85

Is there a way to run rake commands for db:migrate and db:rollback on the console?

It sucks to wait for the rails environment to load!

9 Answers 9

125

In the console:

ActiveRecord::Migration.remove_column :table_name, :column_name

To update your schema.rb file after running migrations from the console, you must run rails db:migrate

5
  • @WestonGanger how?
    – nruth
    Feb 10, 2018 at 13:46
  • 1
    @nruth not sure that weston is correct here. I find that any time I run these commands, then I might have to do reload! to get the effect in the console, and having finished with the console, as long I exit the console, I do rails db:migrate, and it migrates them, and updates db/schema.rb . Really good to look at db/schema.rb . it shows all your tables. rails db:migrate updates schema.rb for you, at least I think that's what i've found.
    – barlop
    Apr 18, 2019 at 15:12
  • @WestonGanger care to comment?(as your comment is under question)
    – barlop
    Apr 18, 2019 at 15:43
  • 1
    @barlop @nruth. The migration occurs as soon as this command is run and changes the database, the schema however will not be updated. Running rails db:migrate can automatically update the schema. However this is an extra step that is not in the answer. Apr 19, 2019 at 16:25
  • @WestonGanger yeah but since you can do rails db:migrate, that's not manually updating the schema.rb file. That's automatically updating it.
    – barlop
    Apr 19, 2019 at 19:00
89

Rails <= 4

This will allow you to migrate without reloading the whole rails environment:

ActiveRecord::Migrator.migrate "db/migrate"

and rollback:

# 3 is the number of migrations to rollback, optional, defaults to 1
ActiveRecord::Migrator.rollback "db/migrate", 3

Rails >= 5 (thanks to @gssbzn, his answer is below)

Migrate :

ActiveRecord::MigrationContext.new("db/migrate").migrate

And rollback :

# 3 is the number of migrations to rollback, optional, defaults to 1
ActiveRecord::MigrationContext.new("db/migrate").rollback 3
9
  • 2
    Note that if you're using Mongoid, it's the same: Mongoid::Migrator.migrate "db/migrate" Sep 5, 2012 at 18:00
  • This is perfect to add to your test_helper.rb in Rails apps Oct 7, 2016 at 19:28
  • Received error, bash: ActiveRecord::Migrator.migrate: command not found... using Rails 2.3.18, ruby 1.9.3p551, Now executed after executing the command inside the rails console.
    – vidur punj
    Feb 1, 2018 at 11:26
  • 1
    This is correct for Rails 4, but doesn't work for later versions Jan 30, 2020 at 17:35
  • 1
    For newer Rails versions, you also need to pass schema_migration: ActiveRecord::MigrationContext.new(ActiveRecord::Migrator.migrations_paths, ActiveRecord::Base.connection.schema_migration)
    – pamit
    Mar 17, 2021 at 5:35
32

Another way that I find neater to just run some migration command from console is this:

ActiveRecord::Schema.define do
  create_table :foo do |t|
    t.string  :bar
    t.timestamps
  end
end

This has the advantage that the contents inside the block is compatible with just copy and pasting random contents from a real migration file / schema.rb.

1
  • I've found this really helpful in diagnosing some db-specific issues with migrations. Thank you!
    – AJFaraday
    Sep 3, 2019 at 10:15
14

For Rails 5 and Rails 6:

ActiveRecord::Base.connection.migration_context.migrate

For Rails 3 and Rails 4:

ActiveRecord::Migrator.migrate 'db/migrate'
1
  • This is the best answer for Rails 5 & 6, because it uses existing methods to get the migration context (instantiating it directly may not be reliable).
    – Kelvin
    Jan 5, 2022 at 17:19
13

For rails 5.2 the accepted answer has been removed and replaced with

ActiveRecord::MigrationContext.new("db/migrate").migrate

Please be aware as this may also change for future versions of rails as they work to add multiple database connections

7

I needed to pretend a migration was run to unblock a deploy, this can be done with:

class Mig < ActiveRecord::Base; self.table_name = 'schema_migrations';end
Mig.create! version: '20180611172637'
5

You can use the %x[command]

%x[rake db:migrate]
2
  • 3
    That defeats the purpose to not have to wait for rails to load.
    – rafamvc
    Oct 4, 2011 at 21:23
  • @rafamvc yes agreed! That's why I think Benoit's answer is better :)
    – dexter
    Oct 5, 2011 at 4:15
1

To run single migration

ActiveRecord::Migration.add_column(:table_name, :column_name, :data_type)

To run all migrations

ActiveRecord::Migrator.migrate('db/migrate')

To rollback n migrations

ActiveRecord::Migrator.rollback('db/migrate', n)

0

I created a method in my .irbrc file that runs migrations then reloads the console:

def migrate
  if defined? Rails::Console # turn off info logging for Rails 3
    old_log_level = ActiveRecord::Base.logger.try(:sev_threshold)
    ActiveRecord::Base.logger.sev_threshold = Logger::WARN
  end
  reload! && migations_ran = true if ActiveRecord::Migrator.migrate(Rails.root.join("db/migrate")).any?
  ActiveRecord::Base.logger.sev_threshold = old_log_level if defined? old_log_level
  migations_ran ||= nil # useful exit status
end

See the entire file here: https://gist.github.com/imme5150/6548368

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