vote up 0 vote down star

I was doing this kind of thing in my migrations:

add_column :statuses, :hold_reason, :string rescue puts "column already added"

but it turns out that, while this works for SQLite, it does not work for PostgreSQL. It seems like if the add_column blows up, even if the Exception is caught, the transaction is dead and so the Migration can't do any additional work.

Is there any non-DB sepecific ways to check if a column or table already exist? Failing that, is there any way to get my rescue block to really work?

flag

62% accept rate

1 Answer

vote up 1 vote down check

You could check the column ActiveRecord style, assuming you've created a model for the table at this point:

Status.column_names.include?("hold_reason")

If you'll be doing it a lot you could make it a method:

def safe_add_column table_name, column_name, type, options
  unless table_name.to_s.singularize.camelcase.constantize.column_names.include?(column_name.to_s)
    add_column table_name, column_name, type, options
  else
    announce "Column #{column_name} already exists in table #{table_name}"
  end
end

However I'm not quite sure if this holds up if multiple migrations are run at once. I guess you could trigger a reload if necessary to update the Model metadata.

Also I haven't run this code for bugs, but the concept is sound.

link|flag
My guess is that each migration runs in its own transaction, so forcing a reload (if necessary) should do the trick. I'll check it out and let you know, the idea looks sound. – yar Oct 30 at 2:12
Not really. ActiveRecord gets the column layout from that database. I'm not sure when that information is loaded and if and when it's updated. So I mentioned the reloading to be safe. – EmFi Oct 30 at 3:56
Sorry, I wasn't clear. My point was this: DURING a migration even reloading wouldn't update the ActiveRecord. I think it depends on the transaction level, etc., but from what I can gather, each migration is one transaction, so the Model wouldn't know that a column has been added until the migration is done. On the other hand, since Status (in your example) is just a simple class, you could simplify your safe_add_column... method to define the class and do the check, eliminating the dependency on the model being present whatsoever. THANKS for the answer and the comments. – yar Oct 30 at 13:24

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.