How to solve “Cannot add a NOT NULL column with default value NULL” in SQLite3?

二次信任 提交于 2019-11-27 06:57:18

You already have rows in the table, and you're adding a new column division_id. It needs something in that new column in each of the existing rows.

SQLite would typically choose NULL, but you've specified it can't be NULL, so what should it be? It has no way of knowing.

See:

That blog's recommendation is to add the column without the not null constraint, and it'll be added with NULL in every row. Then you can fill in values in the division_id and then use change_column to add the not null constraint.

See the blogs I linked to for an description of a migration script that does this three-step process.

This is (what I would consider) a glitch with SQLite. This error occurs whether there are any records in the table or not.

When adding a table from scratch, you can specify NOT NULL, which is what you're doing with the ":null => false" notation. However, you can't do this when adding a column. SQLite's specification says you have to have a default for this, which is a poor choice. Adding a default value is not an option because it defeats the purpose of having a NOT NULL foreign key - namely, data integrity.

Here's a way to get around this glitch, and you can do it all in the same migration. NOTE: this is for the case where you don't already have records in the database.

class AddDivisionIdToProfile < ActiveRecord::Migration
  def self.up
    add_column :profiles, :division_id, :integer
    change_column :profiles, :division_id, :integer, :null => false
  end

  def self.down
    remove_column :profiles, :division_id
  end
end

We're adding the column without the NOT NULL constraint, then immediately altering the column to add the constraint. We can do this because while SQLite is apparently very concerned during a column add, it's not so picky with column changes. This is a clear design smell in my book.

It's definitely a hack, but it's shorter than multiple migrations and it will still work with more robust SQL databases in your production environment.

JosephL

If you have a table with existing rows then you will need to update the existing rows before adding your null constraint. The Guide on migrations recommends using a local model, like so:

Rails 4 and up:

class AddDivisionIdToProfile < ActiveRecord::Migration
  class Profile < ActiveRecord::Base
  end

  def change
    add_column :profiles, :division_id, :integer

    Profile.reset_column_information
    reversible do |dir|
      dir.up { Profile.update_all division_id: Division.first.id }
    end

    change_column :profiles, :division_id, :integer, :null => false
  end

end

Rails 3

class AddDivisionIdToProfile < ActiveRecord::Migration
  class Profile < ActiveRecord::Base
  end

  def change
    add_column :profiles, :division_id, :integer

    Profile.reset_column_information
    Profile.all.each do |profile|
      profile.update_attributes!(:division_id => Division.first.id)
    end

    change_column :profiles, :division_id, :integer, :null => false
  end

end
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