from django.db.transaction import atomic from .exceptions import IrreversibleError class Migration: """ The base class for all migrations. Migration files will import this from django.db.migrations.Migration and subclass it as a class called Migration. It will have one or more of the following attributes: - operations: A list of Operation instances, probably from django.db.migrations.operations - dependencies: A list of tuples of (app_path, migration_name) - run_before: A list of tuples of (app_path, migration_name) - replaces: A list of migration_names Note that all migrations come out of migrations and into the Loader or Graph as instances, having been initialized with their app label and name. """ # Operations to apply during this migration, in order. operations = [] # Other migrations that should be run before this migration. # Should be a list of (app, migration_name). dependencies = [] # Other migrations that should be run after this one (i.e. have # this migration added to their dependencies). Useful to make third-party # apps' migrations run after your AUTH_USER replacement, for example. run_before = [] # Migration names in this app that this migration replaces. If this is # non-empty, this migration will only be applied if all these migrations # are not applied. replaces = [] # Is this an initial migration? Initial migrations are skipped on # --fake-initial if the table or fields already exist. If None, check if # the migration has any dependencies to determine if there are dependencies # to tell if db introspection needs to be done. If True, always perform # introspection. If False, never perform introspection. initial = None # Whether to wrap the whole migration in a transaction. Only has an effect # on database backends which support transactional DDL. atomic = True def __init__(self, name, app_label): self.name = name self.app_label = app_label # Copy dependencies & other attrs as we might mutate them at runtime self.operations = list(self.__class__.operations) self.dependencies = list(self.__class__.dependencies) self.run_before = list(self.__class__.run_before) self.replaces = list(self.__class__.replaces) def __eq__(self, other): if not isinstance(other, Migration): return False return (self.name == other.name) and (self.app_label == other.app_label) def __repr__(self): return "" % (self.app_label, self.name) def __str__(self): return "%s.%s" % (self.app_label, self.name) def __hash__(self): return hash("%s.%s" % (self.app_label, self.name)) def mutate_state(self, project_state, preserve=True): """ Take a ProjectState and return a new one with the migration's operations applied to it. Preserve the original object state by default and return a mutated state from a copy. """ new_state = project_state if preserve: new_state = project_state.clone() for operation in self.operations: operation.state_forwards(self.app_label, new_state) return new_state def apply(self, project_state, schema_editor, collect_sql=False): """ Take a project_state representing all migrations prior to this one and a schema_editor for a live database and apply the migration in a forwards order. Return the resulting project state for efficient reuse by following Migrations. """ for operation in self.operations: # If this operation cannot be represented as SQL, place a comment # there instead if collect_sql: schema_editor.collected_sql.append("--") if not operation.reduces_to_sql: schema_editor.collected_sql.append( "-- MIGRATION NOW PERFORMS OPERATION THAT CANNOT BE WRITTEN AS SQL:" ) schema_editor.collected_sql.append("-- %s" % operation.describe()) schema_editor.collected_sql.append("--") if not operation.reduces_to_sql: continue # Save the state before the operation has run old_state = project_state.clone() operation.state_forwards(self.app_label, project_state) # Run the operation atomic_operation = operation.atomic or (self.atomic and operation.atomic is not False) if not schema_editor.atomic_migration and atomic_operation: # Force a transaction on a non-transactional-DDL backend or an # atomic operation inside a non-atomic migration. with atomic(schema_editor.connection.alias): operation.database_forwards(self.app_label, schema_editor, old_state, project_state) else: # Normal behaviour operation.database_forwards(self.app_label, schema_editor, old_state, project_state) return project_state def unapply(self, project_state, schema_editor, collect_sql=False): """ Take a project_state representing all migrations prior to this one and a schema_editor for a live database and apply the migration in a reverse order. The backwards migration process consists of two phases: 1. The intermediate states from right before the first until right after the last operation inside this migration are preserved. 2. The operations are applied in reverse order using the states recorded in step 1. """ # Construct all the intermediate states we need for a reverse migration to_run = [] new_state = project_state # Phase 1 for operation in self.operations: # If it's irreversible, error out if not operation.reversible: raise IrreversibleError("Operation %s in %s is not reversible" % (operation, self)) # Preserve new state from previous run to not tamper the same state # over all operations new_state = new_state.clone() old_state = new_state.clone() operation.state_forwards(self.app_label, new_state) to_run.insert(0, (operation, old_state, new_state)) # Phase 2 for operation, to_state, from_state in to_run: if collect_sql: schema_editor.collected_sql.append("--") if not operation.reduces_to_sql: schema_editor.collected_sql.append( "-- MIGRATION NOW PERFORMS OPERATION THAT CANNOT BE WRITTEN AS SQL:" ) schema_editor.collected_sql.append("-- %s" % operation.describe()) schema_editor.collected_sql.append("--") if not operation.reduces_to_sql: continue if not schema_editor.connection.features.can_rollback_ddl and operation.atomic: # We're forcing a transaction on a non-transactional-DDL backend with atomic(schema_editor.connection.alias): operation.database_backwards(self.app_label, schema_editor, from_state, to_state) else: # Normal behaviour operation.database_backwards(self.app_label, schema_editor, from_state, to_state) return project_state class SwappableTuple(tuple): """ Subclass of tuple so Django can tell this was originally a swappable dependency when it reads the migration file. """ def __new__(cls, value, setting): self = tuple.__new__(cls, value) self.setting = setting return self def swappable_dependency(value): """Turn a setting value into a dependency.""" return SwappableTuple((value.split(".", 1)[0], "__first__"), value)