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I'm working on a Ruby on Rails 3 webapp on Heroku. How do I empty the database?

18 Answers 18

727

To drop the database, if you are using SHARED_DATABASE_URL:

$ heroku pg:reset DATABASE_URL

Now to recreate the database with nothing in it:

$ heroku run rake db:migrate  

To populate the database with your seed data:

$ heroku run rake db:seed

---OR---

You can combine the last two (migrate & seed) into one action by executing this:

$ heroku run rake db:setup

Edit 2014-04-18: rake db:setup doesn't work with Rails 4, it fails with a Couldn't create database error.

Edit 2014-10-09: You can use rake db:setup with Rails 4. It does give you a Couldn't create database error (because the database was already created using the heroku pg:reset command). But it also loads your database schema and your seeds after the error message.

You can do this with pretty much any rake command, but there are exceptions. For example, db:reset doesn't work via heroku run rake. You have to use pg:reset instead.

More information can be found in Heroku's documentation:

Running Rake Commands

Reset Postgres DB

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  • 23
    Thank you. Actually, "heroku pg:reset --db SHARED_DATABASE_URL" did the trick. But you got me going in the right direction.
    – Jay Godse
    Mar 17, 2011 at 22:17
  • 5
    @JayGodse Heroku now says SHARED_DATABASE_URL is deprecated, please use SHARED_DATABASE
    – Phil
    Oct 18, 2011 at 9:40
  • 6
    Actually you should be checking in your schema.rb and you should use: rake db:schema:load
    – Amala
    Dec 2, 2011 at 23:06
  • 19
    They have changed it again now is heroku pg:reset DATABASE Jan 23, 2013 at 23:48
  • 9
    To save a couple of seconds of time, use heroku pg:reset DATABASE --confirm appname Jun 8, 2013 at 6:08
103

Heroku has deprecated the --db option now, so now use:

heroku pg:reset DATABASE_URL --confirm {the name of your app}

It's a little confusing because you use the literal text SHARED_DATABASE but where I have written {the name of your app} substitute the name of your app. For example, if your app is called my_great_app then you use:

heroku pg:reset DATABASE_URL --confirm my_great_app
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  • 3
    if you just paste skip the bit after (and including) the -- heroku will tell you what to type..
    – baash05
    Feb 1, 2012 at 22:48
  • useful command to get the name of your postgres database on heroku : heroku config | grep HEROKU_POSTGRESQL
    – zero_cool
    Jun 7, 2014 at 0:50
  • "you use the literal text SHARED_DATABASE" ? You are using DATABASE_URL in your code samples. Do you mean that? Jun 17, 2014 at 10:30
  • Nope. I was referring to the other answer's use of the words SHARED_DATABASE
    – Dave Sag
    Jun 17, 2014 at 14:34
72

To drop the database:

$ heroku pg:reset SHARED_DATABASE --confirm NAME_OF_THE_APP

To recreate the database:

$ heroku run rake db:migrate

To seed the database:

$ heroku run rake db:seed

**Final step

$ heroku restart
4
  • 4
    I prefer this answer over any else's. This works perfectly in my scenario on Heroku, I believe it is highly under voted!
    – Jonathan
    Mar 24, 2012 at 16:04
  • It might be because heroku changed the syntax of these commands recently. Mar 24, 2012 at 19:49
  • 1
    'heroku restart' was the one key piece I was missing. Thanks. Jul 2, 2014 at 15:00
  • heroku run rake db:migrate no longer recreates the database
    – Rots
    Sep 30, 2014 at 9:16
48

The current, ie. 2017 way to do this is:

heroku pg:reset DATABASE

https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/heroku-postgresql#pg-reset

1
  • 1
    Agreed. The current way to re-populate the database is: heroku run rake db:migrate db:seed Dec 5, 2014 at 0:33
14

Now the command is

heroku pg:reset DATABASE_URL --confirm your_app_name

this way you can specify which app's db you want to reset. Then you can run

heroku run rake db:migrate 
heroku run rake db:seed 

or direct for both above commands

heroku run rake db:setup 

And now final step to restart your app

heroku restart
1
  • 1
    Restarting might not be necessary but good point giving it a mention. Oct 21, 2018 at 20:04
11

I contacted Heroku support, and they confirmed that it is a bug with the latest gem (I am using heroku-2.26.2)

Charlie - we are aware of this issue with the 'heroku' gem and are working to fix it.

Here's the issue if you care to follow-along - https://github.com/heroku/heroku/issues/356

Downgrading to an earlier version of the 'heroku' gem should help. I've been using v2.25.0 for most of today without issue.

Downgrade with the following commands:

gem uninstall heroku

gem install heroku --version 2.25.0

If you already have multiple gems installed, you may be presented with:

Select gem to uninstall:
 1. heroku-2.25.0
 2. heroku-2.26.2
 3. All versions

Just uninstall #2 and rerun the command. Joy!

1
  • 1
    All the gems have been deprecated now, you need to get rid of them and install the Heroku toolbelt. toolbelt.heroku.com
    – Ghoti
    Sep 9, 2013 at 21:52
9

The complete answer is (for users with multi-db):

heroku pg:info - which outputs

=== HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_RED <-- this is DB
Plan Basic
Status available

heroku pg:reset HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_RED --confirm app_name

More information found in: https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/heroku-postgresql

8

Now it's diffrent with heroku. Try: heroku pg:reset DATABASE --confirm

1
  • For some apps you still need to use SHARED_DATABASE
    – tfwright
    Oct 11, 2012 at 15:29
8

Now it's also possible to reset the database through their web interface.

Go to dashboard.heroku.com select your app and then you'll find the database under the add-ons category, click on it and then you can reset the database.

Reset Heroku Database

7

Today the command

heroku pg:reset --db SHARED_DATABASE_URL

not working for shared plans, I'm resolve using

heroku pg:reset SHARED_DATABASE
6

Check your heroku version. I just updated mine to 2.29.0, as follows:

heroku --version
#=> heroku-gem/2.29.0 (x86_64-linux) ruby/1.9.3

Now you can run:

heroku pg:reset DATABASE --confirm YOUR_APP_NAME

Then create your database and seed it in a single command:

heroku run rake db:setup

Now restart and try your app:

heroku restart
heroku open
6

Login to your DB using heroku pg:psql and type the following commands:

drop schema public cascade;
create schema public;
5

In case you prefer to use Heroku Web-site:

  1. Go to https://postgres.heroku.com/databases
  2. Select the database you want to reset
  3. Click on a settings button in the right upper corner
  4. Click "Reset Database" as shown below:
  5. type in "RESET" and press ok

heroku database reset

4

This is what worked for me.

1.clear db.

heroku pg:reset --app YOUR_APP

After running that you will have to type in your app name again to confirm.

2.migrate db to recreate.

heroku run rake db:migrate  --app YOUR_APP

3.add seed data to db.

heroku run rake db:seed --app YOUR_APP
3

Assuming you want to reset your PostgreSQL database and set it back up, use:

heroku apps

to list your applications on Heroku. Find the name of your current application (application_name). Then run

heroku config | grep POSTGRESQL

to get the name of your databases. An example could be

HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_WHITE_URL

Finally, given application_name and database_url, you should run

heroku pg:reset `database_url` --confirm `application_name`
heroku run rake db:migrate
heroku restart
0
1

If you are logged in from the console, this will do the job in the latest heroku toolbelt,

heroku pg:reset --confirm database-name

0

I always do this with the one-liner 'heroku pg:reset DATABASE'.

0

Best solution for you issue will be

heroku pg:reset -r heroku  --confirm your_heroku_app_name

--confirm your_heroku_app_name

is not required, but terminal always ask me do that command.

After that command you will be have pure db, without structure and stuff, after that you can run

heroku run rake db:schema:load -r heroku

or

heroku run rake db:migrate -r heroku

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