Opened 10 years ago

Last modified 8 years ago

#23833 closed New feature

drop all tables — at Version 13

Reported by: Mattia Procopio Owned by: Mattia Procopio
Component: Core (Management commands) Version: dev
Severity: Normal Keywords:
Cc: Triage Stage: Accepted
Has patch: no Needs documentation: no
Needs tests: no Patch needs improvement: no
Easy pickings: no UI/UX: no

Description (last modified by Mattia Procopio)

Sometimes it happeens that I need to delete all tables within my database, dropping tables manually is a boring procedure. Would it be good to add such a feature as command?

Change History (13)

comment:1 by Yamila, 10 years ago

Resolution: fixed
Status: newclosed

Talked to the author of the ticket. Add clarifying comment:

The main concern is that in the same database you may have tables belonging and non-belonging the django project. In that scenario:

  • dropdb : would cause losing all tables even those I would like to keep
  • entering the db-shell and deleting tables one by one is boring and it's easy to make a mistake

comment:2 by Yamila, 10 years ago

Resolution: fixed
Status: closednew

comment:3 by Yamila, 10 years ago

Triage Stage: UnreviewedAccepted

comment:4 by Mattia Procopio, 10 years ago

Owner: changed from nobody to Mattia Procopio
Status: newassigned

comment:5 by Tim Graham, 10 years ago

For apps without migrations, you could something like: ./manage.py sqlclear | ./manage.py dbshell I think. Apps with migrations only support sqlmigrate and sqlflush though. I am not sure if there is a good reason not to support sqlclear so this is still possible.

comment:6 by Andrew Godwin, 10 years ago

With migrations you can just reverse the migrations with ./manage.py migrate appname zero, which will clear everything as required.

comment:7 by Burhan Khalid, 10 years ago

Faced with a similar problem, I came up with this snippet that will clear only those apps that are not django.contrib. (of course, this is before migrations came around). Might give some ideas:

echo 'from django.conf import settings; print settings.INSTALLED_APPS; quit();' | \
python manage.py shell --plain 2>&1 | \
tail -n1 | sed -r "s|^.*\((.*)\).*$|\1|; s|[',]| |g; s|django\.contrib\.||g" | \
xargs python manage.py sqlclear | \
python manage.py dbshell && python manage.py syncdb

comment:8 by Shai Berger, 10 years ago

@MattBlack85: You said in the ticket that "this is easy using SQLite", but I don't see how that fits with the clarification in comment:1. Do you care to elaborate?

comment:9 by Mattia Procopio, 10 years ago

sure, I didn't explain well, I'm goin to update the description. I was meaning "with SQLite usually the db can be easily dropped with a rm and recreated" but yeah, that's not dropping table

comment:10 by Mattia Procopio, 10 years ago

Description: modified (diff)

comment:11 by Shai Berger, 10 years ago

I guess I didn't explain my question clearly enough:

"drop database" on other backends is just as easy as "rm" with SQLite, but that does not seem satisfactory to you. According to comment:1, your intention is to drop the Django-managed tables only, but apparently that does not apply for SQLite because there, dropping everything is allowed.

So -- is the comparison to SQLite at all relevant? The feature request is valid without it, and less clear with it.

comment:12 by Mattia Procopio, 10 years ago

I'd like to manage drop table for SQLite too. I'll drop the reference to SQLite at all to make this more clear.

comment:13 by Mattia Procopio, 10 years ago

Description: modified (diff)
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