74

Take a look at this:

$ pypy ./manage.py syncdb
/usr/lib64/pypy-2.4.0/site-packages/django/core/management/commands/syncdb.py:24: RemovedInDjango19Warning: The syncdb command will be removed in Django 1.9
  warnings.warn("The syncdb command will be removed in Django 1.9", RemovedInDjango19Warning)

(cut)

I ran a quick google search, but could not find the answer - what should I be using instead of syncdb?

1
  • 2
    Actually, now that I that I look again, it's right there: syncdb has been deprecated and replaced by migrate
    – d33tah
    Commented Apr 16, 2015 at 18:53

4 Answers 4

93

syncdb is deprecated because of the migration system, introduced with django 1.7.

Now you can track your changes using makemigrations. This transforms your model changes into python code to make them deployable to another databases. When you have further modifications you need applied to the database, you can use data migrations.

After you created the migrations you have to apply them: migrate.

So instead of using syncdb you should use makemigrations and then migrate.

Workflow on development after you changed something in your models:

./manage.py makemigrations
./manage.py migrate

And on your production system:

./manage.py migrate

Bonus: you do not need to run migrate for each change. If you have multiple changes not applied yet django will run them in the correct order for you.

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  • 2
    It is the best new feature ;) Commented Apr 16, 2015 at 23:44
  • 9
    NOTE: makemigrations may require the module name as a parameter.
    – d33tah
    Commented Sep 6, 2015 at 17:52
  • 1
    This is terrible advice. If you're installing an app with a dozen migrations to a blank database, you should never run migrate because that will be a huge waste of time. @Don Mums answer is the correct answer.
    – Cerin
    Commented Apr 20, 2017 at 2:29
64

You should definitely use migration system. Which lets you track changes in your models.py, and create migrations for the database. The migration system uses the commands makemigrations to create migrations and migrate to migrate the database.

If for whatever reason you need to create a database the same way syncdb did it there is command flag that causes migrate to work the same way. You should only do this if you REALLY need it and you know what you are doing. For example to create an empty database on for a continuous integration system of your choice.

python manage.py migrate auth
# performs migrations for auth and contenttypes contrib apps

python manage.py migrate --run-syncdb
# creates the rest of the database

Tested on Django 1.9.1.

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    +1 for the actual solution, this should be the answer. While you should use migrations for production releases when actively developing from scratch it is easier to just wipe out the DB and start over than need to run 500 migrations. I routinely run dropdb mydb && createdb mydb && python manage.py migrate --run-syncdb whenever I make a change.
    – dotcomly
    Commented Feb 27, 2016 at 8:19
  • --run-syncdb only seems to work on apps that don't have migrations. I used the following workaround: find -name "migrations" -exec mv {}/__init__.py {}/__init__ \; && python manage.py migrate && python manage.py migrate --run-syncdb && find -name "migrations" -exec mv {}/__init__ {}/__init__.py \; && python manage.py migrate --fake
    – libcthorne
    Commented Jun 28, 2018 at 17:08
9

You should use the makemigrations and migrate commands that were introduced in django 1.7

https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.7/topics/migrations/

0
3

syncdb has some problem with db migration. so, after django 1.7 makemigrations and migrate have been introduced. Now in django 1.9 syncdb has been deprecated. try
1. python manage.py makemigrations which detects changes in db and creates one .py file as inside migrations folder 2. python manage.py migrate will apply the migrations to the database

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