Very simple question here - if migrations can get slow and cumbersome as an app gets more complex and if we have the much cleaner rake db:schema:load
to call instead, why do migrations exist at all?
If the answer to the above is that migrations are used for version control (a stepwise record of changes to the database), then as an app gets more complex and rake db:schema:load
is used more instead, do they continue to maintain their primary function?
From the answers to this question: rake db:schema:load
will delete data on a production server so be careful when using it.
Migrations provide forward and backward step changes to the database. In a production environment, incremental changes must be made to the database during deploys: migrations provide this functionality with a rollback failsafe. If you run rake db:schema:load
on a production server, you'll end up deleting all your production data. This is a dangerous habit to get into.
That being said, I believe it is a decent practice to occasionally "collapse" migrations. This entails deleting old migrations, replacing them with a single migration (very similar to your schema.rb
file) and updating the schema_migrations
table to reflect this change. Be very careful when doing this! You can easily delete your production data if you aren't careful.
As a side note, I strongly believe that you should never put data creation in the migration files. The seed.rb
file can be used for this, or custom rake or deploy tasks. Putting this into migration files mixes your database schema specification with your data specification and can lead to conflicts when running migration files.