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Edit: I understand the reason why this happened. It was because of the existence of `initial_data.json` file. Apparently, south wants to add those fixtures after migration but failing because of the unique property of a field.

I changed my model from this:

class Setting(models.Model):
    anahtar = models.CharField(max_length=20,unique=True)
    deger = models.CharField(max_length=40)

    def __unicode__(self):
        return self.anahtar

To this,

class Setting(models.Model):
    anahtar = models.CharField(max_length=20,unique=True)
    deger = models.CharField(max_length=100)

    def __unicode__(self):
        return self.anahtar

Schema migration command completed successfully, but, trying to migrate gives me this error:

IntegrityError: duplicate key value violates unique constraint "blog_setting_anahtar_key" DETAIL: Key (anahtar)=(blog_baslik) already exists.

I want to keep that field unique, but still migrate the field. By the way, data loss on that table is acceptable, so long as other tables in DB stay intact.

1 Answer 1

1

It's actually the default behavior of syncdb to run initial_data.json each time. From the Django docs:

If you create a fixture named initial_data.[xml/yaml/json], that fixture will be loaded every time you run syncdb. This is extremely convenient, but be careful: remember that the data will be refreshed every time you run syncdb. So don't use initial_data for data you'll want to edit.

See: docs

Personally, I think the use-case for initial data that needs to be reloaded each and every time a change occurs is retarded, so I never use initial_data.json.

The better method, since you're using South, is to manually call loaddata on a specific fixture necessary for your migration. In the case of initial data, that would go in your 0001_initial.py migration.

def forwards(self, orm):
    from django.core.management import call_command
    call_command("loaddata", "my_fixture.json")

See: http://south.aeracode.org/docs/fixtures.html

Also, remember that the path to your fixture is relative to the project root. So, if your fixture is at "myproject/myapp/fixtures/my_fixture.json" call_command would actually look like:

call_command('loaddata', 'myapp/fixtures/my_fixture.json')

And, of course, your fixture can't be named 'initial_data.json', otherwise, the default behavior will take over.

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