often involve some form of ambiguity and, in those cases, Django would have to guess at the correct changes to make. There is a risk that critical data would be lost in the process.

If you have made changes to a model and wish to alter the database tables to match, use the sql command to display the new SQL structure and compare that to your existing table schema to work out the changes.

https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/django-admin/

Reference: FAQ - https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/faq/models/#if-i-make-changes-to-a-model-how-do-i-update-the-database

People also recommend South ( http://south.aeracode.org/docs/about.html#key-features ), but I haven't tried it.

Upvotes: 216

Udi
Udi

Reputation: 30472

Quickest (drops and creates all tables including data):

./manage.py reset appname | ./manage.py dbshell

Caution:

  • Might not work on Windows correctly.
  • Might keep some old tables in the db

Upvotes: 0

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