DoctrineMigrationsBundle ======================== Database migrations are a way to safely update your database schema both locally and on production. Instead of running the ``doctrine:schema:update`` command or applying the database changes manually with SQL statements, migrations allow to replicate the changes in your database schema in a safe manner. Migrations are available in Symfony applications via the `DoctrineMigrationsBundle`_, which uses the external `Doctrine Database Migrations`_ library. Read the `documentation`_ of that library if you need a general introduction about migrations. Installation ------------ Run this command in your terminal: .. code-block:: terminal $ composer require doctrine/doctrine-migrations-bundle "^2.0" If you don't use `Symfony Flex`_, you must enable the bundle manually in the application: .. code-block:: php // config/bundles.php // in older Symfony apps, enable the bundle in app/AppKernel.php return [ // ... Doctrine\Bundle\MigrationsBundle\DoctrineMigrationsBundle::class => ['all' => true], ]; Configuration ------------- If you use Symfony Flex, the ``doctrine_migrations.yaml`` config file is created automatically. Otherwise, create the following file and configure it for your application: .. code-block:: yaml # config/packages/doctrine_migrations.yaml doctrine_migrations: name: 'Application Migrations' # Namespace/path to search for migrations migrations_paths: 'DoctrineMigrations': '%kernel.project_dir%/src/Migrations' # Deprecated since v2.2, use "migrations_paths" instead (array value) dir_name: '%kernel.project_dir%/src/Migrations' # Deprecated since v2.2, use "migrations_paths" instead (array key) namespace: DoctrineMigrations storage: # Default (SQL table) metadata storage configuration table_storage: table_name: 'migration_versions' version_column_name: 'version' version_column_length: 1024 executed_at_column_name: 'executed_at' # Deprecated since v2.2, use "storage.table_storage.table_name" instead table_name: 'migration_versions' # Deprecated since v2.2, use "storage.table_storage.version_column_name" instead column_name: 'version' # Deprecated since v2.2, use "storage.table_storage.version_column_length" instead (minimum value has to be at least 1024) column_length: 14 # Deprecated since v2.2, use "storage.table_storage.executed_at_column_name" instead executed_at_column_name: 'executed_at' # available in version >= 1.2. Possible values: "BY_YEAR", "BY_YEAR_AND_MONTH", false organize_migrations: false # available in version >= 1.3. Path to your custom migrations template custom_template: ~ all_or_nothing: false Usage ----- All of the migrations functionality is contained in a few console commands: .. code-block:: terminal doctrine doctrine:migrations:diff [diff] Generate a migration by comparing your current database to your mapping information. doctrine:migrations:dump-schema [dump-schema] Dump the schema for your database to a migration. doctrine:migrations:execute [execute] Execute a single migration version up or down manually. doctrine:migrations:generate [generate] Generate a blank migration class. doctrine:migrations:latest [latest] Outputs the latest version number doctrine:migrations:migrate [migrate] Execute a migration to a specified version or the latest available version. doctrine:migrations:rollup [rollup] Rollup migrations by deleting all tracked versions and insert the one version that exists. doctrine:migrations:status [status] View the status of a set of migrations. doctrine:migrations:up-to-date [up-to-date] Tells you if your schema is up-to-date. doctrine:migrations:version [version] Manually add and delete migration versions from the version table. Start by getting the status of migrations in your application by running the ``status`` command: .. code-block:: terminal $ php bin/console doctrine:migrations:status == Configuration >> Name: Application Migrations >> Database Driver: pdo_mysql >> Database Host: 127.0.0.1 >> Database Name: symfony_migrations >> Configuration Source: manually configured >> Version Table Name: migration_versions >> Version Column Name: version >> Migrations Namespace: DoctrineMigrations >> Migrations Directory: /path/to/project/app/Migrations >> Previous Version: Already at first version >> Current Version: 0 >> Next Version: Already at latest version >> Latest Version: 0 >> Executed Migrations: 0 >> Executed Unavailable Migrations: 0 >> Available Migrations: 0 >> New Migrations: 0 Now, you can start working with migrations by generating a new blank migration class. Later, you'll learn how Doctrine can generate migrations automatically for you. .. code-block:: terminal $ php bin/console doctrine:migrations:generate Generated new migration class to "/path/to/project/app/Migrations/Version20180605025653.php" To run just this migration for testing purposes, you can use migrations:execute --up 20180605025653 To revert the migration you can use migrations:execute --down 20180605025653 Have a look at the newly generated migration class and you will see something like the following: .. code-block:: php declare(strict_types=1); namespace DoctrineMigrations; use Doctrine\DBAL\Schema\Schema; use Doctrine\Migrations\AbstractMigration; /** * Auto-generated Migration: Please modify to your needs! */ final class Version20180605025653 extends AbstractMigration { public function getDescription() : string { return ''; } public function up(Schema $schema) : void { // this up() migration is auto-generated, please modify it to your needs } public function down(Schema $schema) : void { // this down() migration is auto-generated, please modify it to your needs } } If you run the ``status`` command it will now show that you have one new migration to execute: .. code-block:: terminal $ php bin/console doctrine:migrations:status --show-versions == Configuration >> Name: Application Migrations >> Database Driver: pdo_mysql >> Database Host: 127.0.0.1 >> Database Name: symfony_migrations >> Configuration Source: manually configured >> Version Table Name: migration_versions >> Version Column Name: version >> Migrations Namespace: DoctrineMigrations >> Migrations Directory: /path/to/project/app/Migrations >> Previous Version: Already at first version >> Current Version: 0 >> Next Version: 2018-06-05 02:56:53 (20180605025653) >> Latest Version: 2018-06-05 02:56:53 (20180605025653) >> Executed Migrations: 0 >> Executed Unavailable Migrations: 0 >> Available Migrations: 1 >> New Migrations: 1 == Available Migration Versions >> 2018-06-05 02:56:53 (20180605025653) not migrated Now you can add some migration code to the ``up()`` and ``down()`` methods and finally migrate when you're ready: .. code-block:: terminal $ php bin/console doctrine:migrations:migrate 20180605025653 For more information on how to write the migrations themselves (i.e. how to fill in the ``up()`` and ``down()`` methods), see the official Doctrine Migrations `documentation`_. .. tip:: If you need to use another database connection to execute migrations you may use option ``--db="doctrine-connection-name"`` where ``doctrine-connection-name`` is valid Doctrine connection defined in doctrine.yaml Running Migrations during Deployment ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Of course, the end goal of writing migrations is to be able to use them to reliably update your database structure when you deploy your application. By running the migrations locally (or on a beta server), you can ensure that the migrations work as you expect. When you do finally deploy your application, you just need to remember to run the ``doctrine:migrations:migrate`` command. Internally, Doctrine creates a ``migration_versions`` table inside your database and tracks which migrations have been executed there. So, no matter how many migrations you've created and executed locally, when you run the command during deployment, Doctrine will know exactly which migrations it hasn't run yet by looking at the ``migration_versions`` table of your production database. Regardless of what server you're on, you can always safely run this command to execute only the migrations that haven't been run yet on *that* particular database. Skipping Migrations ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You can skip single migrations by explicitly adding them to the ``migration_versions`` table: .. code-block:: terminal $ php bin/console doctrine:migrations:version YYYYMMDDHHMMSS --add Doctrine will then assume that this migration has already been run and will ignore it. Generating Migrations Automatically ----------------------------------- In reality, you should rarely need to write migrations manually, as the migrations library can generate migration classes automatically by comparing your Doctrine mapping information (i.e. what your database *should* look like) with your actual current database structure. For example, suppose you create a new ``User`` entity and add mapping information for Doctrine's ORM: .. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php-annotations // src/Entity/User.php namespace App\Entity; use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM; /** * @ORM\Entity * @ORM\Table(name="hello_user") */ class User { /** * @ORM\Id * @ORM\Column(type="integer") * @ORM\GeneratedValue(strategy="AUTO") */ private $id; /** * @ORM\Column(type="string", length=255) */ private $name; .. code-block:: yaml # config/doctrine/User.orm.yml App\Entity\User: type: entity table: user id: id: type: integer generator: strategy: AUTO fields: name: type: string length: 255 .. code-block:: xml With this information, Doctrine is now ready to help you persist your new ``User`` object to and from the ``user`` table. Of course, this table doesn't exist yet! Generate a new migration for this table automatically by running the following command: .. code-block:: terminal $ php bin/console doctrine:migrations:diff You should see a message that a new migration class was generated based on the schema differences. If you open this file, you'll find that it has the SQL code needed to create the ``user`` table. Next, run the migration to add the table to your database: .. code-block:: terminal $ php bin/console doctrine:migrations:migrate The moral of the story is this: after each change you make to your Doctrine mapping information, run the ``doctrine:migrations:diff`` command to automatically generate your migration classes. If you do this from the very beginning of your project (i.e. so that even the first tables were loaded via a migration class), you'll always be able to create a fresh database and run your migrations in order to get your database schema fully up to date. In fact, this is an easy and dependable workflow for your project. If you don't want to use this workflow and instead create your schema via ``doctrine:schema:create``, you can tell Doctrine to skip all existing migrations: .. code-block:: terminal $ php bin/console doctrine:migrations:version --add --all Otherwise Doctrine will try to run all migrations, which probably will not work. Manual Tables ------------- It is a common use case, that in addition to your generated database structure based on your doctrine entities you might need custom tables. By default such tables will be removed by the ``doctrine:migrations:diff`` command. If you follow a specific scheme you can configure doctrine/dbal to ignore those tables. Let's say all custom tables will be prefixed by ``t_``. In this case you just have to add the following configuration option to your doctrine configuration: .. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: yaml doctrine: dbal: schema_filter: ~^(?!t_)~ .. code-block:: xml .. code-block:: php $container->loadFromExtension('doctrine', array( 'dbal' => array( 'schema_filter' => '~^(?!t_)~', // ... ), // ... )); This ignores the tables on the DBAL level and they will be ignored by the diff command. Note that if you have multiple connections configured then the ``schema_filter`` configuration will need to be placed per-connection. .. _documentation: https://www.doctrine-project.org/projects/doctrine-migrations/en/current/index.html .. _DoctrineMigrationsBundle: https://github.com/doctrine/DoctrineMigrationsBundle .. _`Doctrine Database Migrations`: https://github.com/doctrine/migrations .. _`Symfony Flex`: https://symfony.com/doc/current/setup/flex.html