I have added EF 5 to my project via Nuget and enabled migrations with the "Enable-Migrations" command. I have then called "Add-Migration" to generate the base code for generating the schema.
I then added a property to one of my domain objects (string property called "TestProperty") and added a mapping to my EntityTypeConfiguration file (we're ignoring the conventions at the moment).
Calling "Add-Migration" again produces the error:
Unable to generate an explicit migration because the following explicit migrations are pending: [201303262144218_Initial]. Apply the pending explicit migrations before attempting to generate a new explicit migration.
But calling "Update-Database" produces a sql exception because the tables already exist:
There is already an object named 'Customer' in the database
In my constructor for my DbContext I have tried the different update strategies, e.g.:
Database.SetInitializer<UnitOfWork>(new DropCreateDatabaseAlways<UnitOfWork>());
Am I missing something obvious?
I tried the solution here but it didn't work: Automatic Migrations for ASP.NET
Thanks
EDIT: Update
The key to getting past the first step is to create the initial migration and then delete the generated code from the Up and Down methods (http://thedatafarm.com/blog/data-access/using-ef-migrations-with-an-existing-database/).
I can then update the model and the EF map and then run Add-Migration. This generates a migration with the correct Up and Down code.
The problem is then trying to apply the update. Update-Database produces the error "Unable to update database to match the current model because there are pending changes and automatic migration is disabled...automatic migration. Set DbMigrationsConfiguration.AutomaticMigrationsEnabled to true to enable automatic migration.
You can use the Add-Migration command to write the pending model changes to a code-based migration". Ok, so I try Add-Migration again and it produces another migration with the exact same code as the last one.
I run Update-Database and get the same error again. I try "Update-Database -TargetMigration 201304080859556_MyMigration -Force" but this produces "The specified target migration '201304080859556_MyMigration' does not exist. Ensure that target migration refers to an existing migration id" - It does!
Very frustrating!
I had the same problem enabling EF migrations for a code-first model with an existing database, and the following procedure worked:
- Remove the existing Migrations folder in your project, and DROP the table
__MigrationHistory
from the existing database.
- Run the
enable-migrations
command from the Package Manager Console.
- Run the
add-migration
command to create an initial migration.
- Remove all of the code in
Up()
method for the initial migration.
- Run the
update-database
command to apply the initial migration to your database.
This doesn't make any changes to existing objects (because the Up()
method contains no code), but it marks the existing database as having been migrated to the initial state.
- Make changes to your code-first model.
- Run the
add-migration
command to create a new migration.
The code in the Up()
method of the new migration will contain only the changes to your object model.
- Run the
update-database
command to apply the changes to your database.
I run Update-Database and get the same error again. I try "Update-Database -TargetMigration 201304080859556_MyMigration -Force" but this produces "The specified target migration '201304080859556_MyMigration' does not exist. Ensure that target migration refers to an existing migration id" - It does!
There is one more issue which may cause your last error (and maybe it's a root cause of previous ones). I had a similar problem and it turned out that for some strange reason some of my migration classes where in a different namespace than the namespace of my MigrationConfiguration
class. Correcting namespaces (also in xxx.Designer.cs
files) solved this issue (migrations were visible and working again).
Did you try using the -force parameter to apply the changes.
Update-Database [-SourceMigration <String>]
[-TargetMigration <String>] [-Script] [-Force] [-ProjectName <String>]
[-StartUpProjectName <String>] [-ConfigurationTypeName <String>]
[-ConnectionStringName <String>] [<CommonParameters>]
-FORCE
Specifies that data loss is acceptable during automatic migration of the
database.
You can use get-help Update-Database -examples
to see usage examples.
Further read: EF Code First Migrations
This is a blanket approach that usually works:
- Delete your entire Migrations folder (make sure that you copy any code that you might have created from the seed method in your migration configuration file).
- Delete the actual database. If you are using LocalDb, this will normally sit within your AppData solution folder (Right-click -> open folder location). Make sure to delete the .mdf & .log database files.
- Go to Package Manager Console. Enter
enable-migrations -projectname yourprojectname
- Go to Package Manager Console. Enter
add-migration "Initial" -projectname yourprojectname
.
- Open the migration configuration file and paste the code that you copied from step 1 into the seed method.
- Go to Package Manager Console. Enter
update-database -projectname yourprojectname
This should do the trick.
Trying to migrate an old db version to a new model, either the database didn't match the new model or i got errors like :
Type is not resolved for member 'Npgsql.PostgresException,Npgsql,
Version=3.2.2.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=5d8b90d52f46fda7'
Here's how it worked (using automatic migration) :
- Delete Migrations folder
- Execute enable-migrations
Set this two properties to true in the newly created Configuration.cs
public Configuration()
{
AutomaticMigrationsEnabled = true;
AutomaticMigrationDataLossAllowed = true;
}
Execute Update-Database -Force
Your database will be updated to latest scheme and ready.
hope this helps.