Methods
- add_belongs_to
- add_column
- add_foreign_key
- add_index
- add_reference
- add_timestamps
- assume_migrated_upto_version
- change_column
- change_column_comment
- change_column_default
- change_column_null
- change_table
- change_table_comment
- column_exists?
- columns
- create_join_table
- create_table
- data_source_exists?
- data_sources
- drop_join_table
- drop_table
- foreign_key_exists?
- foreign_keys
- index_exists?
- index_name_exists?
- indexes
- native_database_types
- options_include_default?
- primary_key
- remove_belongs_to
- remove_column
- remove_columns
- remove_foreign_key
- remove_index
- remove_reference
- remove_timestamps
- rename_column
- rename_index
- rename_table
- table_alias_for
- table_comment
- table_exists?
- table_options
- tables
- view_exists?
- views
Instance Public methods
add_column(table_name, column_name, type, options = {})
Add a new type
column named column_name
to table_name
.
The type
parameter is normally one of the migrations native types, which is one of the following: :primary_key
, :string
, :text
, :integer
, :bigint
, :float
, :decimal
, :numeric
, :datetime
, :time
, :date
, :binary
, :boolean
.
You may use a type not in this list as long as it is supported by your database (for example, “polygon” in MySQL
), but this will not be database agnostic and should usually be avoided.
Available options are (none of these exists by default):
-
:limit
- Requests a maximum column length. This is the number of characters for a:string
column and number of bytes for:text
,:binary
and:integer
columns. This option is ignored by some backends. -
:default
- The column's default value. Usenil
forNULL
. -
:null
- Allows or disallowsNULL
values in the column. -
:precision
- Specifies the precision for the:decimal
and:numeric
columns. -
:scale
- Specifies the scale for the:decimal
and:numeric
columns. -
:comment
- Specifies the comment for the column. This option is ignored by some backends.
Note: The precision is the total number of significant digits, and the scale is the number of digits that can be stored following the decimal point. For example, the number 123.45 has a precision of 5 and a scale of 2. A decimal with a precision of 5 and a scale of 2 can range from -999.99 to 999.99.
Please be aware of different RDBMS implementations behavior with :decimal
columns:
-
The SQL standard says the default scale should be 0,
:scale
<=:precision
, and makes no comments about the requirements of:precision
. -
MySQL:
:precision
[1..63],:scale
[0..30]. Default is (10,0). -
PostgreSQL:
:precision
[1..infinity],:scale
[0..infinity]. No default. -
SQLite3: No restrictions on
:precision
and:scale
, but the maximum supported:precision
is 16. No default. -
Oracle:
:precision
[1..38],:scale
[-84..127]. Default is (38,0). -
DB2:
:precision
[1..63],:scale
[0..62]. Default unknown. -
SqlServer:
:precision
[1..38],:scale
[0..38]. Default (38,0).
Examples
add_column(:users, :picture, :binary, limit: 2.megabytes)
# ALTER TABLE "users" ADD "picture" blob(2097152)
add_column(:articles, :status, :string, limit: 20, default: 'draft', null: false)
# ALTER TABLE "articles" ADD "status" varchar(20) DEFAULT 'draft' NOT NULL
add_column(:answers, :bill_gates_money, :decimal, precision: 15, scale: 2)
# ALTER TABLE "answers" ADD "bill_gates_money" decimal(15,2)
add_column(:measurements, :sensor_reading, :decimal, precision: 30, scale: 20)
# ALTER TABLE "measurements" ADD "sensor_reading" decimal(30,20)
# While :scale defaults to zero on most databases, it
# probably wouldn't hurt to include it.
add_column(:measurements, :huge_integer, :decimal, precision: 30)
# ALTER TABLE "measurements" ADD "huge_integer" decimal(30)
# Defines a column that stores an array of a type.
add_column(:users, :skills, :text, array: true)
# ALTER TABLE "users" ADD "skills" text[]
# Defines a column with a database-specific type.
add_column(:shapes, :triangle, 'polygon')
# ALTER TABLE "shapes" ADD "triangle" polygon
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 578
def add_column(table_name, column_name, type, options = {})
at = create_alter_table table_name
at.add_column(column_name, type, options)
execute schema_creation.accept at
end
🔎 See on GitHub
add_foreign_key(from_table, to_table, options = {})
Adds a new foreign key. from_table
is the table with the key column, to_table
contains the referenced primary key.
The foreign key will be named after the following pattern: fk_rails_<identifier>
. identifier
is a 10 character long string which is deterministically generated from the from_table
and column
. A custom name can be specified with the :name
option.
Creating a simple foreign key
add_foreign_key :articles, :authors
generates:
ALTER TABLE "articles" ADD CONSTRAINT fk_rails_e74ce85cbc FOREIGN KEY ("author_id") REFERENCES "authors" ("id")
Creating a foreign key on a specific column
add_foreign_key :articles, :users, column: :author_id, primary_key: "lng_id"
generates:
ALTER TABLE "articles" ADD CONSTRAINT fk_rails_58ca3d3a82 FOREIGN KEY ("author_id") REFERENCES "users" ("lng_id")
Creating a cascading foreign key
add_foreign_key :articles, :authors, on_delete: :cascade
generates:
ALTER TABLE "articles" ADD CONSTRAINT fk_rails_e74ce85cbc FOREIGN KEY ("author_id") REFERENCES "authors" ("id") ON DELETE CASCADE
The options
hash can include the following keys:
:column
-
The foreign key column name on
from_table
. Defaults toto_table.singularize + "_id"
:primary_key
-
The primary key column name on
to_table
. Defaults toid
. :name
-
The constraint name. Defaults to
fk_rails_<identifier>
. :on_delete
-
Action that happens
ON DELETE
. Valid values are:nullify
,:cascade
and:restrict
:on_update
-
Action that happens
ON UPDATE
. Valid values are:nullify
,:cascade
and:restrict
:validate
-
(Postgres only) Specify whether or not the constraint should be validated. Defaults to
true
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 960
def add_foreign_key(from_table, to_table, options = {})
return unless supports_foreign_keys?
options = foreign_key_options(from_table, to_table, options)
at = create_alter_table from_table
at.add_foreign_key to_table, options
execute schema_creation.accept(at)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
add_index(table_name, column_name, options = {})
Adds a new index to the table. column_name
can be a single Symbol
, or an Array
of Symbols.
The index will be named after the table and the column name(s), unless you pass :name
as an option.
Creating a simple index
add_index(:suppliers, :name)
generates:
CREATE INDEX suppliers_name_index ON suppliers(name)
Creating a unique index
add_index(:accounts, [:branch_id, :party_id], unique: true)
generates:
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX accounts_branch_id_party_id_index ON accounts(branch_id, party_id)
Creating a named index
add_index(:accounts, [:branch_id, :party_id], unique: true, name: 'by_branch_party')
generates:
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX by_branch_party ON accounts(branch_id, party_id)
Creating an index with specific key length
add_index(:accounts, :name, name: 'by_name', length: 10)
generates:
CREATE INDEX by_name ON accounts(name(10))
Creating an index with specific key lengths for multiple keys
add_index(:accounts, [:name, :surname], name: 'by_name_surname', length: {name: 10, surname: 15})
generates:
CREATE INDEX by_name_surname ON accounts(name(10), surname(15))
Note: SQLite doesn't support index length.
Creating an index with a sort order (desc or asc, asc is the default)
add_index(:accounts, [:branch_id, :party_id, :surname], order: {branch_id: :desc, party_id: :asc})
generates:
CREATE INDEX by_branch_desc_party ON accounts(branch_id DESC, party_id ASC, surname)
Note: MySQL
only supports index order from 8.0.1 onwards (earlier versions accepted the syntax but ignored it).
Creating a partial index
add_index(:accounts, [:branch_id, :party_id], unique: true, where: "active")
generates:
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX index_accounts_on_branch_id_and_party_id ON accounts(branch_id, party_id) WHERE active
Note: Partial indexes are only supported for PostgreSQL
and SQLite 3.8.0+.
Creating an index with a specific method
add_index(:developers, :name, using: 'btree')
generates:
CREATE INDEX index_developers_on_name ON developers USING btree (name) -- PostgreSQL
CREATE INDEX index_developers_on_name USING btree ON developers (name) -- MySQL
Note: only supported by PostgreSQL
and MySQL
Creating an index with a specific operator class
add_index(:developers, :name, using: 'gist', opclass: :gist_trgm_ops)
# CREATE INDEX developers_on_name ON developers USING gist (name gist_trgm_ops) -- PostgreSQL
add_index(:developers, [:name, :city], using: 'gist', opclass: { city: :gist_trgm_ops })
# CREATE INDEX developers_on_name_and_city ON developers USING gist (name, city gist_trgm_ops) -- PostgreSQL
add_index(:developers, [:name, :city], using: 'gist', opclass: :gist_trgm_ops)
# CREATE INDEX developers_on_name_and_city ON developers USING gist (name gist_trgm_ops, city gist_trgm_ops) -- PostgreSQL
Note: only supported by PostgreSQL
Creating an index with a specific type
add_index(:developers, :name, type: :fulltext)
generates:
CREATE FULLTEXT INDEX index_developers_on_name ON developers (name) -- MySQL
Note: only supported by MySQL
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 763
def add_index(table_name, column_name, options = {})
index_name, index_type, index_columns, index_options = add_index_options(table_name, column_name, options)
execute "CREATE #{index_type} INDEX #{quote_column_name(index_name)} ON #{quote_table_name(table_name)} (#{index_columns})#{index_options}"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
add_reference(table_name, ref_name, **options)
Adds a reference. The reference column is a bigint by default, the :type
option can be used to specify a different type. Optionally adds a _type
column, if :polymorphic
option is provided. add_reference
and add_belongs_to
are acceptable.
The options
hash can include the following keys:
:type
-
The reference column type. Defaults to
:bigint
. :index
-
Add an appropriate index. Defaults to true. See
add_index
for usage of this option. :foreign_key
-
Add an appropriate foreign key constraint. Defaults to false.
:polymorphic
-
Whether an additional
_type
column should be added. Defaults to false. :null
-
Whether the column allows nulls. Defaults to true.
Create a user_id bigint column
add_reference(:products, :user)
Create a user_id string column
add_reference(:products, :user, type: :string)
Create supplier_id, supplier_type columns and appropriate index
add_reference(:products, :supplier, polymorphic: true, index: true)
Create a supplier_id column with a unique index
add_reference(:products, :supplier, index: { unique: true })
Create a supplier_id column with a named index
add_reference(:products, :supplier, index: { name: "my_supplier_index" })
Create a supplier_id column and appropriate foreign key
add_reference(:products, :supplier, foreign_key: true)
Create a supplier_id column and a foreign key to the firms table
add_reference(:products, :supplier, foreign_key: {to_table: :firms})
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 873
def add_reference(table_name, ref_name, **options)
ReferenceDefinition.new(ref_name, options).add_to(update_table_definition(table_name, self))
end
🔎 See on GitHub
add_timestamps(table_name, options = {})
Adds timestamps (created_at
and updated_at
) columns to table_name
. Additional options (like :null
) are forwarded to add_column
.
add_timestamps(:suppliers, null: true)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 1115
def add_timestamps(table_name, options = {})
options[:null] = false if options[:null].nil?
add_column table_name, :created_at, :datetime, options
add_column table_name, :updated_at, :datetime, options
end
🔎 See on GitHub
assume_migrated_upto_version(version, migrations_paths)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 1037
def assume_migrated_upto_version(version, migrations_paths)
migrations_paths = Array(migrations_paths)
version = version.to_i
sm_table = quote_table_name(ActiveRecord::SchemaMigration.table_name)
migrated = ActiveRecord::SchemaMigration.all_versions.map(&:to_i)
versions = migration_context.migration_files.map do |file|
migration_context.parse_migration_filename(file).first.to_i
end
unless migrated.include?(version)
execute "INSERT INTO #{sm_table} (version) VALUES (#{quote(version)})"
end
inserting = (versions - migrated).select { |v| v < version }
if inserting.any?
if (duplicate = inserting.detect { |v| inserting.count(v) > 1 })
raise "Duplicate migration #{duplicate}. Please renumber your migrations to resolve the conflict."
end
if supports_multi_insert?
execute insert_versions_sql(inserting)
else
inserting.each do |v|
execute insert_versions_sql(v)
end
end
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub
change_column(table_name, column_name, type, options = {})
Changes the column's definition according to the new options. See TableDefinition#column
for details of the options you can use.
change_column(:suppliers, :name, :string, limit: 80)
change_column(:accounts, :description, :text)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 612
def change_column(table_name, column_name, type, options = {})
raise NotImplementedError, "change_column is not implemented"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
change_column_comment(table_name, column_name, comment)
Changes the comment for a column or removes it if nil
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 1177
def change_column_comment(table_name, column_name, comment)
raise NotImplementedError, "#{self.class} does not support changing column comments"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
change_column_default(table_name, column_name, default_or_changes)
Sets a new default value for a column:
change_column_default(:suppliers, :qualification, 'new')
change_column_default(:accounts, :authorized, 1)
Setting the default to nil
effectively drops the default:
change_column_default(:users, :email, nil)
Passing a hash containing :from
and :to
will make this change reversible in migration:
change_column_default(:posts, :state, from: nil, to: "draft")
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 630
def change_column_default(table_name, column_name, default_or_changes)
raise NotImplementedError, "change_column_default is not implemented"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
change_column_null(table_name, column_name, null, default = nil)
Sets or removes a NOT NULL
constraint on a column. The null
flag indicates whether the value can be NULL
. For example
change_column_null(:users, :nickname, false)
says nicknames cannot be NULL
(adds the constraint), whereas
change_column_null(:users, :nickname, true)
allows them to be NULL
(drops the constraint).
The method accepts an optional fourth argument to replace existing NULL
s with some other value. Use that one when enabling the constraint if needed, since otherwise those rows would not be valid.
Please note the fourth argument does not set a column's default.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 650
def change_column_null(table_name, column_name, null, default = nil)
raise NotImplementedError, "change_column_null is not implemented"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
change_table(table_name, options = {})
A block for changing columns in table
.
# change_table() yields a Table instance
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.column :name, :string, limit: 60
# Other column alterations here
end
The options
hash can include the following keys:
:bulk
-
Set this to true to make this a bulk alter query, such as
ALTER TABLE `users` ADD COLUMN age INT, ADD COLUMN birthdate DATETIME ...
Defaults to false.
Only supported on the
MySQL
andPostgreSQL
adapter, ignored elsewhere.
Add a column
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.column :name, :string, limit: 60
end
Add 2 integer columns
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.integer :width, :height, null: false, default: 0
end
Add created_at/updated_at columns
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.timestamps
end
Add a foreign key column
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.references :company
end
Creates a company_id(bigint)
column.
Add a polymorphic foreign key column
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.belongs_to :company, polymorphic: true
end
Creates company_type(varchar)
and company_id(bigint)
columns.
Remove a column
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.remove :company
end
Remove several columns
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.remove :company_id
t.remove :width, :height
end
Remove an index
change_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.remove_index :company_id
end
See also Table
for details on all of the various column transformations.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 465
def change_table(table_name, options = {})
if supports_bulk_alter? && options[:bulk]
recorder = ActiveRecord::Migration::CommandRecorder.new(self)
yield update_table_definition(table_name, recorder)
bulk_change_table(table_name, recorder.commands)
else
yield update_table_definition(table_name, self)
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub
change_table_comment(table_name, comment)
Changes the comment for a table or removes it if nil
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 1172
def change_table_comment(table_name, comment)
raise NotImplementedError, "#{self.class} does not support changing table comments"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
column_exists?(table_name, column_name, type = nil, options = {})
Checks to see if a column exists in a given table.
# Check a column exists
column_exists?(:suppliers, :name)
# Check a column exists of a particular type
column_exists?(:suppliers, :name, :string)
# Check a column exists with a specific definition
column_exists?(:suppliers, :name, :string, limit: 100)
column_exists?(:suppliers, :name, :string, default: 'default')
column_exists?(:suppliers, :name, :string, null: false)
column_exists?(:suppliers, :tax, :decimal, precision: 8, scale: 2)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 132
def column_exists?(table_name, column_name, type = nil, options = {})
column_name = column_name.to_s
checks = []
checks << lambda { |c| c.name == column_name }
checks << lambda { |c| c.type == type } if type
column_options_keys.each do |attr|
checks << lambda { |c| c.send(attr) == options[attr] } if options.key?(attr)
end
columns(table_name).any? { |c| checks.all? { |check| check[c] } }
end
🔎 See on GitHub
columns(table_name)
Returns an array of Column
objects for the table specified by table_name
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 111
def columns(table_name)
table_name = table_name.to_s
column_definitions(table_name).map do |field|
new_column_from_field(table_name, field)
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub
create_join_table(table_1, table_2, column_options: {}, **options)
Creates a new join table with the name created using the lexical order of the first two arguments. These arguments can be a String
or a Symbol
.
# Creates a table called 'assemblies_parts' with no id.
create_join_table(:assemblies, :parts)
You can pass an options
hash which can include the following keys:
:table_name
-
Sets the table name, overriding the default.
:column_options
-
Any extra options you want appended to the columns definition.
:options
-
Any extra options you want appended to the table definition.
:temporary
-
Make a temporary table.
:force
-
Set to true to drop the table before creating it. Defaults to false.
Note that create_join_table
does not create any indices by default; you can use its block form to do so yourself:
create_join_table :products, :categories do |t|
t.index :product_id
t.index :category_id
end
Add a backend specific option to the generated SQL (MySQL
)
create_join_table(:assemblies, :parts, options: 'ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8')
generates:
CREATE TABLE assemblies_parts (
assembly_id bigint NOT NULL,
part_id bigint NOT NULL,
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 368
def create_join_table(table_1, table_2, column_options: {}, **options)
join_table_name = find_join_table_name(table_1, table_2, options)
column_options.reverse_merge!(null: false, index: false)
t1_ref, t2_ref = [table_1, table_2].map { |t| t.to_s.singularize }
create_table(join_table_name, options.merge!(id: false)) do |td|
td.references t1_ref, column_options
td.references t2_ref, column_options
yield td if block_given?
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub
create_table(table_name, comment: nil, **options)
Creates a new table with the name table_name
. table_name
may either be a String
or a Symbol
.
There are two ways to work with create_table
. You can use the block form or the regular form, like this:
Block form
# create_table() passes a TableDefinition object to the block.
# This form will not only create the table, but also columns for the
# table.
create_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.column :name, :string, limit: 60
# Other fields here
end
Block form, with shorthand
# You can also use the column types as method calls, rather than calling the column method.
create_table(:suppliers) do |t|
t.string :name, limit: 60
# Other fields here
end
Regular form
# Creates a table called 'suppliers' with no columns.
create_table(:suppliers)
# Add a column to 'suppliers'.
add_column(:suppliers, :name, :string, {limit: 60})
The options
hash can include the following keys:
:id
-
Whether to automatically add a primary key column. Defaults to true. Join tables for ActiveRecord::Base.has_and_belongs_to_many should set it to false.
A
Symbol
can be used to specify the type of the generated primary key column. :primary_key
-
The name of the primary key, if one is to be added automatically. Defaults to
id
. If:id
is false, then this option is ignored.If an array is passed, a composite primary key will be created.
Note that Active Record models will automatically detect their primary key. This can be avoided by using self.primary_key= on the model to define the key explicitly.
:options
-
Any extra options you want appended to the table definition.
:temporary
-
Make a temporary table.
:force
-
Set to true to drop the table before creating it. Set to
:cascade
to drop dependent objects as well. Defaults to false. :as
-
SQL to use to generate the table. When this option is used, the block is ignored, as are the
:id
and:primary_key
options.
Add a backend specific option to the generated SQL (MySQL
)
create_table(:suppliers, options: 'ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8')
generates:
CREATE TABLE suppliers (
id bigint auto_increment PRIMARY KEY
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8
Rename the primary key column
create_table(:objects, primary_key: 'guid') do |t|
t.column :name, :string, limit: 80
end
generates:
CREATE TABLE objects (
guid bigint auto_increment PRIMARY KEY,
name varchar(80)
)
Change the primary key column type
create_table(:tags, id: :string) do |t|
t.column :label, :string
end
generates:
CREATE TABLE tags (
id varchar PRIMARY KEY,
label varchar
)
Create a composite primary key
create_table(:orders, primary_key: [:product_id, :client_id]) do |t|
t.belongs_to :product
t.belongs_to :client
end
generates:
CREATE TABLE order (
product_id bigint NOT NULL,
client_id bigint NOT NULL
);
ALTER TABLE ONLY "orders"
ADD CONSTRAINT orders_pkey PRIMARY KEY (product_id, client_id);
Do not add a primary key column
create_table(:categories_suppliers, id: false) do |t|
t.column :category_id, :bigint
t.column :supplier_id, :bigint
end
generates:
CREATE TABLE categories_suppliers (
category_id bigint,
supplier_id bigint
)
Create a temporary table based on a query
create_table(:long_query, temporary: true,
as: "SELECT * FROM orders INNER JOIN line_items ON order_id=orders.id")
generates:
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE long_query AS
SELECT * FROM orders INNER JOIN line_items ON order_id=orders.id
See also TableDefinition#column
for details on how to create columns.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 290
def create_table(table_name, comment: nil, **options)
td = create_table_definition table_name, options[:temporary], options[:options], options[:as], comment: comment
if options[:id] != false && !options[:as]
pk = options.fetch(:primary_key) do
Base.get_primary_key table_name.to_s.singularize
end
if pk.is_a?(Array)
td.primary_keys pk
else
td.primary_key pk, options.fetch(:id, :primary_key), options
end
end
yield td if block_given?
if options[:force]
drop_table(table_name, options.merge(if_exists: true))
end
result = execute schema_creation.accept td
unless supports_indexes_in_create?
td.indexes.each do |column_name, index_options|
add_index(table_name, column_name, index_options)
end
end
if supports_comments? && !supports_comments_in_create?
change_table_comment(table_name, comment) if comment.present?
td.columns.each do |column|
change_column_comment(table_name, column.name, column.comment) if column.comment.present?
end
end
result
end
🔎 See on GitHub
data_source_exists?(name)
Checks to see if the data source name
exists on the database.
data_source_exists?(:ebooks)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 45
def data_source_exists?(name)
query_values(data_source_sql(name), "SCHEMA").any? if name.present?
rescue NotImplementedError
data_sources.include?(name.to_s)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
data_sources()
Returns the relation names useable to back Active Record models. For most adapters this means all tables
and views
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 35
def data_sources
query_values(data_source_sql, "SCHEMA")
rescue NotImplementedError
tables | views
end
🔎 See on GitHub
drop_join_table(table_1, table_2, options = {})
Drops the join table specified by the given arguments. See create_join_table
for details.
Although this command ignores the block if one is given, it can be helpful to provide one in a migration's change
method so it can be reverted. In that case, the block will be used by create_join_table
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 388
def drop_join_table(table_1, table_2, options = {})
join_table_name = find_join_table_name(table_1, table_2, options)
drop_table(join_table_name)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
drop_table(table_name, options = {})
Drops a table from the database.
:force
-
Set to
:cascade
to drop dependent objects as well. Defaults to false. :if_exists
-
Set to
true
to only drop the table if it exists. Defaults to false.
Although this command ignores most options
and the block if one is given, it can be helpful to provide these in a migration's change
method so it can be reverted. In that case, options
and the block will be used by create_table
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 495
def drop_table(table_name, options = {})
execute "DROP TABLE#{' IF EXISTS' if options[:if_exists]} #{quote_table_name(table_name)}"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
foreign_key_exists?(from_table, options_or_to_table = {})
Checks to see if a foreign key exists on a table for a given foreign key definition.
# Checks to see if a foreign key exists.
foreign_key_exists?(:accounts, :branches)
# Checks to see if a foreign key on a specified column exists.
foreign_key_exists?(:accounts, column: :owner_id)
# Checks to see if a foreign key with a custom name exists.
foreign_key_exists?(:accounts, name: "special_fk_name")
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 1010
def foreign_key_exists?(from_table, options_or_to_table = {})
foreign_key_for(from_table, options_or_to_table).present?
end
🔎 See on GitHub
foreign_keys(table_name)
Returns an array of foreign keys for the given table. The foreign keys are represented as ForeignKeyDefinition objects.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 912
def foreign_keys(table_name)
raise NotImplementedError, "foreign_keys is not implemented"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
index_exists?(table_name, column_name, options = {})
Checks to see if an index exists on a table for a given index definition.
# Check an index exists
index_exists?(:suppliers, :company_id)
# Check an index on multiple columns exists
index_exists?(:suppliers, [:company_id, :company_type])
# Check a unique index exists
index_exists?(:suppliers, :company_id, unique: true)
# Check an index with a custom name exists
index_exists?(:suppliers, :company_id, name: "idx_company_id")
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 100
def index_exists?(table_name, column_name, options = {})
column_names = Array(column_name).map(&:to_s)
checks = []
checks << lambda { |i| Array(i.columns) == column_names }
checks << lambda { |i| i.unique } if options[:unique]
checks << lambda { |i| i.name == options[:name].to_s } if options[:name]
indexes(table_name).any? { |i| checks.all? { |check| check[i] } }
end
🔎 See on GitHub
index_name_exists?(table_name, index_name)
Verifies the existence of an index with a given name.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 822
def index_name_exists?(table_name, index_name)
index_name = index_name.to_s
indexes(table_name).detect { |i| i.name == index_name }
end
🔎 See on GitHub
indexes(table_name)
Returns an array of indexes for the given table.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 82
def indexes(table_name)
raise NotImplementedError, "#indexes is not implemented"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
native_database_types()
Returns a hash of mappings from the abstract data types to the native database types. See TableDefinition#column
for details on the recognized abstract data types.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 15
def native_database_types
{}
end
🔎 See on GitHub
options_include_default?(options)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 1167
def options_include_default?(options)
options.include?(:default) && !(options[:null] == false && options[:default].nil?)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
primary_key(table_name)
Returns just a table's primary key
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 145
def primary_key(table_name)
pk = primary_keys(table_name)
pk = pk.first unless pk.size > 1
pk
end
🔎 See on GitHub
remove_belongs_to(table_name, ref_name, foreign_key: false, polymorphic: false, **options)
remove_column(table_name, column_name, type = nil, options = {})
Removes the column from the table definition.
remove_column(:suppliers, :qualification)
The type
and options
parameters will be ignored if present. It can be helpful to provide these in a migration's change
method so it can be reverted. In that case, type
and options
will be used by add_column
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 602
def remove_column(table_name, column_name, type = nil, options = {})
execute "ALTER TABLE #{quote_table_name(table_name)} #{remove_column_for_alter(table_name, column_name, type, options)}"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
remove_columns(table_name, *column_names)
Removes the given columns from the table definition.
remove_columns(:suppliers, :qualification, :experience)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 588
def remove_columns(table_name, *column_names)
raise ArgumentError.new("You must specify at least one column name. Example: remove_columns(:people, :first_name)") if column_names.empty?
column_names.each do |column_name|
remove_column(table_name, column_name)
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub
remove_foreign_key(from_table, options_or_to_table = {})
Removes the given foreign key from the table. Any option parameters provided will be used to re-add the foreign key in case of a migration rollback. It is recommended that you provide any options used when creating the foreign key so that the migration can be reverted properly.
Removes the foreign key on accounts.branch_id
.
remove_foreign_key :accounts, :branches
Removes the foreign key on accounts.owner_id
.
remove_foreign_key :accounts, column: :owner_id
Removes the foreign key named special_fk_name
on the accounts
table.
remove_foreign_key :accounts, name: :special_fk_name
The options
hash accepts the same keys as SchemaStatements#add_foreign_key
.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 988
def remove_foreign_key(from_table, options_or_to_table = {})
return unless supports_foreign_keys?
fk_name_to_delete = foreign_key_for!(from_table, options_or_to_table).name
at = create_alter_table from_table
at.drop_foreign_key fk_name_to_delete
execute schema_creation.accept(at)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
remove_index(table_name, options = {})
Removes the given index from the table.
Removes the index on branch_id
in the accounts
table if exactly one such index exists.
remove_index :accounts, :branch_id
Removes the index on branch_id
in the accounts
table if exactly one such index exists.
remove_index :accounts, column: :branch_id
Removes the index on branch_id
and party_id
in the accounts
table if exactly one such index exists.
remove_index :accounts, column: [:branch_id, :party_id]
Removes the index named by_branch_party
in the accounts
table.
remove_index :accounts, name: :by_branch_party
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 786
def remove_index(table_name, options = {})
index_name = index_name_for_remove(table_name, options)
execute "DROP INDEX #{quote_column_name(index_name)} ON #{quote_table_name(table_name)}"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
remove_reference(table_name, ref_name, foreign_key: false, polymorphic: false, **options)
Removes the reference(s). Also removes a type
column if one exists. remove_reference
and remove_belongs_to
are acceptable.
Remove the reference
remove_reference(:products, :user, index: true)
Remove polymorphic reference
remove_reference(:products, :supplier, polymorphic: true)
Remove the reference with a foreign key
remove_reference(:products, :user, index: true, foreign_key: true)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 893
def remove_reference(table_name, ref_name, foreign_key: false, polymorphic: false, **options)
if foreign_key
reference_name = Base.pluralize_table_names ? ref_name.to_s.pluralize : ref_name
if foreign_key.is_a?(Hash)
foreign_key_options = foreign_key
else
foreign_key_options = { to_table: reference_name }
end
foreign_key_options[:column] ||= "#{ref_name}_id"
remove_foreign_key(table_name, foreign_key_options)
end
remove_column(table_name, "#{ref_name}_id")
remove_column(table_name, "#{ref_name}_type") if polymorphic
end
🔎 See on GitHub
remove_timestamps(table_name, options = {})
Removes the timestamp columns (created_at
and updated_at
) from the table definition.
remove_timestamps(:suppliers)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 1126
def remove_timestamps(table_name, options = {})
remove_column table_name, :updated_at
remove_column table_name, :created_at
end
🔎 See on GitHub
rename_column(table_name, column_name, new_column_name)
Renames a column.
rename_column(:suppliers, :description, :name)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 658
def rename_column(table_name, column_name, new_column_name)
raise NotImplementedError, "rename_column is not implemented"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
rename_index(table_name, old_name, new_name)
Renames an index.
Rename the index_people_on_last_name
index to index_users_on_last_name
:
rename_index :people, 'index_people_on_last_name', 'index_users_on_last_name'
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 797
def rename_index(table_name, old_name, new_name)
validate_index_length!(table_name, new_name)
# this is a naive implementation; some DBs may support this more efficiently (PostgreSQL, for instance)
old_index_def = indexes(table_name).detect { |i| i.name == old_name }
return unless old_index_def
add_index(table_name, old_index_def.columns, name: new_name, unique: old_index_def.unique)
remove_index(table_name, name: old_name)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
rename_table(table_name, new_name)
Renames a table.
rename_table('octopuses', 'octopi')
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 479
def rename_table(table_name, new_name)
raise NotImplementedError, "rename_table is not implemented"
end
🔎 See on GitHub
table_alias_for(table_name)
Truncates a table alias according to the limits of the current adapter.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 29
def table_alias_for(table_name)
table_name[0...table_alias_length].tr(".", "_")
end
🔎 See on GitHub
table_comment(table_name)
Returns the table comment that's stored in database metadata.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 24
def table_comment(table_name)
nil
end
🔎 See on GitHub
table_exists?(table_name)
Checks to see if the table table_name
exists on the database.
table_exists?(:developers)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 60
def table_exists?(table_name)
query_values(data_source_sql(table_name, type: "BASE TABLE"), "SCHEMA").any? if table_name.present?
rescue NotImplementedError
tables.include?(table_name.to_s)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
table_options(table_name)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 19
def table_options(table_name)
nil
end
🔎 See on GitHub
tables()
Returns an array of table names defined in the database.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 52
def tables
query_values(data_source_sql(type: "BASE TABLE"), "SCHEMA")
end
🔎 See on GitHub
view_exists?(view_name)
Checks to see if the view view_name
exists on the database.
view_exists?(:ebooks)
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 75
def view_exists?(view_name)
query_values(data_source_sql(view_name, type: "VIEW"), "SCHEMA").any? if view_name.present?
rescue NotImplementedError
views.include?(view_name.to_s)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
views()
Returns an array of view names defined in the database.
📝 Source code
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb, line 67
def views
query_values(data_source_sql(type: "VIEW"), "SCHEMA")
end
🔎 See on GitHub