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Migrations
Migrations are like version control for your database, allowing your team to define and share the application's database schema definition. Migrations use the Schema facade that provides database agnostic support for creating and manipulating tables across all of TinyORM's supported database systems.
c++ orm
database
migrations
tinyorm

import Link from '@docusaurus/Link'

import APITable from '@theme/APITable' import CodeBlock from '@theme/CodeBlock' import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem' import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs'

import { shell, bash, pwsh, zsh, bash_label, pwsh_label, zsh_label } from '@theme/constants' import { applicationFolderPath, } from '@theme/utils/rootFolderUtils'

Database: Migrations

Introduction

__Stability: 2__ - Stable

Migrations are like version control for your database, allowing your team to define and share the application's database schema definition. If you have ever had to tell a teammate to manually add a column to their local database schema after pulling in your changes from source control, you've faced the problem that database migrations solve.

The TinyORM Schema facade provides database agnostic support for creating and manipulating tables across all of TinyORM's supported database systems. Typically, migrations will use this facade to create and modify database tables and columns.

The tom migrations is a small console application that depends on the TinyORM library. All migrations logic is compiled so recompilation is needed after adding a new migration class.

:::warning The schema builder and migrations don't support multi-threading. :::

:::note TinyORM's schema builder supports all supported databases out of the box. :::

The following image shows what the tom console application looks like. ✨ As you can see it offers everything that is needed to generate and manage migrations and seeders and all of this is backed up with the tab completion.

<img src={require('./assets/img/migrations/tom_cli.png').default} alt='TinyORM - Tom console application - Showcase' width='760' title='TinyORM - Tom console application - Showcase' />

Generating Migrations

You may use the make:migration tom command to generate a database migration. The new migration will be placed in your database/migrations directory. Each migration filename contains a timestamp that allows tom to determine the order of the migrations:

tom make:migration create_posts_table

tom will use the name of the migration to attempt to guess the name of the table and whether or not the migration will be creating a new table. If tom is able to determine the table name from the migration name, tom will pre-fill the generated migration file with the specified table. Otherwise, you may simply specify the table in the migration file manually.

If you would like to specify a custom path for the generated migration, you may use the --path option when executing the make:migration command. The given path should be relative to your pwd or you can use the --realpath option and pass the absolute path to the --path option.

Migrations naming rules

If the migration name starts with the create_ string then the stub for table creation will be used and if the migration name contains _(from|to|in)_ then the stub for table update will be used. You can override these rules using the --create and --table options and specify the table name manually.

:::tip You can also pass the full migration filename with the datetime prefix and extension to the make:migration. This command is able to detect almost any combination of the passed value, with or without datetime prefix or extension if it is the filename; or StudlyCase, snake_case, or kebab-case if it is the classname or any combination described above. 👀 :::

Tab completion

Tab completion is available for the pwsh (on Linux too), bash, and zsh shells. For pwsh the tom.exe and TinyOrm0.dll library must be on the system path to work properly. With bash if the tom executable and libTinyOrm.so library is not on the system path then it will provide less accurate completions.

You can enable it using the following commands.

tom integrate pwsh
tom integrate bash
tom integrate zsh
tom integrate zsh --path=/usr/share/zsh/site-functions

Or you can enable it manually. Following actions are the same as the tom integrate command does.

For the pwsh paste the following code to the pwsh profile (works on Linux or Windows).

Register-ArgumentCompleter -Native -CommandName tom,tom_testdata -ScriptBlock {
    Param($wordToComplete, $commandAst, $cursorPosition)
    [Console]::InputEncoding =
    [Console]::OutputEncoding = $OutputEncoding = [System.Text.Utf8Encoding]::new()
    $Local:word = $wordToComplete.Replace('"', '\"')
    $Local:ast = $commandAst.ToString().Replace('"', '\"')
    tom complete --word="$Local:word" --commandline="$Local:ast" --position=$cursorPosition
        | ForEach-Object {
            $completionText, $listText, $toolTip = $_ -split ';', 3
            $listText ??= $completionText
            $toolTip ??= $completionText
            [System.Management.Automation.CompletionResult]::new(
                $completionText, $listText, 'ParameterValue', $toolTip)
        }
}

For bash you can copy or create symlink of the /tools/completions/tom.bash file to the /usr/share/bash-completion/completions folder.

{`sudo ln -s ${applicationFolderPath(bash)}/TinyORM/tools/completions/tom.bash /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/tom`}

And for zsh you can copy or create symlink of the /tools/completions/tom.zsh file to the _tom file to /usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions folder.

{`sudo ln -s ${applicationFolderPath(bash)}/TinyORM/tools/completions/tom.zsh /usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions/_tom`}

It will provide completions for the tom commands, long and short parameters, and also for some positional arguments like namespaces for the list command or commands for the help command.

:::tip The tom integrate zsh command also accepts the --path= option with which you can set the location, where the zsh completion file should be created. :::

:::tip You can also output the completion script using the --stdout option eg. tom integrate bash --stdout. :::

Alternative installation methods

This section describes alternative installation methods for bash and zsh tab completions.

Static installation

Idea is to output the tab completion to the file and then source it.

mkdir -p ~/.local/share/tom
tom integrate bash --stdout > ~/.local/share/tom/tom.bash

# Then source this file in the ~/.bashrc
source $HOME/.local/share/tom/tom.bash
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/tom
tom integrate zsh --stdout > ~/.local/share/tom/tom.zsh

# Then source this file in the ~/.zshrc
source $HOME/.local/share/tom/tom.zsh
compdef _tom tom

Dynamic installation

Idea is to avoid outputting the tab completion to the file, so you eval the tab completion source code right away.

# Add this eval to the ~/.bashrc
eval "$(tom integrate bash --stdout)"
# Add this eval to the ~/.zshrc
eval "$(tom integrate zsh --stdout)"
compdef _tom tom

Migration Structure

A migration class contains two methods: up and down. The up method is used to add new tables, columns, or indexes to your database, while the down method should reverse the operations performed by the up method.

Within both of these methods, you may use the TinyORM schema builder to expressively create and modify tables. To learn about all of the methods available on the Schema builder, check out its documentation. For example, the following migration creates a posts table:

#pragma once

#include <tom/migration.hpp>

namespace Migrations
{

    struct CreatePostsTable : Migration
    {
        /*! Filename of the migration file. */
        T_MIGRATION

        /*! Run the migrations. */
        void up() const override
        {
            Schema::create("posts", [](Blueprint &table)
            {
                table.id();

                table.string(NAME);
                table.timestamps();
            });
        }

        /*! Reverse the migrations. */
        void down() const override
        {
            Schema::dropIfExists("posts");
        }
    };

} // namespace Migrations

Migration classes can be named in two formats, StudlyCase without the datetime prefix and "snake_case" with the datetime prefix. If the StudlyCase name is used then the T_MIGRATION macro must also be used in the migration class.

Naming with the datetime prefix should look like this.

struct _2014_10_12_000000_create_posts_table : Migration
{

    /*! Run the migrations. */
    void up() const override
    {
        //
    }

    /*! Reverse the migrations. */
    void down() const override
    {
        //
    }
};

:::tip The StudlyCase naming is preferred. Also the make:migration command generates migrations in this format. :::

Setting The Migration Connection

If your migration will be interacting with a database connection other than your application's default database connection, you should set the connection data member of your migration:

/*! The name of the database connection to use. */
QString connection = QStringLiteral("tinyorm_example");

/*! Run the migrations. */
void up() const override
{
    //
}

Running Migrations

To run all of your outstanding migrations, execute the migrate Tom command:

tom migrate

If you would like to see which migrations have run thus far, you may use the migrate:status tom command:

tom migrate:status

If you would like to see the SQL statements that will be executed by the migrations without actually running them, you may provide the --pretend flag to the migrate command:

tom migrate --pretend

:::tip Many tom commands offer variety of options, you can explore them using the tom list and tom help commands. In most cases, these commands and options are self-explanatory. :::

:::tip The tom command is able to guess the command name and command namespace, eg. tom mig:st or tom m:rol, ... :::

:::tip You can pass the -vvv command-line argument to any command to see all executed SQL queries. 👌 :::

:::note The migrate Tom command internally calls the migrate:install command which installs the migration repository table. To uninstall this repository table you can call the migrate:uninstall. :::

Forcing Migrations To Run In Production

Some migration operations are destructive, which means they may cause you to lose data. In order to protect you from running these commands against your production database, you will be prompted for confirmation before the commands are executed. To force the commands to run without a prompt, use the --force flag:

tom migrate --force

Rolling Back Migrations

To roll back the latest migration operation, you may use the rollback Tom command. This command rolls back the last "batch" of migrations, which may include multiple migration files:

tom migrate:rollback

You may roll back a limited number of migrations by providing the step option to the rollback command. For example, the following command will roll back the last five migrations:

tom migrate:rollback --step=5

The migrate:reset command will roll back all of your application's migrations:

tom migrate:reset

You may roll back a specific "batch" of migrations by providing the batch option to the rollback command, where the batch option corresponds to a batch value within your application's migrations database table. For example, the following command will roll back all migrations in batch three:

tom migrate:rollback --batch=3

The migrate:reset command will roll back all of your application's migrations:

tom migrate:reset

The migrate:uninstall command will uninstall the migration repository table, it optionally accepts the --reset option to roll back all of your application's migrations:

tom migrate:uninstall --reset

Roll Back & Migrate Using A Single Command

The migrate:refresh command will roll back all of your migrations and then execute the migrate command. This command effectively re-creates your entire database:

tom migrate:refresh

You may roll back and re-migrate a limited number of migrations by providing the step option to the refresh command. For example, the following command will roll back and re-migrate the last five migrations:

tom migrate:refresh --step=5

Drop All Tables & Migrate

The migrate:fresh command will drop all tables from the database and then execute the migrate command:

tom migrate:fresh

:::warning The migrate:fresh command will drop all database tables regardless of their prefix. This command should be used with caution when developing on a database that is shared with other applications. :::

Tables

Creating Tables

To create a new database table, use the create method on the Schema facade. The create method accepts two arguments: the first is the name of the table, while the second is a lambda expression which receives a Orm::SchemaNs::Blueprint object that may be used to define the new table:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

using Orm::Schema;

Schema::create("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.id();
    table.string("name");
    table.string("email");
    table.timestamps();
});

When creating the table, you may use any of the schema builder's column methods to define the table's columns.

Checking For Table / Column Existence

You may check for the existence of a table or column using the hasTable and hasColumn methods:

if (Schema::hasTable("users")) {
    // The "users" table exists...
}

if (Schema::hasColumn("users", "email")) {
    // The "users" table exists and has an "email" column...
}

Database Connection & Table Options

If you want to perform a schema operation on a database connection that is not your application's default connection, use the connection method or on alias:

Schema::connection("postgres").create("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.id();
});

In addition, a few other data members and methods may be used to define other aspects of the table's creation. The engine data member may be used to specify the table's storage engine when using MySQL:

#include <orm/constants.hpp>

using Orm::Constants::InnoDB;

Schema::create("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.engine = InnoDB;

    // ...
});

The charset and collation data members may be used to specify the character set and collation for the created table when using MySQL:

#include <orm/constants.hpp>

using Orm::Constants::UTF8MB4;

Schema::create("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.charset = UTF8MB4;
    table.collation = "utf8mb4_unicode_ci";

    // ...
});

The temporary method may be used to indicate that the table should be "temporary". Temporary tables are only visible to the current connection's database session and are dropped automatically when the connection is closed:

Schema::create("calculations", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.temporary();

    // ...
});

If you would like to add a "comment" to a database table, you may invoke the comment method on the table instance. Table comments are currently only supported by MySQL and PostgreSQL:

Schema::create("calculations", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.comment("Business calculations");

    // ...
});

Updating Tables

The table method on the Schema facade may be used to update existing tables. Like the create method, the table method accepts two arguments: the name of the table and a lambda expression that receives a Blueprint instance you may use to add columns or indexes to the table:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.integer("votes");
});

Renaming / Dropping Tables {#renaming-and-dropping-tables}

To rename an existing database table, use the rename method:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

Schema::rename("from", "to");

To drop an existing table, you may use the drop or dropIfExists methods:

Schema::drop("users");

Schema::dropIfExists("users");

Renaming Tables With Foreign Keys

Before renaming a table, you should verify that any foreign key constraints on the table have an explicit name in your migration files instead of letting TinyORM assign a convention based name. Otherwise, the foreign key constraint index name will refer to the old table name.

:::tip After renaming a table, you can re-create (drop and create again) the foreign key constraints to fix an index name, so it refers to a renamed table. :::

Columns

Creating Columns

The table method on the Schema facade may be used to update existing tables. Like the create method, the table method accepts two arguments: the name of the table and a lambda expression that receives a Blueprint instance you may use to add columns to the table:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.integer("votes");
});

Available Column Types

The schema builder blueprint offers a variety of methods that correspond to the different types of columns you can add to your database tables. Each of the available methods are listed in the table below:

:::info Names of Char, Double, Enum, and Float column methods are in the CamelCase format to avoid collisions with C++ keywords. :::

bigIncrements() {#column-method-bigIncrements}

The bigIncrements method creates an auto-incrementing UNSIGNED BIGINT (primary key) equivalent column:

#include <orm/constants.hpp>

table.bigIncrements(Orm::ID);

bigInteger() {#column-method-bigInteger}

The bigInteger method creates a BIGINT equivalent column:

table.bigInteger("votes");

binary() {#column-method-binary}

The binary method creates a BLOB equivalent column:

table.binary("photo");

boolean() {#column-method-boolean}

The boolean method creates a BOOLEAN equivalent column:

table.boolean("confirmed");

Char() {#column-method-Char}

The Char method creates a CHAR equivalent column with of a given length:

#include <orm/constants.hpp>

table.Char(Orm::NAME, 100);

date() {#column-method-date}

The date method creates a DATE equivalent column:

table.date("created_at");

datetime() {#column-method-datetime}

The datetime method creates a DATETIME equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits):

table.datetime("created_at", precision = 0);

datetimes() {#column-method-datetimes}

The datetimes method creates created_at and updated_at DATETIME equivalent columns with an optional precision (total digits):

table.datetimes(precision = 0);

datetimeTz() {#column-method-datetimeTz}

The datetimeTz method creates a DATETIME (with timezone) equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits):

#include <orm/constants.hpp>

table.datetimeTz(Orm::CREATED_AT, precision = 0);

decimal() {#column-method-decimal}

The decimal method creates a DECIMAL equivalent column with the given precision (total digits) and scale (decimal digits):

table.decimal("amount", precision = 8, scale = 2);

Double() {#column-method-Double}

The Double method creates a DOUBLE equivalent column with the given precision (total digits) and scale (decimal digits):

table.Double("amount", 8, 2);

Enum() {#column-method-Enum}

The Enum method creates a ENUM equivalent column with the given valid values:

table.Enum("difficulty", {"easy", "hard"});

Float() {#column-method-Float}

The Float method creates a FLOAT equivalent column with the given precision (total digits) and scale (decimal digits):

table.Float("amount", 8, 2);

foreignId() {#column-method-foreignId}

The foreignId method creates an UNSIGNED BIGINT equivalent column:

table.foreignId("user_id");

foreignIdFor() {#column-method-foreignIdFor}

The foreignIdFor method adds a {column}_id UNSIGNED BIGINT equivalent column for a given model class:

#include "models/user.hpp"

Models::User user;

table.foreignIdFor(User);

foreignUuid() {#column-method-foreignUuid}

The foreignUuid method creates a UUID equivalent column:

table.foreignUuid("user_id");

geometry() {#column-method-geometry}

The geometry method creates a GEOMETRY equivalent column:

table.geometry("positions");

geometryCollection() {#column-method-geometryCollection}

The geometryCollection method creates a GEOMETRYCOLLECTION equivalent column:

table.geometryCollection("positions");

id() {#column-method-id}

The id method is an alias of the bigIncrements method. By default, the method will create an id column; however, you may pass a column name if you would like to assign a different name to the column:

table.id();

increments() {#column-method-increments}

The increments method creates an auto-incrementing UNSIGNED INTEGER equivalent column as a primary key:

table.increments("id");

integer() {#column-method-integer}

The integer method creates an INTEGER equivalent column:

table.integer("votes");

ipAddress() {#column-method-ipAddress}

The ipAddress method creates a VARCHAR(45) equivalent column:

table.ipAddress("visitor");

json() {#column-method-json}

The json method creates a JSON equivalent column:

table.json("options");

jsonb() {#column-method-jsonb}

The jsonb method creates a JSONB equivalent column:

table.jsonb("options");

lineString() {#column-method-lineString}

The lineString method creates a LINESTRING equivalent column:

table.lineString("positions");

longBinary() {#column-method-longBinary}

The longBinary method creates a LONGBLOB equivalent column:

table.longBinary("photo");

longText() {#column-method-longText}

The longText method creates a LONGTEXT equivalent column:

table.longText("description");

macAddress() {#column-method-macAddress}

The macAddress method creates a column that is intended to hold a MAC address. Some database systems, such as PostgreSQL, have a dedicated column type for this type of data. Other database systems will use a string equivalent VARCHAR(17) column:

table.macAddress("device");

mediumBinary() {#column-method-mediumBinary}

The mediumBinary method creates a MEDIUMBLOB equivalent column:

table.mediumBinary("photo");

mediumIncrements() {#column-method-mediumIncrements}

The mediumIncrements method creates an auto-incrementing UNSIGNED MEDIUMINT equivalent column as a primary key:

table.mediumIncrements("id");

mediumInteger() {#column-method-mediumInteger}

The mediumInteger method creates a MEDIUMINT equivalent column:

table.mediumInteger("votes");

mediumText() {#column-method-mediumText}

The mediumText method creates a MEDIUMTEXT equivalent column:

table.mediumText("description");

multiLineString() {#column-method-multiLineString}

The multiLineString method creates a MULTILINESTRING equivalent column:

table.multiLineString("positions");

multiPoint() {#column-method-multiPoint}

The multiPoint method creates a MULTIPOINT equivalent column:

table.multiPoint("positions");

multiPolygon() {#column-method-multiPolygon}

The multiPolygon method creates a MULTIPOLYGON equivalent column:

table.multiPolygon("positions");

point() {#column-method-point}

The point method creates a POINT equivalent column:

table.point("position");

polygon() {#column-method-polygon}

The polygon method creates a POLYGON equivalent column:

table.polygon("position");

rememberToken() {#column-method-rememberToken}

The rememberToken method creates a nullable, VARCHAR(100) equivalent column that is intended to store the current "remember me" authentication token:

table.rememberToken();

set() {#column-method-set}

The set method creates a SET equivalent column with the given list of valid values:

table.set("flavors", {"strawberry", "vanilla"});

smallIncrements() {#column-method-smallIncrements}

The smallIncrements method creates an auto-incrementing UNSIGNED SMALLINT equivalent column as a primary key:

table.smallIncrements("id");

smallInteger() {#column-method-smallInteger}

The smallInteger method creates a SMALLINT equivalent column:

table.smallInteger("votes");

softDeletes() {#column-method-softDeletes}

The softDeletes method adds a nullable deleted_at TIMESTAMP equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits). This column is intended to store the deleted_at timestamp needed for TinyORM's "soft delete" functionality:

table.softDeletes("deleted_at", precision = 0);

softDeletesDatetime() {#column-method-softDeletesDatetime}

The softDeletesDatetime method adds a nullable deleted_at DATETIME equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits). This column is intended to store the deleted_at timestamp needed for TinyORM's "soft delete" functionality:

table.softDeletesDatetime("deleted_at", precision = 0);

softDeletesTz() {#column-method-softDeletesTz}

The softDeletesTz method adds a nullable deleted_at TIMESTAMP (with timezone) equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits). This column is intended to store the deleted_at timestamp needed for TinyORM's "soft delete" functionality:

table.softDeletesTz("deleted_at", precision = 0);

string() {#column-method-string}

The string method creates a VARCHAR equivalent column of the given length:

#include <orm/constants.hpp>

table.string(Orm::NAME, 100);

text() {#column-method-text}

The text method creates a TEXT equivalent column:

table.text("description");

time() {#column-method-time}

The time method creates a TIME equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits):

table.time("sunrise", precision = 0);

timeTz() {#column-method-timeTz}

The timeTz method creates a TIME (with timezone) equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits):

table.timeTz("sunrise", precision = 0);

timestamp() {#column-method-timestamp}

The timestamp method creates a TIMESTAMP equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits):

table.timestamp("added_at", precision = 0);

timestampTz() {#column-method-timestampTz}

The timestampTz method creates a TIMESTAMP (with timezone) equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits):

table.timestampTz("added_at", precision = 0);

timestampsTz() {#column-method-timestampsTz}

The timestampsTz method creates created_at and updated_at TIMESTAMP (with timezone) equivalent columns with an optional precision (total digits):

table.timestampsTz(precision = 0);

timestamps() {#column-method-timestamps}

The timestamps method creates created_at and updated_at TIMESTAMP equivalent columns with an optional precision (total digits):

table.timestamps(precision = 0);

tinyBinary() {#column-method-tinyBinary}

The tinyBinary method creates a TINYBLOB equivalent column:

table.tinyBinary("photo");

tinyIncrements() {#column-method-tinyIncrements}

The tinyIncrements method creates an auto-incrementing UNSIGNED TINYINT equivalent column as a primary key:

table.tinyIncrements("id");

tinyInteger() {#column-method-tinyInteger}

The tinyInteger method creates a TINYINT equivalent column:

table.tinyInteger("votes");

tinyText() {#column-method-tinyText}

The tinyText method creates a TINYTEXT equivalent column:

table.tinyText("notes");

unsignedBigInteger() {#column-method-unsignedBigInteger}

The unsignedBigInteger method creates an UNSIGNED BIGINT equivalent column:

table.unsignedBigInteger("votes");

unsignedDecimal() {#column-method-unsignedDecimal}

The unsignedDecimal method creates an UNSIGNED DECIMAL equivalent column with an optional precision (total digits) and scale (decimal digits):

table.unsignedDecimal("amount", precision = 8, scale = 2);

unsignedInteger() {#column-method-unsignedInteger}

The unsignedInteger method creates an UNSIGNED INTEGER equivalent column:

table.unsignedInteger("votes");

unsignedMediumInteger() {#column-method-unsignedMediumInteger}

The unsignedMediumInteger method creates an UNSIGNED MEDIUMINT equivalent column:

table.unsignedMediumInteger("votes");

unsignedSmallInteger() {#column-method-unsignedSmallInteger}

The unsignedSmallInteger method creates an UNSIGNED SMALLINT equivalent column:

table.unsignedSmallInteger("votes");

unsignedTinyInteger() {#column-method-unsignedTinyInteger}

The unsignedTinyInteger method creates an UNSIGNED TINYINT equivalent column:

table.unsignedTinyInteger("votes");

uuid() {#column-method-uuid}

The uuid method creates a UUID equivalent column:

table.uuid("id");

year() {#column-method-year}

The year method creates a YEAR equivalent column:

table.year("birth_year");

Column Modifiers

In addition to the column types listed above, there are several column "modifiers" you may use when adding a column to a database table. For example, to make the column "nullable", you may use the nullable method:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.string("email").nullable();
});

The following table contains all of the available column modifiers. This list does not include index modifiers:

Modifier Description
.after("column") Place the column "after" another column (MySQL).
.autoIncrement() Set INTEGER columns as auto-incrementing (primary key).
.charset("utf8mb4") Specify a character set for the column (MySQL).
.collation("utf8mb4_unicode_ci") Specify a collation for the column (MySQL/PostgreSQL/SQL Server).
.comment("my comment") Add a comment to a column (MySQL / PostgreSQL).
Special characters are escaped.
.defaultValue(value) Specify a "default" value for the column.
Special characters are escaped.
.first() Place the column "first" in the table (MySQL).
.from(integer) Set the starting value of an auto-incrementing field, an alias for startingValue() (MySQL / PostgreSQL).
.invisible() Make the column "invisible" to SELECT * queries (MySQL).
.nullable(value = true) Allow NULL values to be inserted into the column.
.startingValue(integer) Set the starting value of an auto-incrementing field (MySQL / PostgreSQL).
.storedAs(expression) Create a stored generated column (MySQL / PostgreSQL).
.unsigned() Set INTEGER columns as UNSIGNED (MySQL).
.useCurrent() Set TIMESTAMP columns to use CURRENT_TIMESTAMP as default value.
.useCurrentOnUpdate() Set TIMESTAMP columns to use CURRENT_TIMESTAMP when a record is updated.
.virtualAs(expression) Create a virtual generated column (MySQL).
.generatedAs(expression) Create an identity column with specified sequence options (PostgreSQL).
.always() Defines the precedence of sequence values over input for an identity column (PostgreSQL).
.isGeometry() Set spatial column type to geometry - the default type is geography (PostgreSQL).

Default Expressions

The defaultValue modifier accepts a value or an Orm::Query::Expression instance. Using an Expression instance will prevent TinyORM from wrapping the value in quotes and allow you to use database-specific functions. One situation where this is particularly useful is when you need to assign default values to JSON columns:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

using Orm::Query::Expression;

Schema::create("flights", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.id();
    table.json("detail").defaultValue(Expression("(JSON_ARRAY('none'))"));
    table.timestamps();
});

:::note Support for default expressions depends on your database driver, database version, and the field type. Please refer to your database's documentation. :::

:::tip You can obtain an Orm::Query::Expression using the DB::raw method if you have access to the DB facade. :::

Column Order

When using the MySQL database, the after method may be used to add columns after an existing column in the schema:

table.after("password", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.string("address_line1");
    table.string("address_line2");
    table.string("city");
});

Modifying Columns

The change method allows you to modify the type and attributes of existing columns. For example, you may wish to increase the size of a string column. To see the change method in action, let's increase the size of the name column from 25 to 50. To accomplish this, we simply define the new state of the column and then call the change method:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.string("name", 50).change();
});

When modifying a column, you must explicitly include all of the modifiers you want to keep on the column definition - any missing attribute will be dropped. For example, to retain the unsigned, default, and comment attributes, you must call each modifier explicitly when changing the column:

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.integer("votes").isUnsigned().defaultValue(1).comment("my comment").change();
});

:::info The change method and modifying columns is not implemented for the SQLite database because it doesn't support modifying columns out of the box. :::

Renaming Columns

To rename a column, you may use the renameColumn method provided by the schema builder blueprint:

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.renameColumn("from", "to");
});

Renaming Columns On Legacy Databases

Renaming columns is not supported if you are running a database installation older than one of the following releases:

  • MySQL <8.0.3
  • MariaDB <10.5.2
  • SQLite <3.25.0

Dropping Columns

To drop a column, you may use the dropColumn method on the schema builder blueprint:

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.dropColumn("votes");
});

You may drop multiple columns from a table by passing a QList<QString> of column names to the dropColumns method, the dropColumns method also provides parameter pack overload:

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.dropColumns({"votes", "avatar", "location"});
    // Parameter pack overload
    table.dropColumns("votes", "avatar", "location");
});

:::warning The SQLite prior to v3.35.0 doesn't support dropping columns using the ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN, dropping columns was added in the SQLite v3.35.0 as is described in the release notes. :::

Available Command Aliases

TinyORM provides several convenient methods related to dropping common types of columns. Each of these methods is described in the table below:

Command Description
table.dropRememberToken(); Drop the remember_token column.
table.dropSoftDeletes(); Drop the deleted_at column.
table.dropSoftDeletesDatetime(); Alias of dropSoftDeletes() method.
table.dropSoftDeletesTz(); Alias of dropSoftDeletes() method.
table.dropTimestamps(); Drop the created_at and updated_at columns.
table.dropTimestampsTz(); Alias of dropTimestamps() method.
table.dropDatetimes(); Alias of dropTimestamps() method.

Indexes

Creating Indexes

The TinyORM schema builder supports several types of indexes. The following example creates a new email column and specifies that its values should be unique. To create the index, we can chain the unique method onto the column definition:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

Schema::table("users", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.string("email").unique();
});

Alternatively, you may create the index after defining the column. To do so, you should call the unique method on the schema builder blueprint. This method accepts the name of the column that should receive a unique index:

table.unique("email");

You may even pass a QList<QString> of columns to an index method to create a compound (or composite) index:

table.index({"account_id", "created_at"});

When creating an index, TinyORM will automatically generate an index name based on the table, column names, and the index type (eg. users_email_unique), but you may pass a second argument to the method to specify the index name yourself:

table.unique("email", "unique_email");

Available Index Types

TinyORM's schema builder blueprint class provides methods for creating each type of index supported by TinyORM. Each index method accepts an optional second argument to specify the name of the index. If omitted, the name will be derived from the names of the table and column(s) used for the index, as well as the index type (eg. users_email_fulltext). Each of the available index methods is described in the table below:

Command Description
table.primary("id"); Adds a primary key.
table.primary({"id", "parent_id"}); Adds composite keys.
table.unique("email"); Adds a unique index.
table.index("state"); Adds an index.
table.fullText("body"); Adds a full text index (MySQL/PostgreSQL).
table.fullText("body").language("english"); Adds a full text index of the specified language (PostgreSQL).
table.spatialIndex("location"); Adds a spatial index (except SQLite).

Index Lengths & MySQL / MariaDB

By default, TinyORM uses the utf8mb4 character set. If you are running a version of MySQL older than the 5.7.7 release or MariaDB older than the 10.2.2 release, you may need to manually configure the default string length generated by migrations in order for MySQL to create indexes for them. You may configure the default string length by calling the Schema::defaultStringLength method:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

Schema::defaultStringLength(191);

:::tip Alternatively, you may enable the innodb_large_prefix option for your database (enabled by default in >=MySQL 5.7.7). Refer to your database's documentation for instructions on how to properly enable this option. :::

Renaming Indexes

To rename an index, you may use the renameIndex method provided by the schema builder blueprint. This method accepts the current index name as its first argument and the desired name as its second argument:

table.renameIndex("from", "to");

Dropping Indexes

To drop an index, you must specify the index's name. By default, TinyORM automatically assigns an index name based on the table name, the name of the indexed column, and the index type (eg. users_email_unique). Here are some examples:

Command Description
table.dropPrimary("users_id_primary"); Drop a primary key from the "users" table.
table.dropUnique("users_email_unique"); Drop a unique index from the "users" table.
table.dropIndex("geo_state_index"); Drop a basic index from the "geo" table.
table.dropFullText("posts_body_fulltext"); Drop a full text index from the "posts" table.
.dropSpatialIndex("geo_location_spatialindex"); Drop a spatial index from the "geo" table (except SQLite).

I may also drop indexes by a column name or column names for composite keys, if you pass a QList<QString> of columns into a method that drops indexes, the conventional index name will be generated based on the table name, columns, and index type:

Schema::table("geo", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.dropIndex({"state"}); // Drops index 'geo_state_index'
});

Foreign Key Constraints

TinyORM also provides support for creating foreign key constraints, which are used to force referential integrity at the database level. For example, let's define a user_id column on the posts table that references the id column on a users table:

#include <orm/schema.hpp>

using Orm::Constants::ID;

Schema::table("posts", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.unsignedBigInteger("user_id");

    table.foreign("user_id").references(ID).on("users");
});

Since this syntax is rather verbose, TinyORM provides additional, terser methods that use conventions to provide a better developer experience. When using the foreignId method to create your column, the example above can be rewritten like so:

Schema::table("posts", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.foreignId("user_id").constrained();
});

The foreignId method creates an UNSIGNED BIGINT equivalent column, while the constrained method will use conventions to determine the table and column name being referenced. If your table name does not match TinyORM's conventions, you may specify the table name by passing it as an argument to the constrained method:

Schema::table("posts", [](Blueprint &table)
{
    table.foreignId("user_id").constrained("users");
});

You may also specify the desired action for the "on delete" and "on update" properties of the constraint:

#include <orm/constants.hpp>

using Orm::SchemaNs::Constants::Cascade;

table.foreignId("user_id")
     .constrained()
     .onUpdate("cascade")
     .onDelete(Cascade);

An alternative, expressive syntax is also provided for these actions:

Method Description
table.cascadeOnUpdate(); Updates should cascade.
table.restrictOnUpdate(); Updates should be restricted.
table.cascadeOnDelete(); Deletes should cascade.
table.restrictOnDelete(); Deletes should be restricted.
table.nullOnDelete(); Deletes should set the foreign key value to null.

Any additional column modifiers must be called before the constrained method:

table.foreignId("user_id")
     .nullable()
     .constrained();

Dropping Foreign Keys

To drop a foreign key, you may use the dropForeign method, passing the name of the foreign key constraint to be deleted as an argument. Foreign key constraints use the same naming convention as indexes. In other words, the foreign key constraint name is based on the name of the table and the columns in the constraint, followed by a "_foreign" suffix:

table.dropForeign("posts_user_id_foreign");

Alternatively, you may pass a QList<QString> containing the column name that holds the foreign key to the dropForeign method. The QList will be converted to a foreign key constraint name using TinyORM's constraint naming conventions:

table.dropForeign({"user_id"});

Toggling Foreign Key Constraints

You may enable or disable foreign key constraints within your migrations by using the following methods:

Schema::enableForeignKeyConstraints();

Schema::disableForeignKeyConstraints();

Schema::withoutForeignKeyConstraints([]
{
    // Constraints disabled within this lambda expression...
});

:::warning The SQLite disables foreign key constraints by default. When using SQLite, make sure to enable foreign key support in your database configuration before attempting to create them in your migrations. In addition, SQLite only supports creating foreign keys when creating tables and not when tables are altered. :::