Opened 9 years ago
Last modified 8 years ago
#25276 closed Cleanup/optimization
It would be very nice if django AlterField raised an error when ordered to alter that doesn't exist — at Initial Version
Reported by: | Jacek Bzdak | Owned by: | nobody |
---|---|---|---|
Component: | Migrations | Version: | dev |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
Cc: | desecho@… | Triage Stage: | Accepted |
Has patch: | no | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description
If I have following model in app foo
:
class Foo(models.Model): bar = modeld.CharField(max_length=500)
And I write (by hand) following migration:
class Migration(migrations.Migration): dependencies = [ ('foo', '0001_initial'), ] operations = [ migrations.AlterField( model_name='foo', name='baz', #Notice there is a typo in field name field=modeld.CharField(max_length=100) ), ]
Currently this migration is a does nothing, however I feel that more appropriate action would be to notify user that he is trying to alter nonexistent field.
Current implementation is a NOOP because (see: https://github.com/django/django/blob/master/django/db/migrations/operations/fields.py#L178) it is implemented in following way:
state.models[app_label, self.model_name_lower].fields = [ (n, field if n == self.name else f) for n, f in state.models[app_label, self.model_name_lower].fields ] state.reload_model(app_label, self.model_name_lower)
If someone says this is a sensible feature request I may modify migration code to raise if there is an error.
I have actually lost some hours of my life due to this behaviour when I was writing a migration that moved models between applications.