I have my Configuration class constructor like this:
public Configuration() => AutomaticMigrationsEnabled = false;
And I have even updated my DbContent to this:
public DatabaseContext()
: base("DefaultConnection")
{
Database.CommandTimeout = 900;
Database.Log = s => Debug.WriteLine(s);
Configuration.LazyLoadingEnabled = false;
Database.SetInitializer(new CreateDatabaseIfNotExists<DatabaseContext>());
}
But when I try to run update-database
for a specific migration:
update-database -TargetMigration CreateOrganisation
I get this:
Applying explicit migrations: [201805081508118_CreateOrganisation].
Applying explicit migration: 201805081508118_CreateOrganisation.
Applying automatic migration: 201805081508117_CreateOrganisation_AutomaticMigration.
The last one it runs, then fails because it states:
System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException (0x80131904): There is already an object named 'Answers' in the database.
Which there is, but the actual migration looks like this:
public partial class CreateOrganisation : DbMigration
{
public override void Up()
{
CreateTable(
"dbo.Organisations",
c => new
{
Id = c.String(nullable: false, maxLength: 100),
Name = c.String(nullable: false, maxLength: 100),
Description = c.String(maxLength: 255),
})
.PrimaryKey(t => t.Id);
AddColumn("dbo.Users", "OrganisationId", c => c.String(maxLength: 100));
}
public override void Down()
{
DropTable("dbo.Organisations");
DropColumn("dbo.Users", "OrganisationId");
}
}
As you can see, there is no mention of Answer in that migration, which leads me to assume it is trying to do the prior migrations....
Does anyone know how I can stop that?
protected override void OnModelCreating(DbModelBuilder modelBuilder)
{
// Table renames
modelBuilder.Entity<Criteria>().ToTable("Criteria");
modelBuilder.Entity<Formula>().ToTable("Formulas");
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityRole>().ToTable("Roles");
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUserRole>().ToTable("UserRoles");
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUserClaim>().ToTable("UserClaims");
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUserLogin>().ToTable("UserLogins");
modelBuilder.Entity<ImageText>().ToTable("ImageText");
// One to Many
modelBuilder.Entity<Criteria>().HasMany(m => m.Attributes).WithOptional().HasForeignKey(m => m.CriteriaId);
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityRole>().HasMany(m => m.Users).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.RoleId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Organisation>().HasMany(m => m.Feeds).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.OrganisationId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Organisation>().HasMany(m => m.Users).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.OrganisationId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Group>().HasMany(m => m.Questions).WithOptional().HasForeignKey(m => m.GroupId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Question>().HasMany(m => m.Answers).WithOptional().HasForeignKey(m => m.QuestionId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Category>().HasMany(m => m.PriorityColours).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.CategoryId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Category>().HasMany(m => m.Criteria).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.CategoryId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Category>().HasMany(m => m.Feeds).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.CategoryId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Category>().HasMany(m => m.Quotes).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.CategoryId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Category>().HasMany(m => m.QuestionGroups).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.CategoryId);
modelBuilder.Entity<User>().HasMany(m => m.Searches).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.UserId);
modelBuilder.Entity<User>().HasMany(m => m.Charges).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.UserId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Answer>().HasMany(m => m.Images).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.AnswerId);
modelBuilder.Entity<Image>().HasMany(m => m.ImageText).WithRequired().HasForeignKey(m => m.ImageId);
// Create our primary keys
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUserLogin>().HasKey(m => m.UserId);
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityRole>().HasKey(m => m.Id);
modelBuilder.Entity<IdentityUserRole>().HasKey(m => new {m.RoleId, m.UserId});
}
As requested
-verbose
switch to see what exactly is going on.