I'm trying to figure out how to use NHibernate configuration with mapping to update table schemas, rather than dropping and recreating them.

Currently I'm using the NHibernate.Tool.hbm2ddl.SchemaExport obj with FluentNHibernate to generate the database schema for a mysql database. While I can't say it's a huge problem, whenever I call SchemaExport.Execute on the database, it's going to drop all the tables and then recreate them.

What would be way cooler is if I could just have it update the existing table structures retaining data where possible. But I don't really want to use a commerical product, or a code generator, because I don't like code generation in general, and I don't need this enough that I would consider paying for it. So hopefully any answer would keep these caveats in mind.

link|improve this question

feedback

2 Answers

up vote 39 down vote accepted

The SchemaUpdate object provides database schema updating, by apparently generating and executing a series of SQL UPDATE statements (as well as constraint statements) when it's void Execute(bool script, bool doUpdate) function is called. The SchemaUpdate class is in the NHibernate.Tool.hbm2ddl namespace, which can be found in the Nhibernate.dll file.

SchemaUpdate is mentioned in chapter 15 of the nhibernate 1.0.2 toolset guide, here (section 15.1.5).

It's usage is described in "The NHibernate FAQ" which has a more complete example of how to use SchemaUpdate here. On this page the following example test is used, and there is a brief explanation of it's use.

[Test]
public void Update_an_existing_database_schema()
{
    _cfg = new Configuration();
    _cfg.Configure();
    _cfg.AddAssembly(Assembly.LoadFrom("DataLayer.dll"));
    var update = new SchemaUpdate(_cfg);
    update.Execute(true, false);
}

Here's a blog post I've written that has a little more detail about how SchemaUpdate works.

link|improve this answer
we can't modify the setting of field once created for instance modify string length from nvarchar(255) to nvarchar(45), can we? – c.sokun Aug 31 '09 at 10:43
That's a good question, the create version of hbm2ddl would allows you to do this, but I've noticed sometimes I have to drop the tables before the create will run successfully. – Mark Rogers Aug 31 '09 at 13:54
This works brilliantly, this technique is also suited for Fluent NHibernate. – Gravitas Nov 29 '11 at 23:28
feedback

Check out SchemaUpdate.

link|improve this answer
feedback

protected by Will Jan 2 '11 at 21:23

This question is protected to prevent "thanks!", "me too!", or spam answers by new users. To answer it, you must have earned at least 10 reputation on this site.

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