If you know your db and code are synced and now just hung up on something simple like migrations trying to duplicate tasks, the easiest way to start over migrations without losing data is to:
- Delete your Migrations folder in VS.
- Create a new migration (e.g.
add-migration InitialCreate
)
- Delete all but the first row from the
__EFMigrationsHistory
db and change the first row value to your first migration name with the date code (e.g. 20220510060015_InitialCreate
)
If you don't know the ProductVersion
for the migration table, you can find it in the Designer
or Snaphot
.cs
files in the newly created Migrations folder.
Now, when you run update-database
, it should complete without erroring (and perform no tasks). This might be a good way to also get the most clean SQL migration script for an initial production environment if you were doing a bunch of renaming, dropping, tables, columns, etc. in your early migrations.
If your code and db are not in sync, depending on how much data you're dealing with and how out of sync they are, it's probably best to perform steps 1 and 2 above, then backup the db and drop it and let migrations recreate it all again from scratch, then restore the data.
Microsoft: Managing Migrations - Resetting all migrations
To avoid the steps above, sometimes if a migration blows up midway through, you have to step through a migration and comment out each migrationBuilder block that's already completed (in the order they were created), especially if it's not clear from the migration error. So you can look at your db and see that tables, columns, FKs, indexes, etc. that have been dropped, renamed, created, etc. and then just go down the list of migrationBuilder blocks and step through the migration (comment out the completed steps, run update-database again, repeat). When you're done, uncomment everything.
Another common error you might run into if there's already data in the table and you're trying to add a FK constraint:
Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint fails
(Database1
.#sql-alter-d9b-445b
, CONSTRAINT
FK_TableA_TableB_TableBId
FOREIGN KEY (TableBId
) REFERENCES
TableB
(`TableBId)
The table you are trying to create a FK constraint for, it's FK constraint column doesn't match anything in the PK column of the primary table. It's best to prepare for this in advance by creating the PK table first with a default value placeholder, but if you already received the error then here we are. The easiest way to fix this to avoid some of the more drastic steps above is to:
- Check to see if the FK column got created and if it assigned a default value (e.g. in TableA, FK constraint TableBId = "0").
- Modify the PK table (or create it first) with a default PK Id record of whatever value was assigned in step 1 (e.g. in TableB, create a record with TableBId = "0").
- Comment out everything before the
migrationBuilder.AddForeignKey
block that errored out and run update-database
again. The migration should create the FK constraint now and complete.
- Uncomment everything.