We have had to switch from schema.rb to structure.sql, since we needed a VARBINARY field in MySQL with an index of a specified length on it, which schema.rb doesn't handle, but structure.sql does.
Unfortunately, we've now hit a bigger issue. The structure.sql file contains CREATE TABLE
statements in alphabetical order. Our tables have foreign key constraints on them. The structure.sql file includes these key constraints, but references tables that don't get created until further down the file.
e.g.
CREATE TABLE attachments (
id INT NOT NULL auto_increment PRIMARY KEY,
user_id INT,
/* ... snip ... */
CONSTRAINT attachments_user_id_fkey FOREIGN KEY (user_id) REFERENCES users(id) ON UPDATE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB CHARSET=utf8;
/* ... snip ... */
CREATE TABLE users (
id INT NOT NULL auto_increment PRIMARY KEY,
/* ... snip ... */
) ENGINE=InnoDB CHARSET=utf8;
Is there a workaround for this? It seems so fundamentally broken for such a common DB schema design principle I can't even believe this is a thing. We're on Rails 3.2.12.