Desired outcome:
Use model first approach with Entity Framework and allow changes to deployed database/ model to be done automatically based on the changes in the model. Automatic schema difference script generation to allow smooth migrations.
Is there a way to perform migrations in model first EF6? I can see code first migrations topics all over, but nothing much on Model First.
Options I saw so far:
Database generation power pack (seems outdated)
somehow convert to code first, then use migrations (not desirable, as I like to have a visual designer)
somehow piggy back on code first migrations (http://blog.amusedia.com/2012/08/entity-framework-migration-with-model.html : this is for EF5, got error that can't run migrations on Model First)
some third party tools?
As far as I know there still is no automatic migration for Entity framework model first.
Our approach is:
Create a fresh database from the model.
Create a diff script to migrate the old database to the new one.
Verify that this diff script is indeed correct. Always double check what your automation tool creates.
We first used Open DB diff for our model first migrations. After that we switched to Redgate's SQL compare because it produced more reliable migrations .
In our experience DbDiff produced a lot of unnecessary SQL because it bothers with the order that columns are in, and has some other issues like foreign keys constantly being dropped and re-added. Aside from that it still did the job fine, but we had to do a lot of double checking on its generated SQL.
Related
I am using EF Core 2.0 in my sample project with some value object configurations. I modify the code and generate migrations via CLI command line. In the last migration rather than adding a new database table as it should, it is trying to rename existing tables to each other and create an extra table for existing one. I could not figure out the reason for it.
Issue is, since with EF Core the snapshot is a separate auto-generated file from the migration itself I don't want to modify the snapshot.
I only want to modify the migration script so that it will not rename multiple tables, and then generate the snapshot from the migrations I created.
I did not see any command for this in the CLI - is it such a bad practice to modify the scaffolded migration and regenerate or am I missing some obvious new link where how to manually modify migration scripts is explained?
Thanks a bunch.
Update 1: After comments, added info about the snapshot from this link.
Because the current database schema is represented in code, EF Core doesn't have to interact with the database to create migrations. When you add a migration, EF determines what changed by comparing the data model to the snapshot file. EF interacts with the database only when it has to update the database. +
I examined my generated snapshot code from source control. It exactly has added one extra table as what I needed.
The migration script to generate this is hectic at best - renaming multiple tables to each other and then warning that this could break causing multiple issues.
Since this is a sample project for me with only mock data as of now at least, I decided to go for it and not break the automated scripts. I am willing to lose some mock data at this stage rather than wasting time on it.
If this were in a production database I would be extremely careful to manually create the same result with intervention modifying both the scaffold and the migration file.
I am accepting this one as an answer (basically saying current EF Core does not support it to the best of my current knowledge) since there is no other candidate now - I will be more than glad to accept if any better answer shows up.
Maybe I'm defeating the purpose of Code First but for one reason or another let's look at the problem.
I'm working in EF Code First. My 'Cars' POCO has a "Make" field,.. that matches the "Make" column in the db. Now I come along and I manually rename the column in the db to "Manufacturer". How can I force EF to catch up and update/ rename the POCO?
At the moment I'm using EntityFramework 6.1.3 and VS 2010.
The only solution I could find to this problem of the database being out of sync with EF on the code side was to delete all of the MIGRATIONS and the ENTITIES poco classes, and on the db side delete the _migrations table. Then go back to your application and add to your project a new "Code First from Existing Database".
This solved the problem for me easily and will allow me to work with Code First AND SQL Server Management Studio (as I like to do (until I get better at EF)).
I know it's a bit of a work-around but it'll get you out of jail if you find yourself in this situation.
I have been using Database First Entity Framework (EDMX) and SQL Server Data Tools Database Projects in combination very successfully - change the schema in the database and 'Update Model from Database' to get them into the EDMX. I see though that Entity Framework 7 will be dropping the EDMX format and I am looking for a new process that will allow me to use Code First in Combination with Database Projects.
Lots of my existing development and deployment processes rely on having a database project that contains the schema. This goes in source control is deployed along with the code and is used to update the production database complete with data migration using pre and post deployment scripts. I would be reluctant to drop it.
I would be keen to split one big EDMX into many smaller models as part of this work. This will mean multiple Code First models referencing the same database.
Assuming that I have an existing database and a database project to go with it - I am thinking that I would start by using the following wizard to create an initial set of entity and context classes - I would do this for each of the models.
Add | New Item... | Visual C# Items | Data | ADO.NET Entity Data Model | Code first from database
My problem is - where do I go from there? How do I handle schema changes? As long as I can get the database schema updated, I can use a schema compare operation to get the changes into the project.
These are the options that I am considering.
Make changes in the database and use the wizard from above to regenerate. I guess that I would need to keep any modifications to the entity and/or context classes in partial classes so that they do not get overwritten. Automating this with a list of tables etc to include would be handy. Powershell or T4 Templates maybe? SqlSharpener (suggested by Keith in comments) looks like it might help here. I would also look at disabling all but the checks for database existence and schema compatibility here, as suggested by Steve Green in the comments.
Make changes in code and use migrations to get these changes applied to the database. From what I understand, not having models map cleanly to database schemas (mine don't) might pose problems. I also see some complaints on the net that migrations do not cover all database object types - this was also my experience when I played around with Code First a while back - unique constraints I think were not covered. Has this improved in Entity Framework 7?
Make changes in the database and then use migrations as a kind of comparison between code and the database. See what the differences are and adjust the code to suit. Keep going until there are no differences.
Make changes manually in both code and the database. Obviously, this is not very appealing.
Which of these would be best? Is there anything that I would need to know before trying to implement it? Are there any other, better options?
So the path that we ended up taking was to create some T4 templates that generate both a DbContext and our entities. We provide the entity T4 a list of tables from which to generate entities and have a syntax to indicate that the entity based on one table should inherit from the entity based on another. Custom code goes in partial classes. So our solution looks most like my option 1 from above.
Also, we started out generating fluent configuration in OnModelCreating in the DbContext but have swapped to using attributes on the Entities (where attributes exist - HasPrecision was one that we had to use fluent configuration for). We found that it is more concise and easier to locate the configuration for a property when it is right there decorating that property.
I'm using EF6 code-first migrations for existing database but initial DbContext does not fully cover existing schema (since it's massive). So from time to time I have to make updates to the model in database-first style. For example when I need an entity mapping for a table or a column that is already in the database but not reflected in the code I do the following:
Make all change (add new entity, rename the column mapping or add new property)
Scaffold migration representing the latest model snapshot stub_migration
Copy-paste latest serialized model from stub_migration to the last_migration resource file
Delete stub_migration
Revert last_migration in database
Update-Database so that model snapshot in [__MigrationHistory] table would be also updated
I understand that this aproach is a bit hackish and the proper way would be to leave empty stub_migration but this would force lots of empty migrations which I would rather avoid.
Looking at a similar scenario from MSDN article (Option 2: Update the model snapshot in the last migration) I wouldn't imagine that there is an easier way rather than writing power shell script, managed code or both to make it work. But I would rather ask community first before diving deep into it.
So I wonder: is there a simple way to automate generation of new model snapshot in latest migration and reaplying it?
I'm doing something similar. I have a large database and I am using the EF Tools for VS 2013 to reverse engineer it in small parts into my DEV environment. The tool creates my POCOs and Context changes in a separate folder. I move them to my data project, create a fluent configuration and then apply a migration (or turn automigration on).
After a while I want a single migration for TEST or PROD so I roll them up into a single migration using the technique explained here: http://cpratt.co/migrating-production-database-with-entity-framework-code-first/#at_pco=smlwn-1.0&at_si=54ad5c7b61c48943&at_ab=per-12&at_pos=0&at_tot=1
You can simplify the steps for updating DbContext snapshot of the last migration applied to database by re-scaffolding it with Entity Framework:
Revert the last migration if it is applied to the database:
Update-Database -Target:Previous_Migraton
Re-scaffold the last migration Add-Migration The_name_of_the_last_migration which will recreate the last migrations *.resx and *.Designer.cs (not the migration code), which is quite handy.
Those 2 steps are covering 4 steps (2-5) from original question.
You can also get different bahavior depending on what you want by specifying the flags -IgnoreChanges and (or) -Force
And by the way, the major problem with the updating the DbContext snapshot is not how to automate those steps, but how to conditionally apply them to TEST/PROD environments depending on whether you actually want to suppress the warning because you've mapped existing DB-first entities in you DbContext or you want it it to fail the build in case you've created new entities and forgot to create a code-first migration for them.
So, try to avoid those steps altogether and maybe create empty migrations when you just want to map existing tables to your code.
Background:
I'm developing an application with Entity Framework Code First and have been using my POCO Model to describe the database schema as much as I can. However there are a few cases where only the migrations API supports what you want (such as adding an index). I didn't want to start adding migrations until later, it's much faster just to recreate the database at this point, however it seemed like the only option.
So I thought I'd see if I could see if migrations would work. I planned on using them eventually and I was hoping I'd just be able to adjust the Initial migration or regenerate it as I went, until it was time to make real migrations. However I had no real luck with this approach either. It seems like code migrations for entity framework are fundamentally flawed in that they force the schema to be stored (serialized) as part of the migration.
For me it meant that there was no possible way to adjust the migration as I had no way to update the Target property (which is essentially a serialized version of my model). I also can't regenerate the migration because there is no way to express the indices separately. Part of the problem is that the way migrations work forces them to be made in a serial fashion, which is terrible when I want to update past migrations or there are multiple developers.
I've therefore chosen to just use context.Database.ExecuteSqlCommand to add the indices however I want to figure out if this limitation in migrations is going to change in the future or if I can work around it.
Question:
Is there any way to update the IMigrationMetadata for an existing migration and is there a way to have a migration that doesn't need the metadata found in the Target field?