I have an issue where I have an existing database which where I have mapped over only certain entities to use with EF Core (the DB has 100s of tables and I dont want classes for all of them.
I scaffolded the starting stage like this
dotnet ef dbcontext scaffold .. etc etc
Where I specified specific tables with the connection string.
I then created an initial migration to snapshot the starting stage with
dotnet ef migrations add Initial
I now want to add a new table based on a new entity. So I created a second migration using
dotnet ef migrations add NewTable
But when i run this using..
dotnet ef database update NewTable
It attempts to add the tables in the initial migration! because I havent ran that migration, so I have no records in __EFMigrationsHistory. But I dont want to run the first migration as I already have the tables which were scaffolded! Initial was just to create a snapshot which is what I thought you have to do.
So is there some way to make it think Initial has already been run? By putting something in
__EFMigrationsHistory? Then I can run the NewTable migration without getting "object already exisits".
Thanks
It ran my latest NewTable migration fine after I removed the previous one, otherwise it was still trying to add objects from the initial migration resulting in "Object already exists".
I find this strange as the statement
'dotnet ef database update NewTable'
specifies which migration I wanted to run, and shouldn't run initial again. Anyway this fix worked fine.
I can't find official documentation of this method.
All I found is that it apply migrations that didn't applied yet (and create db if not exists).
but how it work?
is it look at the db Migration History table to see which migration missed?
and what if somehow it see that Migration History table has more migrations than in migrations folder? is it downgrade them?
thanks!
Does it look at the db Migration History table to see which migration are missing?
Yes, and applies any missing migrations in chronological order.
What if somehow it sees that the Migration History table has more migrations than in the migrations folder? Does it revert them?
It does nothing. They might be for a different model/DbContext/application that is using the same database.
In my application I enable Code First Migrations with some migrations, Also I use SQL Server Compact for integration test.
When I run my tests, Entity Framework create an empty database and tries to run migration on that empty database and thrown The specified table does not exist.
Based on this report I think usage of Migration in Entity Framework 6 has changed.
I test all Database Initializer with Context.Database.Create(); but in all case tabale's never created.
I don't know that this is EntityFramework's bug or not, but when I made rename the namespace of Migration Configuration class from default (Projectname/Migrations) to any none default name, migration works well.
Context.Database.Create() will not execute migrations! It only creates empty db. To Update database from code to latest version you need to use DbMigrator.Update method:
var migrator = new DbMigrator(new MyMigrationsConfiguration());
migrator.Update();
Alternatively you might use MigrateDatabaseToLatestVersion
Database.SetInitializer(new MigrateDatabaseToLatestVersion<BlogContext, Configuration>());
It is described in details here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/data/jj591621.aspx#initializer
In case someone still struggles to fix the issue.
The code that follows works for me: add-migration MyFirstMigration
Meanwhile add-migration "MyFirstMigration" with the migration name ramped in quote doesn't work.
There may be previous migration files which the ide may be referring to mostly likely due to caching.
Drop backup and drop target database if it exists, and drop the migration folder.
Now add the migration and you will be good to go.
It does happens when adding model and running add-migration command.
Here is the simplest cause of this issue:
Add a newly added model property into IdentityDbContex class.
Here are the steps:
create model
add property into IdentityDbContex class
run add-migration
update-database
How does Flyway handle multiple schema dependencies?
Ie
V1_CREATE_TABLE.sql in SCHEMA_A
V2_CREATE_VIEW.sql in SCHEMA_B (based on table in schema A)
Is it possible to ensure that V1 is created before V2?
It is also possible to get into a cross dependency. For example say V3_CREATE_VIEW_2.sql in SCHEMA_A (based on view in schema B). How do we ensure that dependency?
Flyway will execute the scripts in order based on their version numbers. If you want a single instance of Flyway to manage objects in multiple schemas, you must prefix the object names in the migration scripts.
I am using EF Code First with EF 5 in VS 2012. I use PM update-database command and I have a simple seed method to fill some tables with sample data.
I would like to delete and recreate my x.mdb. The update history seems to be out of sync. If I comment out all my DBSets in my context, update-database runs with no error but leaves some tables in the DB. As I have no valuable data in the DB it seems to the simplest to reset the all thing.
How can I accomplish this?
If I'm understanding it right...
If you want to start clean:
1) Manually delete your DB - wherever it is (I'm assuming you have your connection sorted), or empty it, but easier/safer is to delete it all together - as there is system __MigrationHistory table - you need that removed too.
2) Remove all migration files - which are under Migrations - and named like numbers etc. - remove them all,
3) Rebuild your project containing migrations (and the rest) - and make sure your project is set up (configuration) to build automatically (that sometimes may cause problems - but not likely for you),
4) Run Add-Migration Initial again - then Update-Database
If you worked the correct way to create your migrations by using the command Add-Migration "Name_Of_Migration" then you can do the following to get a clean start (reset, with loss of data, of course):
Update-database -TargetMigration:0
Normally your DB is empty now since the down methods were executed.
Update-database
This will recreate your DB to your current migration
For EntityFrameworkCore you can use the following:
Update-Database -Migration 0
This will remove all migrations from the database.
Then you can use:
Remove-Migration
To remove your migration.
Finally you can recreate your migration and apply it to the database.
Add-Migration Initialize
Update-Database
Tested on EFCore v2.1.0
Similarly for the dotnet ef CLI tool:
dotnet ef database update 0 [ --context dbcontextname ]
dotnet ef migrations add Initialize
dotnet ef database update
Single Liner to Drop, Create and Seed from Package Manager Console:
update-database -TargetMigration:0 | update-database -force
Kaboom.
How about ..
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Database.SetInitializer(new DropCreateDatabaseIfModelChanges<ExampleContext>());
// C
// o
// d
// i
// n
// g
}
I picked this up from Programming Entity Framework: Code First, Pg 28 First Edition.
dbctx.Database.EnsureDeleted();
dbctx.Database.EnsureCreated();
I am using .net Core 6 and this code is directly stripped out of the Program.cs
using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore;
namespace RandomProjectName
{
public class Program
{
public static async Task<int> Main(string[] args)
{
var connectionString = "Server=YourServerName;Database=YourDatabaseName;Integrated Security=True;";
var optionsBuilder = new DbContextOptionsBuilder<YourDataContext>();
optionsBuilder.UseSqlServer(connectionString);
var db = new YourDataContext(optionsBuilder.Options);
db.Database.EnsureDeleted();
db.Database.Migrate();
}
}
}
You should have at minimum initial migration for this to work.
There re many ways to drop a database or update existing database, simply you can switched to previous migrations.
dotnet ef database update previousMigraionName
But some databases have limitations like not allow to modify after create relationships, means you have not allow privileges to drop columns from ef core database providers but most of time in ef core drop database is allowed.so you can drop DB using drop command
and then you use previous migration again.
dotnet ef database drop
PMC command
PM> drop-database
OR you can do manually deleting database and do a migration.
If you created your database following this tutorial: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-au/data/jj193542.aspx
... then this might work:
Delete all .mdf and .ldf files in your project directory
Go to View / SQL Server Object Explorer and delete the database from the (localdb)\v11.0 subnode. See also https://stackoverflow.com/a/15832184/2279059
Using EF6 with ASP.Net Core 5 I found these commands handy during first initialization of the database:
Remove-Migration -force; Add-Migration InitialMigration; Update-Database;
It removes the last migration (should be the only one), creates it again, then refreshes the database. You can thus type these three commands in one line into the Package Management Console after editing your DbContext and it'll update InitialMigration and database.
A little annoying is that it'll compile your project three times in a row but a least no further manual steps (like deleting the migration files) are necessary.
When you remove an entity you'll need to issue Remove-Database before updating. So the line becomes:
Remove-Migration -force; Add-Migration InitialMigration; Remove-Database; Update-Database;
Problematic here: You need to confirm removing the database + 4 rebuilds.
Take these steps:
Delete those object which should be deleted from the context // Dbset<Item> Items{get;set;}
and in Nuget Console run these commands
add-migration [contextName]
update-database -verbose
It will drop table(s) that not exist in Context, but already created in database
Let me help in updating the answers here since new users will find it useful.
I believe the aim is to delete the database itself and recreate it using EF Code First approach.
1.Open your project in Visual Studio using the ".sln" extention.
2.Select Server Explorer( it is oftentimes on the left)
3.Select SQL Server Object Explorer.
4.The database you want to delete would be listed under any of the localDB. Right-Click it and select delete.
Since this question is gonna be clicked some day by new EF Core users and I find the top answers somewhat unnecessarily destructive, I will show you a way to start "fresh". Beware, this deletes all of your data.
Delete all tables on your MS SQL server. Also delete the __EFMigrations table.
Type dotnet ef database update
EF Core will now recreate the database from zero up until your latest migration.