I have a Users model which needs an :email
column (I forgot to add that column during the initial scaffold).
I opened the migration file and added t.string :email
, did rake db:migrate
, and got a NoMethodError
. Then I added the line
add_column :users, :email, :string
again rake db:migrate
, again NoMethodError
. Am I missing a step here?
Edit: here's the migration file.
class CreateUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration
def self.up
add_column :users, :email, :string
create_table :users do |t|
t.string :username开发者_运维知识库
t.string :email
t.string :crypted_password
t.string :password_salt
t.string :persistence_token
t.timestamps
end
end
def self.down
drop_table :users
end
end
If you have already run your original migration (before editing it), then you need to generate a new migration (rails generate migration add_email_to_users email:string
will do the trick).
It will create a migration file containing line:
add_column :users, email, string
Then do a rake db:migrate
and it'll run the new migration, creating the new column.
If you have not yet run the original migration you can just edit it, like you're trying to do. Your migration code is almost perfect: you just need to remove the add_column
line completely (that code is trying to add a column to a table, before the table has been created, and your table creation code has already been updated to include a t.string :email
anyway).
Use this command on the terminal:
rails generate migration add_fieldname_to_tablename fieldname:string
and
rake db:migrate
to run this migration
Sometimes rails generate migration add_email_to_users email:string
produces a migration like this
class AddEmailToUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
end
end
In that case you have to manually an add_column
to change
:
class AddEmailToUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
add_column :users, :email, :string
end
end
And then run rake db:migrate
You can also do
rake db:rollback
if you have not added any data to the tables.Then edit the migration file by adding the email column to it and then call
rake db:migrate
This will work if you have rails 3.1 onwards installed in your system.
Much simpler way of doing it is change let the change in migration file be as it is. use
$rake db:migrate:redo
This will roll back the last migration and migrate it again.
To add a column I just had to follow these steps :
rails generate migration add_fieldname_to_tablename fieldname:string
Alternative
rails generate migration addFieldnameToTablename
Once the migration is generated, then edit the migration and define all the attributes you want that column added to have.
Note: Table names in Rails are always plural (to match DB conventions). Example using one of the steps mentioned previously-
rails generate migration addEmailToUsers
rake db:migrate
Or
- You can change the schema in from
db/schema.rb
, Add the columns you want in the SQL query. Run this command:
rake db:schema:load
Warning/Note
Bear in mind that, running
rake db:schema:load
automatically wipes all data in your tables.
You can also add column to a specific position using before column or after column like:
rails generate migration add_dob_to_customer dob:date
The migration file will generate the following code except after: :email. you need to add after: :email or before: :email
class AddDobToCustomer < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.2]
def change
add_column :customers, :dob, :date, after: :email
end
end
You also can use special change_table method in the migration for adding new columns:
change_table(:users) do |t|
t.column :email, :string
end
When I've done this, rather than fiddling the original migration, I create a new one with just the add column in the up section and a drop column in the down section.
You can change the original and rerun it if you migrate down between, but in this case I think that's made a migration that won't work properly.
As currently posted, you're adding the column and then creating the table.
If you change the order it might work. Or, as you're modifying an existing migration, just add it to the create table instead of doing a separate add column.
You can also do this .. rails g migration add_column_to_users email:string
then rake db:migrate also add :email attribute in your user controller ;
for more detail check out http://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_migrations.html
You can also force to table columns in table using force: true
, if you table is already exist.
example:
ActiveRecord::Schema.define(version: 20080906171750) do
create_table "authors", force: true do |t|
t.string "name"
t.datetime "created_at"
t.datetime "updated_at"
end
end
You could rollback the last migration by
rake db:rollback STEP=1
or rollback this specific migration by
rake db:migrate:down VERSION=<YYYYMMDDHHMMSS>
and edit the file, then run rake db:mirgate
again.
精彩评论