3

All tables and fields created with Rails migrations have latin1_swedish_ci collate. Because my project use russian language, this collation is improper.

Is it possible to use migrations with utf8_general_ci?

P.S. My database.yml:

development:
  adapter: mysql2
  encoding: utf8
  collation: utf8_general_ci
  reconnect: false
  database: my_development
  pool: 5
  username: username
  password: 'heavy'
  host: localhost

2 Answers 2

13

Here's an example of specifying the collation in your migration:

create_table :users, :options => 'COLLATE=utf8_general_ci' do |t|
  t.string :email
  t.timestamps
end
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  • It helps, but in schema.rb I see: "ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8", charset is correct now, but no collation.
    – sekrett
    Mar 22, 2020 at 9:33
1

Rails doesn't set the collation on the connection (only on the database in a create_database call). The best idea here is to set it yourself in your system's MySQL config file, eg. /etc/my.cnf

I actually recommend that you tell MySQL to ignore the client handshake altogether, it's better that the server tells the client which character set and collation to use. The relevant parts of my MySQL conf look like this:

[server]
character_set_server=utf8
collation_server=utf8_unicode_ci
skip_character_set_client_handshake

If you go this path, just remember to do the same on the server you deploy to. If you don't know where your config file is for MySQL then run this from the command prompt: my_print_defaults | grep -A1 "Default options" That will give you the config files MySQL will look for (in order).

3
  • "Doesn't work" doesn't give us anything to go on. You add that to your my.cnf, restarted mysqld so it picked up the new conf, then ran a create_table migration and you're telling me that it wasn't created with that collation? If so, maybe you need to drop and recreate the DB as well (I didn't think you'd need to do that).
    – smathy
    Apr 21, 2011 at 19:56
  • There is no difference between running migrations before inserting this lines and after. Tables are in latin1_swedish_ci dispite of all...
    – Kir
    Apr 23, 2011 at 9:19
  • This would require an administrator-level access to database server and it is not possible every time. I think the another answer would be better from developer aspect. Nov 12, 2014 at 15:53

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