Operation Directives¶
Note
this section discusses the internal API of Alembic as regards the internal system of defining migration operation directives. This section is only useful for developers who wish to extend the capabilities of Alembic. For end-user guidance on Alembic migration operations, please see Operation Reference.
Within migration scripts, actual database migration operations are handled
via an instance of Operations
. The Operations
class
lists out available migration operations that are linked to a
MigrationContext
, which communicates instructions originated
by the Operations
object into SQL that is sent to a database or SQL
output stream.
Most methods on the Operations
class are generated dynamically
using a “plugin” system, described in the next section
Operation Plugins. Additionally, when Alembic migration scripts
actually run, the methods on the current Operations
object are
proxied out to the alembic.op
module, so that they are available
using module-style access.
For an overview of how to use an Operations
object directly
in programs, as well as for reference to the standard operation methods
as well as “batch” methods, see Operation Reference.
Operation Plugins¶
The Operations object is extensible using a plugin system. This system
allows one to add new op.<some_operation>
methods at runtime. The
steps to use this system are to first create a subclass of
MigrateOperation
, register it using the Operations.register_operation()
class decorator, then build a default “implementation” function which is
established using the Operations.implementation_for()
decorator.
Below we illustrate a very simple operation CreateSequenceOp
which
will implement a new method op.create_sequence()
for use in
migration scripts:
from alembic.operations import Operations, MigrateOperation
@Operations.register_operation("create_sequence")
class CreateSequenceOp(MigrateOperation):
"""Create a SEQUENCE."""
def __init__(self, sequence_name, schema=None):
self.sequence_name = sequence_name
self.schema = schema
@classmethod
def create_sequence(cls, operations, sequence_name, **kw):
"""Issue a "CREATE SEQUENCE" instruction."""
op = CreateSequenceOp(sequence_name, **kw)
return operations.invoke(op)
def reverse(self):
# only needed to support autogenerate
return DropSequenceOp(self.sequence_name, schema=self.schema)
@Operations.register_operation("drop_sequence")
class DropSequenceOp(MigrateOperation):
"""Drop a SEQUENCE."""
def __init__(self, sequence_name, schema=None):
self.sequence_name = sequence_name
self.schema = schema
@classmethod
def drop_sequence(cls, operations, sequence_name, **kw):
"""Issue a "DROP SEQUENCE" instruction."""
op = DropSequenceOp(sequence_name, **kw)
return operations.invoke(op)
def reverse(self):
# only needed to support autogenerate
return CreateSequenceOp(self.sequence_name, schema=self.schema)
Above, the CreateSequenceOp
and DropSequenceOp
classes represent
new operations that will
be available as op.create_sequence()
and op.drop_sequence()
.
The reason the operations
are represented as stateful classes is so that an operation and a specific
set of arguments can be represented generically; the state can then correspond
to different kinds of operations, such as invoking the instruction against
a database, or autogenerating Python code for the operation into a
script.
In order to establish the migrate-script behavior of the new operations,
we use the Operations.implementation_for()
decorator:
@Operations.implementation_for(CreateSequenceOp)
def create_sequence(operations, operation):
if operation.schema is not None:
name = "%s.%s" % (operation.schema, operation.sequence_name)
else:
name = operation.sequence_name
operations.execute("CREATE SEQUENCE %s" % name)
@Operations.implementation_for(DropSequenceOp)
def drop_sequence(operations, operation):
if operation.schema is not None:
name = "%s.%s" % (operation.schema, operation.sequence_name)
else:
name = operation.sequence_name
operations.execute("DROP SEQUENCE %s" % name)
Above, we use the simplest possible technique of invoking our DDL, which
is just to call Operations.execute()
with literal SQL. If this is
all a custom operation needs, then this is fine. However, options for
more comprehensive support include building out a custom SQL construct,
as documented at Custom SQL Constructs and Compilation Extension.
With the above two steps, a migration script can now use new methods
op.create_sequence()
and op.drop_sequence()
that will proxy to
our object as a classmethod:
def upgrade():
op.create_sequence("my_sequence")
def downgrade():
op.drop_sequence("my_sequence")
The registration of new operations only needs to occur in time for the
env.py
script to invoke MigrationContext.run_migrations()
;
within the module level of the env.py
script is sufficient.
See also
Autogenerating Custom Operation Directives - how to add autogenerate support to custom operations.
Built-in Operation Objects¶
The migration operations present on Operations
are themselves
delivered via operation objects that represent an operation and its
arguments. All operations descend from the MigrateOperation
class, and are registered with the Operations
class using
the Operations.register_operation()
class decorator. The
MigrateOperation
objects also serve as the basis for how the
autogenerate system renders new migration scripts.
The built-in operation objects are listed below.
- class alembic.operations.ops.AddColumnOp(table_name: str, column: Column, schema: str | None = None, **kw)¶
Represent an add column operation.
- classmethod add_column(operations: Operations, table_name: str, column: Column, schema: str | None = None) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.add_column()
method.
- classmethod batch_add_column(operations: BatchOperations, column: Column, insert_before: str | None = None, insert_after: str | None = None) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.add_column()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.AddConstraintOp¶
Represent an add constraint operation.
- class alembic.operations.ops.AlterColumnOp(table_name: str, column_name: str, schema: str | None = None, existing_type: Any | None = None, existing_server_default: Any = False, existing_nullable: bool | None = None, existing_comment: str | None = None, modify_nullable: bool | None = None, modify_comment: str | bool | None = False, modify_server_default: Any = False, modify_name: str | None = None, modify_type: Any | None = None, **kw)¶
Represent an alter column operation.
- classmethod alter_column(operations: Operations, table_name: str, column_name: str, nullable: bool | None = None, comment: str | bool | None = False, server_default: Any = False, new_column_name: str | None = None, type_: 'TypeEngine' | Type['TypeEngine'] | None = None, existing_type: 'TypeEngine' | Type['TypeEngine'] | None = None, existing_server_default: str | bool | 'Identity' | 'Computed' | None = False, existing_nullable: bool | None = None, existing_comment: str | None = None, schema: str | None = None, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.alter_column()
method.
- classmethod batch_alter_column(operations: BatchOperations, column_name: str, nullable: bool | None = None, comment: bool = False, server_default: 'Function' | bool = False, new_column_name: str | None = None, type_: 'TypeEngine' | Type['TypeEngine'] | None = None, existing_type: 'TypeEngine' | Type['TypeEngine'] | None = None, existing_server_default: bool = False, existing_nullable: None = None, existing_comment: None = None, insert_before: None = None, insert_after: None = None, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.alter_column()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.AlterTableOp(table_name: str, schema: str | None = None)¶
Represent an alter table operation.
- class alembic.operations.ops.BulkInsertOp(table: 'Table' | 'TableClause', rows: List[dict], multiinsert: bool = True)¶
Represent a bulk insert operation.
- classmethod bulk_insert(operations: Operations, table: 'Table' | 'TableClause', rows: List[dict], multiinsert: bool = True) None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.bulk_insert()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.CreateCheckConstraintOp(constraint_name: str | None, table_name: str, condition: str | 'TextClause' | 'ColumnElement[Any]', schema: str | None = None, **kw)¶
Represent a create check constraint operation.
- classmethod batch_create_check_constraint(operations: BatchOperations, constraint_name: str, condition: TextClause, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.create_check_constraint()
method.
- classmethod create_check_constraint(operations: Operations, constraint_name: str | None, table_name: str, condition: str | 'BinaryExpression', schema: str | None = None, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.create_check_constraint()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.CreateForeignKeyOp(constraint_name: str | None, source_table: str, referent_table: str, local_cols: List[str], remote_cols: List[str], **kw)¶
Represent a create foreign key constraint operation.
- classmethod batch_create_foreign_key(operations: BatchOperations, constraint_name: str, referent_table: str, local_cols: List[str], remote_cols: List[str], referent_schema: str | None = None, onupdate: None = None, ondelete: None = None, deferrable: None = None, initially: None = None, match: None = None, **dialect_kw) None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.create_foreign_key()
method.
- classmethod create_foreign_key(operations: Operations, constraint_name: str | None, source_table: str, referent_table: str, local_cols: List[str], remote_cols: List[str], onupdate: str | None = None, ondelete: str | None = None, deferrable: bool | None = None, initially: str | None = None, match: str | None = None, source_schema: str | None = None, referent_schema: str | None = None, **dialect_kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.create_foreign_key()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.CreateIndexOp(index_name: str, table_name: str, columns: Sequence[str | 'TextClause' | 'ColumnElement[Any]'], schema: str | None = None, unique: bool = False, **kw)¶
Represent a create index operation.
- classmethod batch_create_index(operations: BatchOperations, index_name: str, columns: List[str], **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.create_index()
method.
- classmethod create_index(operations: Operations, index_name: str, table_name: str, columns: Sequence[str | 'TextClause' | 'Function'], schema: str | None = None, unique: bool = False, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.create_index()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.CreatePrimaryKeyOp(constraint_name: str | None, table_name: str, columns: Sequence[str], schema: str | None = None, **kw)¶
Represent a create primary key operation.
- classmethod batch_create_primary_key(operations: BatchOperations, constraint_name: str, columns: List[str]) None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.create_primary_key()
method.
- classmethod create_primary_key(operations: Operations, constraint_name: str | None, table_name: str, columns: List[str], schema: str | None = None) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.create_primary_key()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.CreateTableCommentOp(table_name: str, comment: str | None, schema: str | None = None, existing_comment: str | None = None)¶
Represent a COMMENT ON table operation.
- classmethod batch_create_table_comment(operations, comment, existing_comment=None)¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.create_table_comment()
method.
- classmethod create_table_comment(operations: Operations, table_name: str, comment: str | None, existing_comment: None = None, schema: str | None = None) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.create_table_comment()
method.
- reverse()¶
Reverses the COMMENT ON operation against a table.
- class alembic.operations.ops.CreateTableOp(table_name: str, columns: Sequence['Column' | 'Constraint'], schema: str | None = None, _namespace_metadata: 'MetaData' | None = None, _constraints_included: bool = False, **kw)¶
Represent a create table operation.
- classmethod create_table(operations: Operations, table_name: str, *columns, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.create_table()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.CreateUniqueConstraintOp(constraint_name: str | None, table_name: str, columns: Sequence[str], schema: str | None = None, **kw)¶
Represent a create unique constraint operation.
- classmethod batch_create_unique_constraint(operations: BatchOperations, constraint_name: str, columns: Sequence[str], **kw) Any ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.create_unique_constraint()
method.
- classmethod create_unique_constraint(operations: Operations, constraint_name: str | None, table_name: str, columns: Sequence[str], schema: str | None = None, **kw) Any ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.create_unique_constraint()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.DowngradeOps(ops: Sequence[MigrateOperation] = (), downgrade_token: str = 'downgrades')¶
contains a sequence of operations that would apply to the ‘downgrade’ stream of a script.
See also
- class alembic.operations.ops.DropColumnOp(table_name: str, column_name: str, schema: str | None = None, _reverse: AddColumnOp | None = None, **kw)¶
Represent a drop column operation.
- classmethod batch_drop_column(operations: BatchOperations, column_name: str, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.drop_column()
method.
- classmethod drop_column(operations: Operations, table_name: str, column_name: str, schema: str | None = None, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.drop_column()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.DropConstraintOp(constraint_name: str | None, table_name: str, type_: str | None = None, schema: str | None = None, _reverse: AddConstraintOp | None = None)¶
Represent a drop constraint operation.
- classmethod batch_drop_constraint(operations: BatchOperations, constraint_name: str, type_: str | None = None) None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.drop_constraint()
method.
- classmethod drop_constraint(operations: Operations, constraint_name: str, table_name: str, type_: str | None = None, schema: str | None = None) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.drop_constraint()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.DropIndexOp(index_name: 'quoted_name' | str | 'conv', table_name: str | None = None, schema: str | None = None, _reverse: 'CreateIndexOp' | None = None, **kw)¶
Represent a drop index operation.
- classmethod batch_drop_index(operations: BatchOperations, index_name: str, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.drop_index()
method.
- classmethod drop_index(operations: Operations, index_name: str, table_name: str | None = None, schema: str | None = None, **kw) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.drop_index()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.DropTableCommentOp(table_name: str, schema: str | None = None, existing_comment: str | None = None)¶
Represent an operation to remove the comment from a table.
- classmethod batch_drop_table_comment(operations, existing_comment=None)¶
This method is proxied on the
BatchOperations
class, via theBatchOperations.drop_table_comment()
method.
- classmethod drop_table_comment(operations: Operations, table_name: str, existing_comment: str | None = None, schema: str | None = None) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.drop_table_comment()
method.
- reverse()¶
Reverses the COMMENT ON operation against a table.
- class alembic.operations.ops.DropTableOp(table_name: str, schema: str | None = None, table_kw: MutableMapping[Any, Any] | None = None, _reverse: CreateTableOp | None = None)¶
Represent a drop table operation.
- classmethod drop_table(operations: Operations, table_name: str, schema: str | None = None, **kw: Any) None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.drop_table()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.ExecuteSQLOp(sqltext: 'Update' | str | 'Insert' | 'TextClause', execution_options: None = None)¶
Represent an execute SQL operation.
- classmethod execute(operations: Operations, sqltext: str | 'TextClause' | 'Update', execution_options: None = None) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.execute()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.MigrateOperation¶
base class for migration command and organization objects.
This system is part of the operation extensibility API.
- info¶
A dictionary that may be used to store arbitrary information along with this
MigrateOperation
object.
- class alembic.operations.ops.MigrationScript(rev_id: str | None, upgrade_ops: UpgradeOps, downgrade_ops: DowngradeOps, message: str | None = None, imports: Set[str] = {}, head: str | None = None, splice: bool | None = None, branch_label: str | None = None, version_path: str | None = None, depends_on: str | Sequence[str] | None = None)¶
represents a migration script.
E.g. when autogenerate encounters this object, this corresponds to the production of an actual script file.
A normal
MigrationScript
object would contain a singleUpgradeOps
and a singleDowngradeOps
directive. These are accessible via the.upgrade_ops
and.downgrade_ops
attributes.In the case of an autogenerate operation that runs multiple times, such as the multiple database example in the “multidb” template, the
.upgrade_ops
and.downgrade_ops
attributes are disabled, and instead these objects should be accessed via the.upgrade_ops_list
and.downgrade_ops_list
list-based attributes. These latter attributes are always available at the very least as single-element lists.See also
- property downgrade_ops¶
An instance of
DowngradeOps
.See also
- property downgrade_ops_list: List[DowngradeOps]¶
A list of
DowngradeOps
instances.This is used in place of the
MigrationScript.downgrade_ops
attribute when dealing with a revision operation that does multiple autogenerate passes.
- property upgrade_ops¶
An instance of
UpgradeOps
.See also
- property upgrade_ops_list: List[UpgradeOps]¶
A list of
UpgradeOps
instances.This is used in place of the
MigrationScript.upgrade_ops
attribute when dealing with a revision operation that does multiple autogenerate passes.
- class alembic.operations.ops.ModifyTableOps(table_name: str, ops: Sequence[MigrateOperation], schema: str | None = None)¶
Contains a sequence of operations that all apply to a single Table.
- class alembic.operations.ops.OpContainer(ops: Sequence[MigrateOperation] = ())¶
Represent a sequence of operations operation.
- class alembic.operations.ops.RenameTableOp(old_table_name: str, new_table_name: str, schema: str | None = None)¶
Represent a rename table operation.
- classmethod rename_table(operations: Operations, old_table_name: str, new_table_name: str, schema: str | None = None) 'Table' | None ¶
This method is proxied on the
Operations
class, via theOperations.rename_table()
method.
- class alembic.operations.ops.UpgradeOps(ops: Sequence[MigrateOperation] = (), upgrade_token: str = 'upgrades')¶
contains a sequence of operations that would apply to the ‘upgrade’ stream of a script.
See also