Customizing migrations

This guide does not apply for MongoDB.
Instead of migrate dev, db push is used for MongoDB.

In some scenarios, you need to edit a migration file before you apply it. For example, to change the direction of a 1-1 relation (moving the foreign key from one side to another) without data loss, you need to move data as part of the migration - this SQL is not part of the default migration, and must be written by hand.

This guide explains how to edit migration files and gives some examples of use cases where you may want to do this.

How to edit a migration file

To edit a migration file before applying it, the general procedure is the following:

  1. Make a schema change that requires custom SQL (for example, to preserve existing data)

  2. Create a draft migration using:

    $npx prisma migrate dev --create-only
  3. Modify the generated SQL file.

  4. Apply the modified SQL by running:

    $npx prisma migrate dev

Example: Rename a field

By default, renaming a field in the schema results in a migration that will:

  • CREATE a new column (for example, fullname)
  • DROP the existing column (for example, name) and the data in that column

To actually rename a field and avoid data loss when you run the migration in production, you need to modify the generated migration SQL before applying it to the database. Consider the following schema fragment - the biograpy field is spelled wrong.

model Profile {
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
biograpy String
userId Int @unique
user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])
}

To rename the biograpy field to biography:

  1. Rename the field in the schema:

    model Profile {
    id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
    biograpy String
    biography String
    userId Int @unique
    user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])
    }
  2. Run the following command to create a draft migration that you can edit before applying to the database:

    $npx prisma migrate dev --name rename-migration --create-only
  3. Edit the draft migration as shown, changing DROP / DELETE to a single RENAME COLUMN:

    Before
    After
    ./prisma/migrations/20210308092620_rename_migration/migration.sql
    1ALTER TABLE "Profile" DROP COLUMN "biograpy",
    2ADD COLUMN "biography" TEXT NOT NULL;
  4. Save and apply the migration:

    $npx prisma migrate dev

You can use the same technique to rename a model - edit the generated SQL to rename the table rather than drop and re-create it.

Example: Use the expand and contract pattern to evolve the schema without downtime

Making schema changes to existing fields, e.g., renaming a field can lead to downtime. It happens in the time frame between applying a migration that modifies an existing field, and deploying a new version of the application code which uses the modified field.

You can prevent downtime by breaking down the steps required to alter a field into a series of discrete steps designed to introduce the change gradually. This pattern is known as the expand and contract pattern.

The pattern involves two components: your application code accessing the database and the database schema you intend to alter.

With the expand and contract pattern, renaming the field bio to biography would look as follows with Prisma:

  1. Add the new biography field to your Prisma schema and create a migration

    model Profile {
    id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
    bio String
    biography String
    userId Int @unique
    user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])
    }
  2. Expand: update the application code and write to both the bio and biography fields, but continue reading from the bio field, and deploy the code

  3. Create an empty migration and copy existing data from the bio to the biography field

    $npx prisma migrate dev --name copy_biography --create-only
    prisma/migrations/20210420000000_copy_biography/migration.sql
    1UPDATE "Profile" SET biography = bio;
  4. Verify the integrity of the biography field in the database

  5. Update application code to read from the new biography field

  6. Update application code to stop writing to the bio field

  7. Contract: remove the bio from the Prisma schema, and create a migration to remove the bio field

    model Profile {
    id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
    bio String
    biography String
    userId Int @unique
    user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])
    }
    $npx prisma migrate dev --name remove_bio

By using this approach, you avoid potential downtime that altering existing fields that are used in the application code are prone to, and reduce the amount of coordination required between applying the migration and deploying the updated application code.

Note that this pattern is applicable in any situation involving a change to a column that has data and is in use by the application code. Examples include combining two fields into one, or transforming a 1:n relation to a m:n relation.

To learn more, check out the Data Guide article on

Example: Change the direction of a 1-1 relation

To change the direction of a 1-1 relation:

  1. Make the change in the schema:

    model User {
    id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
    name String
    posts Post[]
    profile Profile? @relation(fields: [profileId], references: [id])
    profileId Int @unique
    }
    model Profile {
    id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
    biography String
    user User
    }
  2. Run the following command to create a draft migration that you can edit before applying to the database:

    $npx prisma migrate dev --name rename-migration --create-only
    Hide CLI results
    ⚠️ There will be data loss when applying the migration:
    • The migration will add a unique constraint covering the columns `[profileId]` on the table `User`. If there are existing duplicate values, the migration will fail.
  3. Edit the draft migration as shown:

    Before
    After
    -- DropForeignKey
    ALTER TABLE "Profile" DROP CONSTRAINT "Profile_userId_fkey";
    -- DropIndex
    DROP INDEX "Profile_userId_unique";
    -- AlterTable
    ALTER TABLE "Profile" DROP COLUMN "userId";
    -- AlterTable
    ALTER TABLE "User" ADD COLUMN "profileId" INTEGER NOT NULL;
    -- CreateIndex
    CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "User_profileId_unique" ON "User"("profileId");
    -- AddForeignKey
    ALTER TABLE "User" ADD FOREIGN KEY ("profileId") REFERENCES "Profile"("id") ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE;
  4. Save and apply the migration:

    $npx prisma migrate dev