When I change help_text
or verbose_name
for any of my model fields and run python manage.py makemigrations
, it detects these changes and creates a new migration, say, 0002_xxxx.py
.
I am using PostgreSQL and I think these changes are irrelevant to my database (I wonder if a DBMS for which these changes are relevant exists at all).
Why does Django generate migrations for such changes? Is there an option to ignore them?
Can I apply the changes from 0002_xxxx.py
to the previous migration (0001_initial.py
) manually and safely delete 0002_xxxx.py
?
Is there a way to update previous migration automatically?
You can squash it with the previous migration, sure.
Or if you don't want to output those migrations at all, you can override the makemigrations
and migrate
command by putting this in management/commands/makemigrations.py
in your app:
from django.core.management.commands.makemigrations import Command
from django.db import models
IGNORED_ATTRS = ['verbose_name', 'help_text', 'choices']
original_deconstruct = models.Field.deconstruct
def new_deconstruct(self):
name, path, args, kwargs = original_deconstruct(self)
for attr in IGNORED_ATTRS:
kwargs.pop(attr, None)
return name, path, args, kwargs
models.Field.deconstruct = new_deconstruct
This ticket addressed the problem.
If you have changed only help_text
& django generates a new migration; then you can apply changes from latest migration to previous migration and delete the latest migration.
Just change the help_text
in the previous migration to help_text present in latest migration and delete the latest migration file. Make sure to remove corresponding *.pyc
file if it is present. Otherwise an exception will be raised.
To avoid unnecessary migrations You can do as follows:
- Subclass field that causes migration
- Write custom deconstruct method inside that field
- Profit
Example:
from django.db import models
class CustomCharField(models.CharField): # or any other field
def deconstruct(self):
name, path, args, kwargs = super(CustomCharField, self).deconstruct()
# exclude all fields you dont want to cause migration, my example below:
if 'help_text' in kwargs:
del kwargs['help_text']
if 'verbose_name' in kwargs:
del kwargs['verbose_name']
return name, path, args, kwargs
Hope that helps
As @ChillarAnand noted there is a ticket solving this issue but until now (django 1.9.1) the migrations commands were not fixed.
The least intrusive way of fixing it is to create your own maketranslatedmigrations
command in <your-project>/management/commands/maketranslatedmigrations.py
as
#coding: utf-8
from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand
from django.core.management.commands.makemigrations import Command as MakeMigrations
class Command(MakeMigrations):
leave_locale_alone = True
can_import_settings = True
def handle(self, *app_labels, **options):
super(Command, self).handle(*app_labels, **options)
And then you can use it exactly the same as original makemigrations.
P.S. Don't forget to add __init__.py
files everywhere on the path
I have written custom module for that purpose
All you need is to save it in some utils/models.db and in all your models instead of from django.db import models
write from utils import models
If somebody is interested in it I can write a component and publish it on pypi
UPD: try this https://github.com/FeroxTL/django-migration-control
# models.py
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
from types import FunctionType
from django.db import models
class NoMigrateMixin(object):
"""
Позволяет исключить из миграций различные поля
"""
def deconstruct(self):
name, path, args, kwargs = super(NoMigrateMixin, self).deconstruct()
kwargs.pop('help_text', None)
kwargs.pop('verbose_name', None)
return name, path, args, kwargs
# =============================================================================
# DJANGO CLASSES
# =============================================================================
for name, cls in models.__dict__.items():
if isinstance(cls, type):
if issubclass(cls, models.Field):
# Поля
globals()[name] = type(name, (NoMigrateMixin, cls), {})
else:
# Всякие менеджеры
globals()[name] = cls
elif isinstance(cls, FunctionType):
# Прочие функции
globals()[name] = cls
The ticket that ChillarAnand mentions is very helpfull, but at final of changelog, I did not realize if it was fixed or not, or it was fixed in newest version of Django.
So, due to I did not found any solution for Django 1.9.13, I added a little hack to settings.py
:
if 'makemigrations' in sys.argv:
USE_I18N = False
USE_L10N = False
Not elegant, but it works ok.
From Django 2.X, using ugettext_lazy
instead of ugettext
or gettext
fixes it.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26503826/why-does-django-make-migrations-for-help-text-and-verbose-name-changes