Welcome to django-migration-zero - the holistic implementation of "migration zero" pattern for Django covering local changes and CI/CD pipeline adjustments.
This package implements the "migration zero" pattern to clean up your local migrations and provides convenient management commands to recreate your migration files and updating your migration history on your environments (like test or production systems).
PyPI | GitHub | Full documentation
Creator & Maintainer: Ambient Digital
- Remove all existing local migration files and recreate them as initial migrations
- Configuration singleton in Django admin to prepare your clean-up deployment
- Management command for your pipeline to update Django's migration history table to reflect the changed migrations
Working with any proper ORM will result in database changes which are reflected in migration files to update your different environment's database structure. These files are versioned in your repository and if you follow any of the most popular deployment approaches, they won't be needed when they are deployed on production. This means, they clutter your repo, might lead to merge conflicts in the future and will slow down your test setup.
Django's default way of handling this is called "squashing". This approach is covered broadly in the official documentation. The main drawback here is, that you have to take care of circular dependencies between models. Depending on your project's size, this can take a fair amount of time.
The main benefit of squashing migrations is, that the history stays intact, therefore it can be used for example in package which can be installed by anybody and you don't have control over their database.
If you are working on a "regular" application, you have full control over your data(bases) and once everything has been applied on the "last" system, typically production, the migrations are obsolete. To avoid spending much time on fixing squashed migrations you won't need, you can use the "migration zero" pattern. In a nutshell, this means:
- Delete all your local migration files
- Recreate initial migration files containing your current model state
- Fix the migration history on every of your environments
-
Install the package via pip:
pip install django-migration-zero
or via pipenv:
pipenv install django-migration-zero
-
Add module to
INSTALLED_APPS
within the main djangosettings.py
:INSTALLED_APPS = ( ... 'django_migration_zero', )
-
Apply migrations by running:
python ./manage.py migrate
-
Add this block to your loggers in your main Django
settings.py
to show logs in your console.
LOGGING = {
"handlers": {
"console": {
"class": "logging.StreamHandler",
},
},
"loggers": {
"django_migration_zero": {
"handlers": ["console"],
"level": "INFO",
"propagate": True,
},
},
}
- Fetch the latest changes in GitHub mirror and push them
- Trigger new build at ReadTheDocs.io (follow instructions in admin panel at RTD) if the GitHub webhook is not yet set up.
This package uses uv for dependency management and building.
-
Update documentation about new/changed functionality
-
Update the
CHANGES.md
-
Increment version in main
__init__.py
-
Create pull request / merge to "master"
-
This project uses uv to publish to PyPI. This will create distribution files in the
dist/
directory.uv build
To publish to the production PyPI:
uv publish
To publish to TestPyPI first (recommended for testing):
uv publish --publish-url https://test.pypi.org/legacy/
You can then test the installation from TestPyPI:
uv pip install --index-url https://test.pypi.org/simple/ ambient-package-update
Please note that this package supports the ambient-package-update.
So you don't have to worry about the maintenance of this package. This updater is rendering all important
configuration and setup files. It works similar to well-known updaters like pyupgrade
or django-upgrade
.
To run an update, refer to the documentation page of the "ambient-package-update".