7

what i've done so far is -> i have created a bundle and entity class in it and created a database table named "news" from that entity class using following command

php app/console doctrine:schema:update --force

everything went well.

now i created a new bundle and an other entity class in it from which i want to create an other table in database named "user" but gives an error that "The table with name 'symfony.news' already exists' ".

class user { 
   private $id; 
   private $userEmail; 

   public function getId() { 
       return $this->id; 
   } 

   public function setUserEmail($userEmail) { 
       $this->userEmail = $userEmail; 
       return $this; 
   } 
}
0

4 Answers 4

13

Your entity doesn't contain annotations, and doctrine have no idea what to do with this entity. But if you add to you entity something like:

<?php

namespace AppBundle\Entity;

use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;

/**
 * @ORM\Entity
 * @ORM\Table(name="user")
 */
class User
{
    /**
     * @ORM\Column(type="integer")
     * @ORM\Id
     * @ORM\GeneratedValue(strategy="AUTO")
     */
    private $id;

    /**
     * @ORM\Column(type="string", length=60, unique=true)
     */
    private $email;

    public function getId()
    { 
        return $this->id; 
    } 

    public function setUserEmail($userEmail)
    { 
        $this->userEmail = $userEmail; 
        return $this; 
    }
}

OR

if you add file: User.orm.xml like:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<doctrine-mapping xmlns="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/orm/doctrine-mapping" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/orm/doctrine-mapping http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/orm/doctrine-mapping.xsd">
  <entity name="AppBundle\Entity\User" table="user">
    <unique-constraints>
      <unique-constraint name="UNIQ_797E6294E7927C74" columns="email"/>
    </unique-constraints>
    <id name="id" type="integer" column="id">
      <generator strategy="IDENTITY"/>
    </id>
    <field name="email" type="string" column="email" length="60" nullable="false"/>
  </entity>
</doctrine-mapping>

to your Resources/config/doctrine/ directory, you'll be able to run command:

php app/console doctrine:schema:update --force

and as result you'll receive:

Updating database schema...
Database schema updated successfully! "1" queries were executed

Truly believe that it will solve your problem...

8

For symfony 4 and 4++:

php bin/console doctrine:schema:update --force

For symfony 3:

php app/console doctrine:schema:update --force
3
  • 1
    php bin/console doctrine:schema:update --force Above Line also works with symfony 5.2 Dec 23, 2020 at 18:33
  • yes Symfony 4 and 4++ : .php bin/console doctrine:schema:update --force Dec 24, 2020 at 5:57
  • 1
    If you only need the SQL, not actually migrate through PHP - php bin/console doctrine:schema:update --dump-sql "Instead of trying to apply generated SQLs into EntityManager Storage Connection, output them" docs: bin/console help doctrine:schema:create (works in doctrine/orm 2.13)
    – jave.web
    Mar 29, 2023 at 6:26
0

If neither "php app/console doctrine:schema:update --force" nor "php bin/console doctrine:schema:update --force" (you probably work on windows..) is working out, you may try:

"php artisan doctrine:schema:update --force".

Only thing worked out for me.

-1

Why don't you use doctrine command?

php app/console doctrine:generate:entity 
3
  • i did just like u said but it only create entity not table in database.. this command app/console doctrine:schema:update --force creates table in db but the problem is that how can i tell this command to read all entity files in all bundles and skip if the table already exists otherwise create that table.. this command works perfectly when run first time Apr 22, 2015 at 14:31
  • doctrine:schema:update will update all tables. If the table exists, then it will check for any column changes, but it won't recreate the table.
    – Stev
    Apr 22, 2015 at 18:02
  • 1
    In addition, you cannot leave old tables unmodified if you have changed something in the metadata (column definitions, relations, etc.). So doctrine:schema:update it's safe as long as you don't do modifications on older entities, but only adding new ones.
    – Stev
    Apr 22, 2015 at 18:11

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