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migrations-generator
Generate Laravel Migrations from an existing database, including indexes and foreign keys!
Upgrading to Laravel 5.4
Please note that the Laravel 4 Generator edits have been moved to https://github.com/xethron/Laravel-4-Generators.git
to update compatibility.
Laravel 5 installation
The recommended way to install this is through composer:
composer require --dev "xethron/migrations-generator"
In Laravel 5.5 the service providers will automatically get registered.
In older versions of the framework edit config/app.php
and add this to providers section:
Way\Generators\GeneratorsServiceProvider::class,
Xethron\MigrationsGenerator\MigrationsGeneratorServiceProvider::class,
If you want this lib only for dev, you can add the following code to your app/Providers/AppServiceProvider.php
file, within the register()
method:
public function register()
{
if ($this->app->environment() !== 'production') {
$this->app->register(\Way\Generators\GeneratorsServiceProvider::class);
$this->app->register(\Xethron\MigrationsGenerator\MigrationsGeneratorServiceProvider::class);
}
// ...
}
Notes:
- Thanks to @jamisonvalenta, you can now generate Migrations in Laravel 5!
-
feature/laravel-five-stable
was forked fromway/generators
3.0.3
and was made Laravel5.0
ready. Jeffrey Way has discontinued support for Laravel 5, so the otherartisan generate:
commands may not have been made5.0
compatible. Investigate theartisan make:
commands for substitutes, contribute to Laravel to extend generation support, or fix it and submit a PR tojamisonvalenta/feature/laravel-five-stable
.
Laravel 4 installation
Run the following composer command:
composer require --dev "xethron/migrations-generator:~1.3.0"
Next, add the following service providers:
'Way\Generators\GeneratorsServiceProvider',
'Xethron\MigrationsGenerator\MigrationsGeneratorServiceProvider',
And you're set. To double check if its working, run php artisan
, and look for the command migrate:generate
Usage
To generate migrations from a database, you need to have your database setup in Laravel's Config.
Run php artisan migrate:generate
to create migrations for all the tables, or you can specify the tables you wish to generate using php artisan migrate:generate table1,table2,table3,table4,table5
. You can also ignore tables with --ignore="table3,table4,table5"
Laravel Migrations Generator will first generate all the tables, columns and indexes, and afterwards setup all the foreign key constraints. So make sure you include all the tables listed in the foreign keys so that they are present when the foreign keys are created.
You can also specify the connection name if you are not using your default connection with --connection="connection_name"
Run php artisan help migrate:generate
for a list of options.
Check out Chung Tran's blog post for a quick step by step introduction: Generate Migrations from an existing database in Laravel 4
iSeed
Inverse seed generator (iSeed) is a Laravel package that provides a method to generate a new seed file based on data from the existing database table.
Installation
1) Add orangehill/iseed
to your composer file.
Laravel 5
For Laravel 5 installation edit your project's composer.json
file to require orangehill/iseed
.
"require": {
"orangehill/iseed": "dev-master"
}
Laravel 5 versions less than 5.3.8
For Laravel 5 versions that are less than 5.3.8 edit your project's composer.json
file to require 2.2
version:
"require": {
"orangehill/iseed": "2.2"
}
Laravel 4
If you wish to install it on Laravel 4 you should require 1.1
version:
"require": {
"orangehill/iseed": "1.1"
}
2) Update Composer from the CLI:
composer update
Laravel 5 versions less than 5.5
3) Add the service provider by opening a app/config/app.php
file, and adding a new item to the providers
array.
Orangehill\Iseed\IseedServiceProvider::class
Artisan command options
[table_name]
Mandatory parameter which defines which table/s will be used for seed creation.
Use CSV notation for multiple tables. Seed file will be generated for each table.
Examples:
php artisan iseed my_table
php artisan iseed my_table,another_table
force
Optional parameter which is used to automatically overwrite any existing seeds for desired tables
Example:
The following command will overwrite UsersTableSeeder.php
if it already exists in laravel's seeds directory.
php artisan iseed users --force
dumpauto
Optional boolean parameter that controls the execution of composer dump-autoload
command. Defaults to true.
Example that will stop composer dump-autoload
from execution:
php artisan iseed users --dumpauto=false
clean
Optional parameter which will clean app/database/seeds/DatabaseSeeder.php
before creating new seed class.
Example:
php artisan iseed users --clean
database
Optional parameter which specifies the DB connection name.
Example:
php artisan iseed users --database=mysql2
max
Optional parameter which defines the maximum number of entries seeded from a specified table. In case of multiple tables, limit will be applied to all of them.
Example:
artisan iseed users --max=10
exclude
Optional parameter which accepts comma separated list of columns that you'd like to exclude from tables that are being exported. In case of multiple tables, exclusion will be applied to all of them.
Example:
artisan iseed users --exclude=id
artisan iseed users --exclude=id,created_at,updated_at
prerun
Optional parameter which assigns a laravel event name to be fired before seeding takes place. If an event listener returns false
, seed will fail automatically.
You can assign multiple preruns for multiple table names by passing an array of comma separated DB names and respectively passing a comma separated array of prerun event names.
Example:
The following command will make a seed file which will fire an event named 'someEvent' before seeding takes place.
artisan iseed users --prerun=someEvent
The following example will assign someUserEvent
to users
table seed, and someGroupEvent
to groups
table seed, to be executed before seeding.
artisan iseed users,groups --prerun=someUserEvent,someGroupEvent
The following example will only assign a someGroupEvent
to groups
table seed, to be executed before seeding. Value for the users table prerun was omitted here, so users
table seed will have no prerun event assigned.
artisan iseed users,groups --prerun=,someGroupEvent
postrun
Optional parameter which assigns a laravel event name to be fired after seeding takes place. If an event listener returns false
, seed will be executed, but an exception will be thrown that the postrun failed.
You can assign multiple postruns for multiple table names by passing an array of comma separated DB names and respectively passing a comma separated array of postrun event names.
Example:
The following command will make a seed file which will fire an event named 'someEvent' after seeding was completed.
artisan iseed users --postrun=someEvent
The following example will assign someUserEvent
to users
table seed, and someGroupEvent
to groups
table seed, to be executed after seeding.
artisan iseed users,groups --postrun=someUserEvent,someGroupEvent
The following example will only assign a someGroupEvent
to groups
table seed, to be executed after seeding. Value for the users table postrun was omitted here, so users
table seed will have no postrun event assigned.
artisan iseed users,groups --postrun=,someGroupEvent
noindex
By using --noindex the seed can be generated as a non-indexed array.
The use case for this feature is when you need to merge two seed files.
Example:
artisan iseed users --noindex
Usage
To generate a seed file for your users table simply call: \Iseed::generateSeed('users', 'connectionName', 'numOfRows');
. connectionName
and numOfRows
are not required arguments.
This will create a file inside a /database/seeds
(/app/database/seeds
for Laravel 4), with the contents similar to following example:
<?php
// File: /database/seeds/UsersTableSeeder.php
class UsersTableSeeder extends Seeder {
/**
* Auto generated seed file
*
* @return void
*/
public function run()
{
\DB::table('users')->truncate();
\DB::table('users')->insert(array (
0 =>
array (
'id' => '1',
'email' => 'admin@admin.com',
'password' => '$2y$10$tUGCkQf/0NY3w1l9sobGsudt6UngnoVXx/lUoh9ElcSOD0ERRkK9C',
'permissions' => NULL,
'activated' => '1',
'activation_code' => NULL,
'activated_at' => NULL,
'last_login' => NULL,
'persist_code' => NULL,
'reset_password_code' => NULL,
'first_name' => NULL,
'last_name' => NULL,
'created_at' => '2013-06-11 07:47:40',
'updated_at' => '2013-06-11 07:47:40',
),
1 =>
array (
'id' => '2',
'email' => 'user@user.com',
'password' => '$2y$10$ImNvsMzK/BOgNSYgpjs/3OjMKMHeA9BH/hjl43EiuBuLkZGPMuZ2W',
'permissions' => NULL,
'activated' => '1',
'activation_code' => NULL,
'activated_at' => NULL,
'last_login' => '2013-06-11 07:54:57',
'persist_code' => '$2y$10$C0la8WuyqC6AU2TpUwj0I.E3Mrva8A3tuVFWxXN5u7jswRKzsYYHK',
'reset_password_code' => NULL,
'first_name' => NULL,
'last_name' => NULL,
'created_at' => '2013-06-11 07:47:40',
'updated_at' => '2013-06-11 07:54:57',
),
));
}
}
This command will also update /database/seeds/DatabaseSeeder.php
(/app/database/seeds/DatabaseSeeder.php
for Laravel 4) to include a call to this newly generated seed class.
If you wish you can define custom iSeed template in which all the calls will be placed. You can do this by using #iseed_start
and #iseed_end
templates anywhere within /database/seeds/DatabaseSeeder.php
(/app/database/seeds/DatabaseSeeder.php
for Laravel 4), for example:
<?php
// File: /database/seeds/DatabaseSeeder.php
class DatabaseSeeder extends Seeder {
/**
* Run the database seeds.
*
* @return void
*/
public function run()
{
Eloquent::unguard();
if(App::environment() == "local")
{
throw new \Exception('Only run this from production');
}
#iseed_start
// here all the calls for newly generated seeds will be stored.
#iseed_end
}
}
Alternatively you can run Iseed from the command line using Artisan, e.g. php artisan iseed users
. For generation of multiple seed files comma separated list of table names should be send as an argument for command, e.g. php artisan iseed users,posts,groups
.
In case you try to generate seed file that already exists command will ask you a question whether you want to overwrite it or not. If you wish to overwrite it by default use --force
Artisan Command Option, e.g. php artisan iseed users --force
.
If you wish to clear iSeed template you can use Artisan Command Option --clean
, e.g. php artisan iseed users --clean
. This will clean template from app/database/seeds/DatabaseSeeder.php
before creating new seed class.
You can specify db connection that will be used for creation of new seed files by using Artisan Command Option --database=connection_name
, e.g. php artisan iseed users --database=mysql2
.
To limit number of rows that will be exported from table use Artisan Command Option --max=number_of_rows
, e.g. php artisan iseed users --max=10
. If you use this option while exporting multiple tables specified limit will be applied to all of them.
To (re)seed the database go to the Terminal and run Laravel's db:seed command
(php artisan db:seed
).
Please note that some users encountered a problem with large DB table exports (error when seeding from table with many records). The issue was solved by splitting input data into smaller chunks of elements per insert statement. As you may need to change the chunk size value in some extreme cases where DB table has a large number of columns, the chunk size is configurable in iSeed's config.php
file:
'chunk_size' => 500 // Maximum number of rows per insert statement
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