Runtime Objects¶
The “runtime” of Alembic involves the EnvironmentContext
and MigrationContext
objects. These are the objects that are
in play once the env.py
script is loaded up by a command and
a migration operation proceeds.
The Environment Context¶
The EnvironmentContext
class provides most of the
API used within an env.py
script. Within env.py
,
the instantiated EnvironmentContext
is made available
via a special proxy module called alembic.context
. That is,
you can import alembic.context
like a regular Python module,
and each name you call upon it is ultimately routed towards the
current EnvironmentContext
in use.
In particular, the key method used within env.py
is EnvironmentContext.configure()
,
which establishes all the details about how the database will be accessed.
- class alembic.runtime.environment.EnvironmentContext(config: Config, script: ScriptDirectory, **kw: Any)¶
A configurational facade made available in an
env.py
script.The
EnvironmentContext
acts as a facade to the more nuts-and-bolts objects ofMigrationContext
as well as certain aspects ofConfig
, within the context of theenv.py
script that is invoked by most Alembic commands.EnvironmentContext
is normally instantiated when a command inalembic.command
is run. It then makes itself available in thealembic.context
module for the scope of the command. From within anenv.py
script, the currentEnvironmentContext
is available by importing this module.EnvironmentContext
also supports programmatic usage. At this level, it acts as a Python context manager, that is, is intended to be used using thewith:
statement. A typical use ofEnvironmentContext
:from alembic.config import Config from alembic.script import ScriptDirectory config = Config() config.set_main_option("script_location", "myapp:migrations") script = ScriptDirectory.from_config(config) def my_function(rev, context): '''do something with revision "rev", which will be the current database revision, and "context", which is the MigrationContext that the env.py will create''' with EnvironmentContext( config, script, fn=my_function, as_sql=False, starting_rev="base", destination_rev="head", tag="sometag", ): script.run_env()
The above script will invoke the
env.py
script within the migration environment. If and whenenv.py
callsMigrationContext.run_migrations()
, themy_function()
function above will be called by theMigrationContext
, given the context itself as well as the current revision in the database.Note
For most API usages other than full blown invocation of migration scripts, the
MigrationContext
andScriptDirectory
objects can be created and used directly. TheEnvironmentContext
object is only needed when you need to actually invoke theenv.py
module present in the migration environment.Construct a new
EnvironmentContext
.- Parameters:
config – a
Config
instance.script – a
ScriptDirectory
instance.**kw – keyword options that will be ultimately passed along to the
MigrationContext
whenEnvironmentContext.configure()
is called.
- begin_transaction() _ProxyTransaction | ContextManager[None] ¶
Return a context manager that will enclose an operation within a “transaction”, as defined by the environment’s offline and transactional DDL settings.
e.g.:
with context.begin_transaction(): context.run_migrations()
begin_transaction()
is intended to “do the right thing” regardless of calling context:If
is_transactional_ddl()
isFalse
, returns a “do nothing” context manager which otherwise produces no transactional state or directives.If
is_offline_mode()
isTrue
, returns a context manager that will invoke theDefaultImpl.emit_begin()
andDefaultImpl.emit_commit()
methods, which will produce the string directivesBEGIN
andCOMMIT
on the output stream, as rendered by the target backend (e.g. SQL Server would emitBEGIN TRANSACTION
).Otherwise, calls
sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.begin()
on the current online connection, which returns asqlalchemy.engine.Transaction
object. This object demarcates a real transaction and is itself a context manager, which will roll back if an exception is raised.
Note that a custom
env.py
script which has more specific transactional needs can of course manipulate theConnection
directly to produce transactional state in “online” mode.
- config: Config = None¶
An instance of
Config
representing the configuration file contents as well as other variables set programmatically within it.
- configure(connection: Connection | None = None, url: str | URL | None = None, dialect_name: str | None = None, dialect_opts: Dict[str, Any] | None = None, transactional_ddl: bool | None = None, transaction_per_migration: bool = False, output_buffer: TextIO | None = None, starting_rev: str | None = None, tag: str | None = None, template_args: Dict[str, Any] | None = None, render_as_batch: bool = False, target_metadata: MetaData | None = None, include_name: IncludeNameFn | None = None, include_object: IncludeObjectFn | None = None, include_schemas: bool = False, process_revision_directives: ProcessRevisionDirectiveFn | None = None, compare_type: bool | CompareType = True, compare_server_default: bool | CompareServerDefault = False, render_item: RenderItemFn | None = None, literal_binds: bool = False, upgrade_token: str = 'upgrades', downgrade_token: str = 'downgrades', alembic_module_prefix: str = 'op.', sqlalchemy_module_prefix: str = 'sa.', user_module_prefix: str | None = None, on_version_apply: OnVersionApplyFn | None = None, **kw: Any) None ¶
Configure a
MigrationContext
within thisEnvironmentContext
which will provide database connectivity and other configuration to a series of migration scripts.Many methods on
EnvironmentContext
require that this method has been called in order to function, as they ultimately need to have database access or at least access to the dialect in use. Those which do are documented as such.The important thing needed by
configure()
is a means to determine what kind of database dialect is in use. An actual connection to that database is needed only if theMigrationContext
is to be used in “online” mode.If the
is_offline_mode()
function returnsTrue
, then no connection is needed here. Otherwise, theconnection
parameter should be present as an instance ofsqlalchemy.engine.Connection
.This function is typically called from the
env.py
script within a migration environment. It can be called multiple times for an invocation. The most recentConnection
for which it was called is the one that will be operated upon by the next call torun_migrations()
.General parameters:
- Parameters:
connection – a
Connection
to use for SQL execution in “online” mode. When present, is also used to determine the type of dialect in use.url – a string database url, or a
sqlalchemy.engine.url.URL
object. The type of dialect to be used will be derived from this ifconnection
is not passed.dialect_name – string name of a dialect, such as “postgresql”, “mssql”, etc. The type of dialect to be used will be derived from this if
connection
andurl
are not passed.dialect_opts – dictionary of options to be passed to dialect constructor.
transactional_ddl – Force the usage of “transactional” DDL on or off; this otherwise defaults to whether or not the dialect in use supports it.
transaction_per_migration – if True, nest each migration script in a transaction rather than the full series of migrations to run.
output_buffer – a file-like object that will be used for textual output when the
--sql
option is used to generate SQL scripts. Defaults tosys.stdout
if not passed here and also not present on theConfig
object. The value here overrides that of theConfig
object.output_encoding – when using
--sql
to generate SQL scripts, apply this encoding to the string output.literal_binds –
when using
--sql
to generate SQL scripts, pass through theliteral_binds
flag to the compiler so that any literal values that would ordinarily be bound parameters are converted to plain strings.Warning
Dialects can typically only handle simple datatypes like strings and numbers for auto-literal generation. Datatypes like dates, intervals, and others may still require manual formatting, typically using
Operations.inline_literal()
.Note
the
literal_binds
flag is ignored on SQLAlchemy versions prior to 0.8 where this feature is not supported.See also
Operations.inline_literal()
starting_rev – Override the “starting revision” argument when using
--sql
mode.tag – a string tag for usage by custom
env.py
scripts. Set via the--tag
option, can be overridden here.template_args – dictionary of template arguments which will be added to the template argument environment when running the “revision” command. Note that the script environment is only run within the “revision” command if the –autogenerate option is used, or if the option “revision_environment=true” is present in the alembic.ini file.
version_table – The name of the Alembic version table. The default is
'alembic_version'
.version_table_schema – Optional schema to place version table within.
version_table_pk – boolean, whether the Alembic version table should use a primary key constraint for the “value” column; this only takes effect when the table is first created. Defaults to True; setting to False should not be necessary and is here for backwards compatibility reasons.
on_version_apply –
a callable or collection of callables to be run for each migration step. The callables will be run in the order they are given, once for each migration step, after the respective operation has been applied but before its transaction is finalized. Each callable accepts no positional arguments and the following keyword arguments:
ctx
: theMigrationContext
running the migration,step
: aMigrationInfo
representing the step currently being applied,heads
: a collection of version strings representing the current heads,run_args
: the**kwargs
passed torun_migrations()
.
Parameters specific to the autogenerate feature, when
alembic revision
is run with the--autogenerate
feature:- Parameters:
target_metadata – a
sqlalchemy.schema.MetaData
object, or a sequence ofMetaData
objects, that will be consulted during autogeneration. The tables present in eachMetaData
will be compared against what is locally available on the targetConnection
to produce candidate upgrade/downgrade operations.compare_type –
Indicates type comparison behavior during an autogenerate operation. Defaults to
True
turning on type comparison, which has good accuracy on most backends. See Comparing Types for an example as well as information on other type comparison options. Set toFalse
which disables type comparison. A callable can also be passed to provide custom type comparison, see Comparing Types for additional details.Changed in version 1.12.0: The default value of
EnvironmentContext.configure.compare_type
has been changed toTrue
.compare_server_default –
Indicates server default comparison behavior during an autogenerate operation. Defaults to
False
which disables server default comparison. Set toTrue
to turn on server default comparison, which has varied accuracy depending on backend.To customize server default comparison behavior, a callable may be specified which can filter server default comparisons during an autogenerate operation. defaults during an autogenerate operation. The format of this callable is:
def my_compare_server_default(context, inspected_column, metadata_column, inspected_default, metadata_default, rendered_metadata_default): # return True if the defaults are different, # False if not, or None to allow the default implementation # to compare these defaults return None context.configure( # ... compare_server_default = my_compare_server_default )
inspected_column
is a dictionary structure as returned bysqlalchemy.engine.reflection.Inspector.get_columns()
, whereasmetadata_column
is asqlalchemy.schema.Column
from the local model environment.A return value of
None
indicates to allow default server default comparison to proceed. Note that some backends such as Postgresql actually execute the two defaults on the database side to compare for equivalence.include_name –
A callable function which is given the chance to return
True
orFalse
for any database reflected object based on its name, including database schema names when theEnvironmentContext.configure.include_schemas
flag is set toTrue
.The function accepts the following positional arguments:
name
: the name of the object, such as schema name or table name. Will beNone
when indicating the default schema name of the database connection.type
: a string describing the type of object; currently"schema"
,"table"
,"column"
,"index"
,"unique_constraint"
, or"foreign_key_constraint"
parent_names
: a dictionary of “parent” object names, that are relative to the name being given. Keys in this dictionary may include:"schema_name"
,"table_name"
or"schema_qualified_table_name"
.
E.g.:
def include_name(name, type_, parent_names): if type_ == "schema": return name in ["schema_one", "schema_two"] else: return True context.configure( # ... include_schemas = True, include_name = include_name )
include_object –
A callable function which is given the chance to return
True
orFalse
for any object, indicating if the given object should be considered in the autogenerate sweep.The function accepts the following positional arguments:
object
: aSchemaItem
object such as aTable
,Column
,Index
UniqueConstraint
, orForeignKeyConstraint
objectname
: the name of the object. This is typically available viaobject.name
.type
: a string describing the type of object; currently"table"
,"column"
,"index"
,"unique_constraint"
, or"foreign_key_constraint"
reflected
:True
if the given object was produced based on table reflection,False
if it’s from a localMetaData
object.compare_to
: the object being compared against, if available, elseNone
.
E.g.:
def include_object(object, name, type_, reflected, compare_to): if (type_ == "column" and not reflected and object.info.get("skip_autogenerate", False)): return False else: return True context.configure( # ... include_object = include_object )
For the use case of omitting specific schemas from a target database when
EnvironmentContext.configure.include_schemas
is set toTrue
, theschema
attribute can be checked for eachTable
object passed to the hook, however it is much more efficient to filter on schemas before reflection of objects takes place using theEnvironmentContext.configure.include_name
hook.render_as_batch –
if True, commands which alter elements within a table will be placed under a
with batch_alter_table():
directive, so that batch migrations will take place.include_schemas –
If True, autogenerate will scan across all schemas located by the SQLAlchemy
get_schema_names()
method, and include all differences in tables found across all those schemas. When using this option, you may want to also use theEnvironmentContext.configure.include_name
parameter to specify a callable which can filter the tables/schemas that get included.render_item –
Callable that can be used to override how any schema item, i.e. column, constraint, type, etc., is rendered for autogenerate. The callable receives a string describing the type of object, the object, and the autogen context. If it returns False, the default rendering method will be used. If it returns None, the item will not be rendered in the context of a Table construct, that is, can be used to skip columns or constraints within op.create_table():
def my_render_column(type_, col, autogen_context): if type_ == "column" and isinstance(col, MySpecialCol): return repr(col) else: return False context.configure( # ... render_item = my_render_column )
Available values for the type string include:
"column"
,"primary_key"
,"foreign_key"
,"unique"
,"check"
,"type"
,"server_default"
.upgrade_token – When autogenerate completes, the text of the candidate upgrade operations will be present in this template variable when
script.py.mako
is rendered. Defaults toupgrades
.downgrade_token – When autogenerate completes, the text of the candidate downgrade operations will be present in this template variable when
script.py.mako
is rendered. Defaults todowngrades
.alembic_module_prefix – When autogenerate refers to Alembic
alembic.operations
constructs, this prefix will be used (i.e.op.create_table
) Defaults to “op.
”. Can beNone
to indicate no prefix.sqlalchemy_module_prefix – When autogenerate refers to SQLAlchemy
Column
or type classes, this prefix will be used (i.e.sa.Column("somename", sa.Integer)
) Defaults to “sa.
”. Can beNone
to indicate no prefix. Note that when dialect-specific types are rendered, autogenerate will render them using the dialect module name, i.e.mssql.BIT()
,postgresql.UUID()
.user_module_prefix –
When autogenerate refers to a SQLAlchemy type (e.g.
TypeEngine
) where the module name is not under thesqlalchemy
namespace, this prefix will be used within autogenerate. If left at its default ofNone
, the__module__
attribute of the type is used to render the import module. It’s a good practice to set this and to have all custom types be available from a fixed module space, in order to future-proof migration files against reorganizations in modules.See also
process_revision_directives –
a callable function that will be passed a structure representing the end result of an autogenerate or plain “revision” operation, which can be manipulated to affect how the
alembic revision
command ultimately outputs new revision scripts. The structure of the callable is:def process_revision_directives(context, revision, directives): pass
The
directives
parameter is a Python list containing a singleMigrationScript
directive, which represents the revision file to be generated. This list as well as its contents may be freely modified to produce any set of commands. The section Customizing Revision Generation shows an example of doing this. Thecontext
parameter is theMigrationContext
in use, andrevision
is a tuple of revision identifiers representing the current revision of the database.The callable is invoked at all times when the
--autogenerate
option is passed toalembic revision
. If--autogenerate
is not passed, the callable is invoked only if therevision_environment
variable is set to True in the Alembic configuration, in which case the givendirectives
collection will contain emptyUpgradeOps
andDowngradeOps
collections for.upgrade_ops
and.downgrade_ops
. The--autogenerate
option itself can be inferred by inspectingcontext.config.cmd_opts.autogenerate
.The callable function may optionally be an instance of a
Rewriter
object. This is a helper object that assists in the production of autogenerate-stream rewriter functions.
Parameters specific to individual backends:
- Parameters:
mssql_batch_separator – The “batch separator” which will be placed between each statement when generating offline SQL Server migrations. Defaults to
GO
. Note this is in addition to the customary semicolon;
at the end of each statement; SQL Server considers the “batch separator” to denote the end of an individual statement execution, and cannot group certain dependent operations in one step.oracle_batch_separator – The “batch separator” which will be placed between each statement when generating offline Oracle migrations. Defaults to
/
. Oracle doesn’t add a semicolon between statements like most other backends.
- execute(sql: ClauseElement | str, execution_options: dict | None = None) None ¶
Execute the given SQL using the current change context.
The behavior of
execute()
is the same as that ofOperations.execute()
. Please see that function’s documentation for full detail including caveats and limitations.This function requires that a
MigrationContext
has first been made available viaconfigure()
.
- get_bind() Connection ¶
Return the current ‘bind’.
In “online” mode, this is the
sqlalchemy.engine.Connection
currently being used to emit SQL to the database.This function requires that a
MigrationContext
has first been made available viaconfigure()
.
- get_context() MigrationContext ¶
Return the current
MigrationContext
object.If
EnvironmentContext.configure()
has not been called yet, raises an exception.
- get_head_revision() str | Tuple[str, ...] | None ¶
Return the hex identifier of the ‘head’ script revision.
If the script directory has multiple heads, this method raises a
CommandError
;EnvironmentContext.get_head_revisions()
should be preferred.This function does not require that the
MigrationContext
has been configured.
- get_head_revisions() str | Tuple[str, ...] | None ¶
Return the hex identifier of the ‘heads’ script revision(s).
This returns a tuple containing the version number of all heads in the script directory.
This function does not require that the
MigrationContext
has been configured.
- get_revision_argument() str | Tuple[str, ...] | None ¶
Get the ‘destination’ revision argument.
This is typically the argument passed to the
upgrade
ordowngrade
command.If it was specified as
head
, the actual version number is returned; if specified asbase
,None
is returned.This function does not require that the
MigrationContext
has been configured.
- get_starting_revision_argument() str | Tuple[str, ...] | None ¶
Return the ‘starting revision’ argument, if the revision was passed using
start:end
.This is only meaningful in “offline” mode. Returns
None
if no value is available or was configured.This function does not require that the
MigrationContext
has been configured.
- get_tag_argument() str | None ¶
Return the value passed for the
--tag
argument, if any.The
--tag
argument is not used directly by Alembic, but is available for customenv.py
configurations that wish to use it; particularly for offline generation scripts that wish to generate tagged filenames.This function does not require that the
MigrationContext
has been configured.See also
EnvironmentContext.get_x_argument()
- a newer and more open ended system of extendingenv.py
scripts via the command line.
- get_x_argument(as_dictionary: Literal[False]) List[str] ¶
- get_x_argument(as_dictionary: Literal[True]) Dict[str, str]
- get_x_argument(as_dictionary: bool = False) List[str] | Dict[str, str]
Return the value(s) passed for the
-x
argument, if any.The
-x
argument is an open ended flag that allows any user-defined value or values to be passed on the command line, then available here for consumption by a customenv.py
script.The return value is a list, returned directly from the
argparse
structure. Ifas_dictionary=True
is passed, thex
arguments are parsed usingkey=value
format into a dictionary that is then returned.For example, to support passing a database URL on the command line, the standard
env.py
script can be modified like this:cmd_line_url = context.get_x_argument( as_dictionary=True).get('dbname') if cmd_line_url: engine = create_engine(cmd_line_url) else: engine = engine_from_config( config.get_section(config.config_ini_section), prefix='sqlalchemy.', poolclass=pool.NullPool)
This then takes effect by running the
alembic
script as:alembic -x dbname=postgresql://user:pass@host/dbname upgrade head
This function does not require that the
MigrationContext
has been configured.
- is_offline_mode() bool ¶
Return True if the current migrations environment is running in “offline mode”.
This is
True
orFalse
depending on the--sql
flag passed.This function does not require that the
MigrationContext
has been configured.
- is_transactional_ddl()¶
Return True if the context is configured to expect a transactional DDL capable backend.
This defaults to the type of database in use, and can be overridden by the
transactional_ddl
argument toconfigure()
This function requires that a
MigrationContext
has first been made available viaconfigure()
.
- run_migrations(**kw: Any) None ¶
Run migrations as determined by the current command line configuration as well as versioning information present (or not) in the current database connection (if one is present).
The function accepts optional
**kw
arguments. If these are passed, they are sent directly to theupgrade()
anddowngrade()
functions within each target revision file. By modifying thescript.py.mako
file so that theupgrade()
anddowngrade()
functions accept arguments, parameters can be passed here so that contextual information, usually information to identify a particular database in use, can be passed from a customenv.py
script to the migration functions.This function requires that a
MigrationContext
has first been made available viaconfigure()
.
- script: ScriptDirectory = None¶
An instance of
ScriptDirectory
which provides programmatic access to version files within theversions/
directory.
The Migration Context¶
The MigrationContext
handles the actual work to be performed
against a database backend as migration operations proceed. It is generally
not exposed to the end-user, except when the
on_version_apply
callback hook is used.
- class alembic.runtime.migration.MigrationContext(dialect: Dialect, connection: Connection | None, opts: Dict[str, Any], environment_context: EnvironmentContext | None = None)¶
Represent the database state made available to a migration script.
MigrationContext
is the front end to an actual database connection, or alternatively a string output stream given a particular database dialect, from an Alembic perspective.When inside the
env.py
script, theMigrationContext
is available via theEnvironmentContext.get_context()
method, which is available atalembic.context
:# from within env.py script from alembic import context migration_context = context.get_context()
For usage outside of an
env.py
script, such as for utility routines that want to check the current version in the database, theMigrationContext.configure()
method to create newMigrationContext
objects. For example, to get at the current revision in the database usingMigrationContext.get_current_revision()
:# in any application, outside of an env.py script from alembic.migration import MigrationContext from sqlalchemy import create_engine engine = create_engine("postgresql://mydatabase") conn = engine.connect() context = MigrationContext.configure(conn) current_rev = context.get_current_revision()
The above context can also be used to produce Alembic migration operations with an
Operations
instance:# in any application, outside of the normal Alembic environment from alembic.operations import Operations op = Operations(context) op.alter_column("mytable", "somecolumn", nullable=True)
- autocommit_block() Iterator[None] ¶
Enter an “autocommit” block, for databases that support AUTOCOMMIT isolation levels.
This special directive is intended to support the occasional database DDL or system operation that specifically has to be run outside of any kind of transaction block. The PostgreSQL database platform is the most common target for this style of operation, as many of its DDL operations must be run outside of transaction blocks, even though the database overall supports transactional DDL.
The method is used as a context manager within a migration script, by calling on
Operations.get_context()
to retrieve theMigrationContext
, then invokingMigrationContext.autocommit_block()
using thewith:
statement:def upgrade(): with op.get_context().autocommit_block(): op.execute("ALTER TYPE mood ADD VALUE 'soso'")
Above, a PostgreSQL “ALTER TYPE..ADD VALUE” directive is emitted, which must be run outside of a transaction block at the database level. The
MigrationContext.autocommit_block()
method makes use of the SQLAlchemyAUTOCOMMIT
isolation level setting, which against the psycogp2 DBAPI corresponds to theconnection.autocommit
setting, to ensure that the database driver is not inside of a DBAPI level transaction block.Warning
As is necessary, the database transaction preceding the block is unconditionally committed. This means that the run of migrations preceding the operation will be committed, before the overall migration operation is complete.
It is recommended that when an application includes migrations with “autocommit” blocks, that
EnvironmentContext.transaction_per_migration
be used so that the calling environment is tuned to expect short per-file migrations whether or not one of them has an autocommit block.
- begin_transaction(_per_migration: bool = False) _ProxyTransaction | ContextManager[None] ¶
Begin a logical transaction for migration operations.
This method is used within an
env.py
script to demarcate where the outer “transaction” for a series of migrations begins. Example:def run_migrations_online(): connectable = create_engine(...) with connectable.connect() as connection: context.configure( connection=connection, target_metadata=target_metadata ) with context.begin_transaction(): context.run_migrations()
Above,
MigrationContext.begin_transaction()
is used to demarcate where the outer logical transaction occurs around theMigrationContext.run_migrations()
operation.A “Logical” transaction means that the operation may or may not correspond to a real database transaction. If the target database supports transactional DDL (or
EnvironmentContext.configure.transactional_ddl
is true), theEnvironmentContext.configure.transaction_per_migration
flag is not set, and the migration is against a real database connection (as opposed to using “offline”--sql
mode), a real transaction will be started. If--sql
mode is in effect, the operation would instead correspond to a string such as “BEGIN” being emitted to the string output.The returned object is a Python context manager that should only be used in the context of a
with:
statement as indicated above. The object has no other guaranteed API features present.See also
- property bind: Connection | None¶
Return the current “bind”.
In online mode, this is an instance of
sqlalchemy.engine.Connection
, and is suitable for ad-hoc execution of any kind of usage described in SQLAlchemy Core documentation as well as for usage with thesqlalchemy.schema.Table.create()
andsqlalchemy.schema.MetaData.create_all()
methods ofTable
,MetaData
.Note that when “standard output” mode is enabled, this bind will be a “mock” connection handler that cannot return results and is only appropriate for a very limited subset of commands.
- classmethod configure(connection: Connection | None = None, url: str | URL | None = None, dialect_name: str | None = None, dialect: Dialect | None = None, environment_context: EnvironmentContext | None = None, dialect_opts: Dict[str, str] | None = None, opts: Any | None = None) MigrationContext ¶
Create a new
MigrationContext
.This is a factory method usually called by
EnvironmentContext.configure()
.- Parameters:
connection – a
Connection
to use for SQL execution in “online” mode. When present, is also used to determine the type of dialect in use.url – a string database url, or a
sqlalchemy.engine.url.URL
object. The type of dialect to be used will be derived from this ifconnection
is not passed.dialect_name – string name of a dialect, such as “postgresql”, “mssql”, etc. The type of dialect to be used will be derived from this if
connection
andurl
are not passed.opts – dictionary of options. Most other options accepted by
EnvironmentContext.configure()
are passed via this dictionary.
- execute(sql: ClauseElement | str, execution_options: dict | None = None) None ¶
Execute a SQL construct or string statement.
The underlying execution mechanics are used, that is if this is “offline mode” the SQL is written to the output buffer, otherwise the SQL is emitted on the current SQLAlchemy connection.
- get_current_heads() Tuple[str, ...] ¶
Return a tuple of the current ‘head versions’ that are represented in the target database.
For a migration stream without branches, this will be a single value, synonymous with that of
MigrationContext.get_current_revision()
. However when multiple unmerged branches exist within the target database, the returned tuple will contain a value for each head.If this
MigrationContext
was configured in “offline” mode, that is withas_sql=True
, thestarting_rev
parameter is returned in a one-length tuple.If no version table is present, or if there are no revisions present, an empty tuple is returned.
- get_current_revision() str | None ¶
Return the current revision, usually that which is present in the
alembic_version
table in the database.This method intends to be used only for a migration stream that does not contain unmerged branches in the target database; if there are multiple branches present, an exception is raised. The
MigrationContext.get_current_heads()
should be preferred over this method going forward in order to be compatible with branch migration support.If this
MigrationContext
was configured in “offline” mode, that is withas_sql=True
, thestarting_rev
parameter is returned instead, if any.
- run_migrations(**kw: Any) None ¶
Run the migration scripts established for this
MigrationContext
, if any.The commands in
alembic.command
will set up a function that is ultimately passed to theMigrationContext
as thefn
argument. This function represents the “work” that will be done whenMigrationContext.run_migrations()
is called, typically from within theenv.py
script of the migration environment. The “work function” then provides an iterable of version callables and other version information which in the case of theupgrade
ordowngrade
commands are the list of version scripts to invoke. Other commands yield nothing, in the case that a command wants to run some other operation against the database such as thecurrent
orstamp
commands.- Parameters:
**kw – keyword arguments here will be passed to each migration callable, that is the
upgrade()
ordowngrade()
method within revision scripts.
- stamp(script_directory: ScriptDirectory, revision: str) None ¶
Stamp the version table with a specific revision.
This method calculates those branches to which the given revision can apply, and updates those branches as though they were migrated towards that revision (either up or down). If no current branches include the revision, it is added as a new branch head.