88

I have a local database that is currently in it's second version and should now go to it's third version.

The code for the previous migrations was generated by another programmer so I am assuming I am doing something wrong here.

In my model there are around 30 classes, and inside the model folder there is a mapping folder and it contains the mappings for those 30 classes.

So now I added 1 new class in the same manner as those previous classes and then run the add-migration command in the Package Manager Console.

Infortunately I get an empty migration Up() and Down() method.

When I look in the database there is a __migrationHistory available with the previous 2 migrations. If I run my application now, the third migration is also added but obviously the new table is not being created because it's not in the Up() method.

What could I be doing wrong?

I think something is going wrong when scaffolding the previous migrations... It's like it can't find the new Code-First classes I have added.

This is my command:

add-migration "1.2" -verbose -ProjectName "MyEFproject"

I am assuming that the scaffolding doesn't know where to look for the new class... or is this by convention that all model classes are just expected to be in the project?

Result of add-migration:

namespace MyProject.Migrations
{
using System;
using System.Data.Entity.Migrations;

public partial class _1002 : DbMigration
{
    public override void Up()
    {
    }

    public override void Down()
    {
    }
}
}

Sample of new Model Class:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;

namespace MyProject.Models
{
public partial class MyTable
{

    public string SomeId { get; set; }
    public string SomeText { get; set; }


}
}

Sample of new Mapping class

using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations.Schema;
using System.Data.Entity.ModelConfiguration;

namespace MyProject.Models.Mapping
{
 public class MyTableMap : EntityTypeConfiguration<MyTable>
{

    public MyTableMap()
    {
        // Primary Key
        this.HasKey(t => t.SomeId);

        // Properties
        this.Property(t => t.SomeText)
            .IsRequired()
            .HasMaxLength(30);



        // Table & Column Mappings
        this.ToTable("MyTable", "database");
        this.Property(t => t.SomeId).HasColumnName("SomeId");
        this.Property(t => t.SomeText).HasColumnName("SomeText");


    }




   }
}

Thank you,

3
  • 5
    Is MyTable referenced inside your DbContext class? Commented Mar 28, 2014 at 9:22
  • 1
    NO ! I see the DBContext class is hidden somehwere between the models.... :-) That's probably the issue. Let me try!! Commented Mar 28, 2014 at 9:25
  • 1
    relaunching Visual Studio helped me
    – Kinemota
    Commented Dec 1, 2017 at 18:22

24 Answers 24

156

You need to add your table to your implementation of the DbContext class, e.g.

public class MyDatabaseEntities : DbContext {
    public virtual DbSet<MyTable> MyTable { get; set; }
}
7
  • 40
    in my case i have added the model in dbcontext. but still add and down are empty
    – Beingnin
    Commented May 17, 2018 at 8:55
  • 8
    I had the same problem as @NithinChandran, I solved it by adding -Force to the migration command.
    – Flipbed
    Commented Jun 24, 2019 at 14:26
  • 4
    Don't forget to use virtual keyword Commented Jan 29, 2021 at 17:01
  • I had the issue because MyTable class and MyTable property names were the same. So I changed it to <MyTable> Mytable Commented Feb 15, 2021 at 11:24
  • 2
    In my case I had to revert migration, delete the .cs files in migration folder and then execute add-migration command again. I reverted it with this command: Update-Database -TargetMigration $InitialDatabase -Force
    – amin
    Commented Nov 9, 2023 at 5:45
65

While rolling back an existing EF Core Data Context back to empty, my migrations wouldn't generate until I removed the ApplicationDbContextModelSnapshot that accompanied the migrations.

This class is auto-generated and needs to align with your current migration level.

5
  • 3
    That solve the issue for me. I just delete ModelSnapshot file and it was auto-generate when I re-run Add-Migration command. Thanks Commented Jan 2, 2020 at 9:31
  • 3
    Deleting ModelSnapshot caused the new migration to create the entire database from scratch instead of upgrading the schema from the last applied migration. After doing this I had to delete all my migrations and start over.
    – Neutrino
    Commented Apr 13, 2022 at 10:31
  • This solved this issue for me, thanks Commented Nov 18, 2022 at 8:48
  • The reason behind this is the manual deletion of the migration file, while it must be rolled back using cmd. Commented Jan 11, 2023 at 10:49
  • This solution worked for me when I faced this issue using rider. I never needed the workaround in visual studio. I think it means you are doing the same thing that would be done with the -force flag. Commented Oct 31, 2023 at 11:37
25

I was able to fix this issue by deleting a record of last migration from _MigrationHistory table. This record had been incorrectly created before I added DbSet for new model object to DbContext class. After this deletion new migration was created with correct Up() and Down() methods.

1
  • 2
    I had these tables created previously and therefore needed one more step to make this work - delete new tables in ProjectnameContextModelSnapshot.cs file under Migrations folder stackoverflow.com/questions/45915473/…
    – Chemist
    Commented Mar 9, 2018 at 21:25
13

I had this problem because I forgot to add {get; set;} after my variable names

1
  • 2
    Yeah, That was my case I forget too public DbSet<Value> values { get; set; }
    – VectorX
    Commented Jul 6, 2019 at 3:20
7

You need to add your table to your implementation of the DbContext class, e.g. While rolling back an existing EF Core Data Context back to empty, my migrations wouldn't generate until I REMOVED the ApplicationDbContextModelSnapshot that accompanied the migrations.

0
5

In my case, the datacontext project is a class lib project. It is different from the startup project which is asp.net mvc 5 project. Now by mistake the connection string in the startup project is pointing to a different database.

So ensure that datacontext project and startup project point to the same database. Also use the full command as mentioned in the question like the following. You can include -Force as well.

add-migration "InitialMigration" -verbose -ProjectName "MyEFproject" -Force
4
  • I had to Remove-Migration, before-re-doing initial migration and update migration steps.
    – Michele
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 14:38
  • 4
    Errors out: "Add-Migration : A parameter cannot be found that matches parameter name 'Force'". I'm assuming this applies to older versions and no longer works. Commented Sep 15, 2018 at 17:32
  • @emirhosseini did you find how to force with a newer version ef core for instance?
    – DAG
    Commented Sep 19, 2019 at 8:15
  • I had to do Remove-Migration first to get the initial migration with content again.Which was strange, since I dropped the database and tried to get started again by resetting the data - but the migration data from previous trials were still intact.. Commented Jun 29, 2020 at 20:51
3

Also: Make sure any new properties you've added are public!

In my case I was doing a migration where I added fields to an existing table and was ending up with empty Up and Down methods,

I had something like this:

public bool ExistingField { get; set; }
bool NewField { get;set; }

Can you spot the difference...?


If you make this mistake rerun the migration with the same name (you probably will need to add the -Force parameter to scaffold it full).

PS. Always make sure your project builds fully before attempting to do any kind of EF command. If your project doesn't already build you're asking for trouble.

0
2

if new tables added to Context just remove new table in "Migration/ExampleContextModelSnapshot"

1
  • This was it for me. I had to just copy from development the correct snapshot file and replace mine with it, which had the same effect of just deleting my new tables (plus whatever else has changed in the main branch).
    – M H
    Commented Jul 19, 2023 at 2:57
2

You need to add your MyTable in Dbset and your issue will be resolved:

public DbSet<MyTable> MyTables { get; set; }
1

I was getting empty migrations added when I had mistakenly related two tables using a 1-many relationship rather than a many-many (i.e. i forgot one of the navigation properties). I had a seeding file that was expecting a many-many relationship and was subsequently failing during the migration causing the migration to fail. Unfortunately there was no output that made it obvious that was the problem and it was only by using the Entity Framework Power Tools (v4 but installed in VS2015) did i visually see the incorrect relationship and realize it was probably the cause.

1

I had to Update-Database with the latest migration before the empty one appending this parameter -TargetMigration:"{your-migration-name}".

Probably it will tell you that there will be data loss from the next buggy one we tried. If you can afford it append -Force to it.

Then I tried to add my new Add-Migration and it wasn't empty.

Final thing that you may need to do if above is throwing exception is to go SQL Server Management Studio and delete the last Automatic migration and try to add it again.

1

I had the same issue on EFcore. When renaming Phone -> mobile, the migration came up empty.

My DbContext :

    protected override void OnModelCreating(ModelBuilder modelBuilder)
    {
      modelBuilder.Entity<MyUser>()
            .Property(c => c.Mobile)
            .HasColumnName("phone");
   }

Problem was using .HasColumnName("phone") was overriding the actual property name so EF probably couldn't see any change. Changing string value made it work.

0

I had this exact issue after I wanted to add an extra column to my database. Because my data would not seed unless the tables were empty, I deleted all the tables and the migrations to recreate the tables. When I tried to migrate, the migration had empty up and down methods.

I solved this by deleting the snapshot file as this was creating the issue. So I deleted all the migrations and the snapshot file, added the migration again and ran update database. The tables and migrations were successfully updated with my new column.

A better way to do this though is to run the down method and drop the tables like that if you are working on test data. Obviously this is bad in the real world to drop tables.

0

To me the problem was that Id property that should correspond to table id was named FeedbackId. I changed to "Id" and then Up/Down weren't empty anymore. Dunno if that can help somehow

0

If your project is small, i.e. you do not have too many migrations yet, you can delete all from your Migration folder. After that, add the migrations again.

2
  • 1
    Be warned: Deleting the Migration folder is a rather dangerous advice, don't do that.
    – B--rian
    Commented Oct 7, 2019 at 11:51
  • It's true!! If you do this, do carefully. I think it don't works on big projects, or you have to add again all the migrations.
    – Marci
    Commented Oct 8, 2019 at 17:21
0

I think this also happens when u try to do migration without any changes in the models. eg when you do migration one and succeed, when u try to do migration2 without doing any changes in any of the models, it will create empty UP and Down.

1
  • Is this just something you think, or did you actually test it? Commented Jul 2, 2020 at 11:57
0

From the perspective of a complete Entity Framework (Core) beginner:

  1. Create your class which will become your table
    1. You can have subclasses with many-to-many or one-to-one relationships.
    2. In step 3 you see the context where both properties have a one-to-one relationship.
  2. Ensure you have one DbContext
    1. If you have more than one DbContext you need to specify which context you want to add the migration to with the -Context parameter.
  3. Add your class to your DbContext as shown by @CondingIntrigue
    1. As a reference The Entity Framework Core DbSet
public class AccountContext : DbContext
{
        public DbSet<Account> Accounts { get; set; }
        public DbSet<SecretIdentity> SecretIdentity { get; set; }
}
  1. Enter Add-Migration
0

In my case, I was encountering similar problems with Visual Studio Code.

I have fixed these by doing the following:

  1. Check inside your ContextModelSnapshot : ModelSnapshot
  2. Comment Model Entity Definition…
  3. Delete your migration files related to these entity
  4. Delete the migrations from the dbo.__EFMigrationsHistory table
  5. Compile your solution.
  6. Run the following commands:
dotnet ef migrations add migrationName -p ProjectContainer/ 
dotnet watch run 
0

Temprorary remove

protected override void OnModelCreating(ModelBuilder modelBuilder)
{
}

and then do initial create

Add-Migration InitialCreate
0

If after adding your class in the dbContext and your migration is still empty: do the following:

In your DbContextModelSnapshot class, remove every related code to that class name that you are trying to apply add-migration on. Save the DbContextModelSnapshot.cs and use the Add-Migration "Added_filename"

This work for me.

0

In my case ,I deleted Migration folder completely. As long as I didn't remove the "ApplicationDbContextModelSnapshot" and all previous migrationas it didn't work.

0

For me it was because I hadn't add Configuration files.

onModelCreating:

    protected override void OnModelCreating(ModelBuilder modelBuilder)
        {
            base.OnModelCreating(modelBuilder);
            modelBuilder.ApplyConfigurationsFromAssembly(typeof(AppDbContext).Assembly);
        }

and add configurations in same assembly derived from IEntityTypeConfiguration<T> where T is your model.

0

In my case the field type was

char

as the result up and down methods were empty then I replace that with string with max length annotation fixed the issue.

    [MaxLength(1)]

    public string OrganizationType { get; set; }

Migration:

 public override void Up()
    {
        AddColumn("dbo.SupplierOrganization", "OrganizationType", c => c.String(maxLength: 1));
    }
    
    public override void Down()
    {
        DropColumn("dbo.SupplierOrganization", "OrganizationType");
    }
-1

I missed adding

{get;set}

After adding getter and setter, up and down methods are not empty.

1

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