rake db:schema:load vs. migrations
Very simple question here - if migrations can get slow and cumbersome as an app gets more complex and if we have the much cleaner rake db:schema:load
to call instead, why do migrations exist at all?
If the answer to the above is that migrations are used for version control (a stepwise record of changes to the database), then as an app gets more complex and rake db:schema:load
is used more instead, do they continue to maint开发者_运维百科ain their primary function?
Caution:
From the answers to this question: rake db:schema:load
will delete data on a production server so be careful when using it.
Migrations provide forward and backward step changes to the database. In a production environment, incremental changes must be made to the database during deploys: migrations provide this functionality with a rollback failsafe. If you run rake db:schema:load
on a production server, you'll end up deleting all your production data. This is a dangerous habit to get into.
That being said, I believe it is a decent practice to occasionally "collapse" migrations. This entails deleting old migrations, replacing them with a single migration (very similar to your schema.rb
file) and updating the schema_migrations
table to reflect this change. Be very careful when doing this! You can easily delete your production data if you aren't careful.
As a side note, I strongly believe that you should never put data creation in the migration files. The seed.rb
file can be used for this, or custom rake or deploy tasks. Putting this into migration files mixes your database schema specification with your data specification and can lead to conflicts when running migration files.
Just stumbled across this post, that was long ago and didn't see the answer I was expecting.
rake db:schema:load
is great for the first time you put a system in production. After that you should run migrations normally.
This also helps you cleaning your migrations whenever you like, since the schema has all the information to put other machines in production even when you cleaned up your migrations.
Migrations lets you add data to the db too. but db:schema:load only loads the schema .
Because migrations can be rolled back, and provide additional functionality. For example, if you need to modify some data as part of a schema change then you'll need to do that as a migration.
As a user of other ORM's, it always seemed strange to me that Rails didn't have a 'sync and update' feature. ie, by using the schema file (which represents the entire, up-to-date schema), go through the existing DB structure and add/remove tables, columns, indexes as required.
To me this would be a lot more robust, even if possibly a little slower.
I have already posted as a comment, but feels it is better to put the comments of the db/schema.rb file here:
# Note that this schema.rb definition is the authoritative source for your
# database schema. If you need to create the application database on another
# system, you should be using db:schema:load, not running all the migrations
# from scratch. The latter is a flawed and unsustainable approach (the more migrations
# you'll amass, the slower it'll run and the greater likelihood for issues).
#
# It's strongly recommended that you check this file into your version control system.
Actually, my experience is that it is better to put the migration files in git and not the schema.rb file...
rake db:migrate
setup the tables in the database. When you run the migration command, it will look in db/migrate/ for any ruby files and execute them starting with the oldest. There is a timestamp at the beginning of each migration filename.
Unlike rake db:migrate
that runs migrations that have not run yet, rake db:schema:load
loads the schema that is already generated in db/schema.rb
into the database.
You can find out more about rake database commands here.
So schema:load takes the currently configured schema, derives the associated queries to match, and runs them all in one go. It's kind of a one-and-done situation. As you've seen, migrations make changes step-by-step. Loading the schema might make sense when working on a project locally, especially early in the lifetime of a project. But if we were to drop and recreate the production DB each time we do a deployment, we would lose production data each time. That's a no-go. So that's why we use migrations to make the required changes to the existing DB.
So. The deeper into a project you get, the more migrations you'll get stacked up as you make more changes to the DB. And with each migration, those migrations become more and more the source of truth of what's on production - what matters isn't what's in the schema, but what migrations have been run in production. The difference is effectively moot if we have both in sync. But as soon as one goes of out date from the other, you start to have discrepancies. Ideally this would not happen, but we live in the real world, and stuff happens. And if you're using schema:load to set up your DB locally, you might not be getting the actual state of the DB, as it is reflected via the migration history on production.
精彩评论