I have a program that my user save something on it. I want to release new version.
My question is: if my users update their app, will their data still be there or not?
My new release its not part of database.
When you update an app, the data is preserved. As far as I am aware, the process is the same as when you test a new build from Xcode.
The only time this could be an issue is if you are using CoreData, and you update your model. In this case, the old store will not work with your new model unless you migrate the old store. Apple has documentation on migrating CoreData stores here.
The database will be in sandbox of the app. So until user deleted the app the database will be there. You can upgrade the app. But if there is something changes into database then you again need to copy the new database to documents directory either by installing the app again and remove the older version Or by manage through code.
All contents of the Documents directory on device is preserved, update only replaces the application bundle, which is read-only anyway.
Can you please let us know for saving what kind of data model you are using, whether Core Data stack or SQLite. If you are using one of them, its pretty obvious you have to write and fetch your DB from documents directory. If your new version does not contain one, it wont work either.
Related
I am learning core data concept and i want to use this in my simple app.
I have did the sample from the below link.
http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/An_iOS_4_iPhone_Core_Data_Tutorial_%28Xcode_4%29
i have did everything and followed the steps described in that link.
Generally i have added the data to tables(entity) and fetched the records using core data.
But my question is==> Once i closed(killed) the app from simulator (or) device means, the data stored in db also cleared. Next time when open that app again means, db will be empty.
In the above link also, this would be happened.
How to store data permanently in db(sqlite) using core data?
i want data(records) which i stored previous in that db. How to achieve it?
Please Help in this regards!!!
Thanks in advance.
Tutorial from raywenderlich would be a good start to learn for coredata... below is the link for the same...
http://www.raywenderlich.com/934/core-data-tutorial-getting-started
For your question : i want data(records) which i stored previous in that db. How to achieve it?
if you will delete the app either from device or simulator your database will be deleted. If you are testing on simulator and you have made db file in Resource bundle then everytime you run the project, Your database will be replaced by your database file in Project bundle..
please see clear yourself how project refers to db while running in simulator.
Here I've got a question concerning releasing update of the application in app store.
Suppose I've an application installed on my iPhone, which has some database inside, i.e. overtime user has entered info and the data were kept locally.
If the new version of application is released, and installed on my iPhone. Will the database be lost ?
I suppose all the information of the application, is removed and the update is installed like a new app. Please confirm.
Thanks
No the users data will not be lost.
When you update an app only the bundle data will be updated, meaning the .app directory of the installed app. Any other directory, like Documents and Library will not be touched.
If there is any data in for example the Documents directory that need updating then you have to write code to detect that and make the necessary changes.
If the database is used by Core Data then you will need to version and migrate the data.
All the files stored inside your app's documents directory (which is usually where db file is stored) are preserved during app update.
If you would have set the version number to your database for your iphone could have been easily handle, save your version number into your db and whenever database is called, compare the version against the expected version If new version > older version change the schema (this is needed if you would have changed the schema of your database) with using SQL ALTER statements and update the app version number.
so whenever user is going to update or fresh installation, it will check the new version with your older version, if it differ then update schema, and if its same no need to make any changes.
If you would not have made any schema related changes (for example adding new column..) then you do not need to worry, user will not lose the data.
my guess is that it would not be replacing any of the existing files instead just updating them if any changes....the best example of data is not lost is that.....i usually update most of my games. and they do preserve my highscore even after the updates.. lol! So, go on. Nothing will be lost. Nice question though. :)
I wanted to know something which is very disturbing for me. i.e.
Lets say I have an App. which is in the Appstore and running fine.
This App. has a local database with lets say 5 tables.
I update this App. and add 2 more new tables, which makes it a total of 7.
When the previous app version users will upgrade to the newer version. Will the database be updated also for the previous version users ?
If yes ?
then will the previous data will be removed.
If not
then the code will obviously make some crashes as it is going to need the new things which are not replaced.
Waiting for your precious comments.
It will all depend on your database. If you are using CoreData, you can migrate the users data into the new database and structures. All the information for your data model is stored in the .xcdatamodel class for your project. It isn't bundled into your code the way other files are.
The part you would need to look into is the Model Versioning Identifier. Here you will be able to increment your MOM, Managed Object Model.
You can also migrate the data over as well. I would review Apple's documentation on CoreData with focus on versioning and migration. Good luck.
Apple Core Data Versioning
If the database is based on coredata then you will need to use .
But if you are using sqlite DB
Then you can save the version number of your app into your db and whenever database is called(with new installation/upgrade), compare the version against the expected version If new version > older version then change the schema (this is needed if you would have changed the schema of your database) with using SQL ALTER statements and update the app version number. so whenever user is going to update or fresh installation, it will check the new version with your older version,
if it differ then
update schema,
and if its same
no need to make any changes.
If you would not have made any schema related changes (for example adding new column..) then you do not need to worry, user will not lose the data.
The contents of the documents directory is left unchanged. The contents of the .app bundle is completely replaced with the new version.
If you store your database in the documents directory and it is modified by the application, you will need to perform some migration to upgrade to the new version. If it's just a read-only database, you can copy over it with the new database.
It depends on where database is placed. All files in application bundle will be replaced. Files in Documents directory will remain intact unless you overwrite them...
Where do you store your database?
What i consider a good approach is to place database in bundle then on first run copy it to documents directory so that you gain RW access.
In your updated application you can check if database exists in Documents read it and update tables to new version, if not then just copy file from bundle to new location.
I have some general questions about iphone app updates that involves sqlite db.
With the new update does the existing sqlite db get overwritten with a copy of the new one?
If the update doesn't involve any schema changes then the user should be able to reuse the existing database with their saved data, right? (if the existing database doesn't get overwritten from 1 above )
If there are some schema changes, what's the best way to transfer data from the old database into the new one? Can some one please give me guidelines and sample code?
Only files inside the app bundle are replaced. If the database file is in your app's Documents directory, it will not be replaced. (Note that if you change files inside your app bundle, the code signature will no longer be valid, and the app will not launch. So unless you are using a read-only database, it would have to be in the Documents directory.)
Yes.
What's best depends on the data. You're not going to find sample code for such a generic question. First, you need to detect that your app is running with an old DB version. Then you need to upgrade it.
To check versions:
You could use a different file name for the new schema. If Version2.db does not exist but Version1.db does, do an upgrade.
You could embed a schema version in your database. I have a table called metadata with a name and value column. I use that to store some general values, including a dataversion number. I check that number when I open the database, and if it is less than the current version, I do an upgrade.
Instead of creating a table, you could also use sqlite's built-in user_version pragma to check and store a version number.
You could check the table structure directly: look for the existence of a column or table.
To upgrade:
You could upgrade in place by using a series of SQL commands. You could even store a SQL file inside your app bundle as a resource and simply pass it along to sqlite3_exec to do all the work. (Do this inside a transaction, in case there is a problem!)
You could upgrade by copying data from one database file to a new one.
If your upgrade may run a long time (more than one second), you should display an upgrading screen, to explain to the user what is going on.
1) The database file isn't stored as part of the app bundle so no, it won't get automatically overwritten.
2) Yes - all their data will be saved. In fact, the database won't get touched at all by the update.
3) This is the tricky one - read this fantastically interesting document - especially the part on lightweight migration - if your schema changes are small and follow a certain set of rules, they will happen automatically and the user won't notice. however, if ther are major changes to the schema you will have to write your own migration code (that's in that links as well)
I've always managed to get away with running lightweight migrations myself - it's by far easier than doing it yourself.
What I do is that I create a working copy of the database in the Documents directory. The main copy comes with the bundle. When I update the app I then have the option to make a new copy over the working copy, or leave it.
I'm working on a Core Data app (for iPhone 3.0, though I don't think that really makes a difference here) and it will need to ship with a "starter" database filled with data. With SQLite, I would just have the App copy the populated database from the bundle into the App's documents directory on first launch and then load that database - all the information would come along with it and we'd be ready to go. But with Core Data, I'm not really sure if I can just save the Persistent store to the App bundle and copy it before having Core Data start doing its thing. Will this cause any problems? There is quite a bit of initial data, so I don't want to package it in another format and have to parse through it.
Yes, you can copy over a pre-populated persistent store.
I created a Mac app that populates a store. It is copied into my bundle and at start, copied to the Docs directory. This works fine. I am told the Core Data Books example was developed the same way.
Please note this doesn't mean you can just copy over any old SQLite file. It has to be a Core Data persistent store, though I think you understand that based on your question.
Actually there is a trick: you must name the file you are going to copy over with an extension other than ".sqlite", ".bin" will do. Otherwise Xcode will change the contents of the file when it copies it into the app during the build phase and it won't load.