Using south to refactor a Django model with inheritance

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遇见更好的自我
遇见更好的自我 2020-12-04 07:40

I was wondering if the following migration is possible with Django south and still retain data.

Before:

I currently have two apps, one called tv, one calle

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  • 2020-12-04 08:05

    I did try to walk through the solution outlined by T Stone and while I think it's a superb starter and explains how things should be done I ran into a few problems.

    I think mostly you don't need to create the table entry for the parent class anymore, i.e. you don't need

    new_movie.videofile_ptr = orm['media.VideoFile'].objects.create()
    

    anymore. Django will now do this automatically for you (if you have non-null fields then the above did not work for me and gave me a database error).

    I think it is probably due to changes in django and south, here is a version that worked for me on ubuntu 10.10 with django 1.2.3 and south 0.7.1. The models are a little different, but you will get the gist:

    Initial setup

    post1/models.py:

    class Author(models.Model):
        first = models.CharField(max_length=30)
        last = models.CharField(max_length=30)
    
    class Tag(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=30, primary_key=True)
    
    class Post(models.Model):
        created_on = models.DateTimeField()
        author = models.ForeignKey(Author)
        tags = models.ManyToManyField(Tag)
        title = models.CharField(max_length=128, blank=True)
        content = models.TextField(blank=True)
    

    post2/models.py:

    class Author(models.Model):
        first = models.CharField(max_length=30)
        middle = models.CharField(max_length=30)
        last = models.CharField(max_length=30)
    
    class Tag(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=30)
    
    class Category(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=30)
    
    class Post(models.Model):
        created_on = models.DateTimeField()
        author = models.ForeignKey(Author)
        tags = models.ManyToManyField(Tag)
        title = models.CharField(max_length=128, blank=True)
        content = models.TextField(blank=True)
        extra_content = models.TextField(blank=True)
        category = models.ForeignKey(Category)
    

    There is obviously a lot of overlap, so I wanted to factor the commonalities out into a general post model and only keep the differences in the other model classes.

    new setup:

    genpost/models.py:

    class Author(models.Model):
        first = models.CharField(max_length=30)
        middle = models.CharField(max_length=30, blank=True)
        last = models.CharField(max_length=30)
    
    class Tag(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=30, primary_key=True)
    
    class Post(models.Model):
        created_on = models.DateTimeField()
        author = models.ForeignKey(Author)
        tags = models.ManyToManyField(Tag)
        title = models.CharField(max_length=128, blank=True)
        content = models.TextField(blank=True)
    

    post1/models.py:

    import genpost.models as gp
    
    class SimplePost(gp.Post):
        class Meta:
            proxy = True
    

    post2/models.py:

    import genpost.models as gp
    
    class Category(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=30)
    
    class ExtPost(gp.Post):
        extra_content = models.TextField(blank=True)
        category = models.ForeignKey(Category)
    

    If you want to follow along you will first need to get these models into south:

    $./manage.py schemamigration post1 --initial
    $./manage.py schemamigration post2 --initial
    $./manage.py migrate
    

    Migrating the data

    How to go about it? First write the new app genpost and do the initial migrations with south:

    $./manage.py schemamigration genpost --initial
    

    (I am using $ to represent the shells prompt, so don't type that.)

    Next create the new classes SimplePost and ExtPost in post1/models.py and post2/models.py respectively (don't delete the rest of the classes yet). Then create schemamigrations for these two as well:

    $./manage.py schemamigration post1 --auto
    $./manage.py schemamigration post2 --auto
    

    Now we can apply all these migrations:

    $./manage.py migrate
    

    Let's get to the heart of the matter, migrating the data from post1 and post2 to genpost:

    $./manage.py datamigration genpost post1_and_post2_to_genpost --freeze post1 --freeze post2
    

    Then edit genpost/migrations/0002_post1_and_post2_to_genpost.py:

    class Migration(DataMigration):
    
        def forwards(self, orm):
    
            # 
            # Migrate common data into the new genpost models
            #
            for auth1 in orm['post1.author'].objects.all():
                new_auth = orm.Author()
                new_auth.first = auth1.first
                new_auth.last = auth1.last
                new_auth.save()
    
            for auth2 in orm['post2.author'].objects.all():
                new_auth = orm.Author()
                new_auth.first = auth2.first
                new_auth.middle = auth2.middle
                new_auth.last = auth2.last
                new_auth.save()
    
            for tag in orm['post1.tag'].objects.all():
                new_tag = orm.Tag()
                new_tag.name = tag.name
                new_tag.save()
    
            for tag in orm['post2.tag'].objects.all():
                new_tag = orm.Tag()
                new_tag.name = tag.name
                new_tag.save()
    
            for post1 in orm['post1.post'].objects.all():
                new_genpost = orm.Post()
    
                # Content
                new_genpost.created_on = post1.created_on
                new_genpost.title = post1.title
                new_genpost.content = post1.content
    
                # Foreign keys
                new_genpost.author = orm['genpost.author'].objects.filter(\
                        first=post1.author.first,last=post1.author.last)[0]
    
                new_genpost.save() # Needed for M2M updates
                for tag in post1.tags.all():
                    new_genpost.tags.add(\
                            orm['genpost.tag'].objects.get(name=tag.name))
    
                new_genpost.save()
                post1.delete()
    
            for post2 in orm['post2.post'].objects.all():
                new_extpost = p2.ExtPost() 
                new_extpost.created_on = post2.created_on
                new_extpost.title = post2.title
                new_extpost.content = post2.content
    
                # Foreign keys
                new_extpost.author_id = orm['genpost.author'].objects.filter(\
                        first=post2.author.first,\
                        middle=post2.author.middle,\
                        last=post2.author.last)[0].id
    
                new_extpost.extra_content = post2.extra_content
                new_extpost.category_id = post2.category_id
    
                # M2M fields
                new_extpost.save()
                for tag in post2.tags.all():
                    new_extpost.tags.add(tag.name) # name is primary key
    
                new_extpost.save()
                post2.delete()
    
            # Get rid of author and tags in post1 and post2
            orm['post1.author'].objects.all().delete()
            orm['post1.tag'].objects.all().delete()
            orm['post2.author'].objects.all().delete()
            orm['post2.tag'].objects.all().delete()
    
    
        def backwards(self, orm):
            raise RuntimeError("No backwards.")
    

    Now apply these migrations:

    $./manage.py migrate
    

    Next you can delete the now redundant parts from post1/models.py and post2/models.py and then create schemamigrations to update the tables to the new state:

    $./manage.py schemamigration post1 --auto
    $./manage.py schemamigration post2 --auto
    $./manage.py migrate
    

    And that should be it! Hopefully it all works and you have refactored your models.

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  • 2020-12-04 08:08

    Abstract Model

    class VideoFile(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=1024, blank=True)
        size = models.IntegerField(blank=True, null=True)
        ctime = models.DateTimeField(blank=True, null=True)
        class Meta:
            abstract = True
    

    May be generic relation will be useful for you too.

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  • 2020-12-04 08:12

    Check out response below by Paul for some notes on compatibility with newer versions of Django/South.


    This seemed like an interesting problem, and I'm becoming a big fan of South, so I decided to look into this a bit. I built a test project on the abstract of what you've described above, and have successfully used South to perform the migration you are asking about. Here's a couple of notes before we get to the code:

    • The South documentation recommends doing schema migrations and data migrations separate. I've followed suit in this.

    • On the backend, Django represents an inherited table by automatically creating a OneToOne field on the inheriting model

    • Understanding this, our South migration needs to properly handle the OneToOne field manually, however, in experimenting with this it seems that South (or perhaps Django itself) cannot create a OneToOne filed on multiple inherited tables with the same name. Because of this, I renamed each child-table in the movies/tv app to be respective to it's own app (ie. MovieVideoFile/ShowVideoFile).

    • In playing with the actual data migration code, it seems South prefers to create the OneToOne field first, and then assign data to it. Assigning data to the OneToOne field during creation cause South to choke. (A fair compromise for all the coolness that is South).

    So having said all that, I tried to keep a log of the console commands being issued. I'll interject commentary where necessary. The final code is at the bottom.

    Command History

    django-admin.py startproject southtest
    manage.py startapp movies
    manage.py startapp tv
    manage.py syncdb
    manage.py startmigration movies --initial
    manage.py startmigration tv --initial
    manage.py migrate
    manage.py shell          # added some fake data...
    manage.py startapp media
    manage.py startmigration media --initial
    manage.py migrate
    # edited code, wrote new models, but left old ones intact
    manage.py startmigration movies unified-videofile --auto
    # create a new (blank) migration to hand-write data migration
    manage.py startmigration movies videofile-to-movievideofile-data 
    manage.py migrate
    # edited code, wrote new models, but left old ones intact
    manage.py startmigration tv unified-videofile --auto
    # create a new (blank) migration to hand-write data migration
    manage.py startmigration tv videofile-to-movievideofile-data
    manage.py migrate
    # removed old VideoFile model from apps
    manage.py startmigration movies removed-videofile --auto
    manage.py startmigration tv removed-videofile --auto
    manage.py migrate
    

    For space sake, and since the models invariably look the same in the end, I'm only going to demonstrate with 'movies' app.

    movies/models.py

    from django.db import models
    from media.models import VideoFile as BaseVideoFile
    
    # This model remains until the last migration, which deletes 
    # it from the schema.  Note the name conflict with media.models
    class VideoFile(models.Model):
        movie = models.ForeignKey(Movie, blank=True, null=True)
        name = models.CharField(max_length=1024, blank=True)
        size = models.IntegerField(blank=True, null=True)
        ctime = models.DateTimeField(blank=True, null=True)
    
    class MovieVideoFile(BaseVideoFile):
        movie = models.ForeignKey(Movie, blank=True, null=True, related_name='shows')
    

    movies/migrations/0002_unified-videofile.py (schema migration)

    from south.db import db
    from django.db import models
    from movies.models import *
    
    class Migration:
    
        def forwards(self, orm):
    
            # Adding model 'MovieVideoFile'
            db.create_table('movies_movievideofile', (
                ('videofile_ptr', orm['movies.movievideofile:videofile_ptr']),
                ('movie', orm['movies.movievideofile:movie']),
            ))
            db.send_create_signal('movies', ['MovieVideoFile'])
    
        def backwards(self, orm):
    
            # Deleting model 'MovieVideoFile'
            db.delete_table('movies_movievideofile')
    

    movies/migration/0003_videofile-to-movievideofile-data.py (data migration)

    from south.db import db
    from django.db import models
    from movies.models import *
    
    class Migration:
    
        def forwards(self, orm):
            for movie in orm['movies.videofile'].objects.all():
                new_movie = orm.MovieVideoFile.objects.create(movie = movie.movie,)
                new_movie.videofile_ptr = orm['media.VideoFile'].objects.create()
    
                # videofile_ptr must be created first before values can be assigned
                new_movie.videofile_ptr.name = movie.name
                new_movie.videofile_ptr.size = movie.size
                new_movie.videofile_ptr.ctime = movie.ctime
                new_movie.videofile_ptr.save()
    
        def backwards(self, orm):
            print 'No Backwards'
    

    South is awesome!

    Ok standard disclaimer: You're dealing with live data. I've given you working code here, but please use the --db-dry-run to test your schema. Always make a backup before trying anything, and generally be careful.

    COMPATIBILITY NOTICE

    I'm going to keep my original message intact, but South has since changed the command manage.py startmigration into manage.py schemamigration.

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  • 2020-12-04 08:12

    I did a similar migration and I chose to do it in multiple steps. In addition to creating the multiple migrations, I also created the backward migration to provide a fallback if things went wrong. Then, I grabbed some test data and migrated it forward and backwards until I was sure it was coming out correctly when I migrated forwards. Finally, I migrated the production site.

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