191
votes

I have the problem, that I have an migration in Rails that sets up a default setting for a column, like this example:

def self.up
  add_column :column_name, :bought_at, :datetime, :default => Time.now
end

Suppose, I like to drop that default settings in a later migration, how do I do that with using rails migrations?

My current workaround is the execution of a custom sql command in the rails migration, like this:

def self.up
  execute 'alter table column_name alter bought_at drop default'
end

But I don't like this approach, because I am now dependent on how the underlying database is interpreting this command. In case of a change of the database this query perhaps might not work anymore and the migration would be broken. So, is there a way to express the undo of a default setting for a column in rails?

4

4 Answers

387
votes

Rails 5+

def change
  change_column_default( :table_name, :column_name, from: nil, to: false )
end

Rails 3 and Rails 4

def up
  change_column_default( :table_name, :column_name, nil )
end

def down
  change_column_default( :table_name, :column_name, false )
end
23
votes

Sounds like you're doing the right thing with your 'execute', as the docs point out:

change_column_default(table_name, column_name, default)

Sets a new default value for a column. If you want to set the default value to NULL, you are out of luck. You need to DatabaseStatements#execute the appropriate SQL statement yourself. Examples

change_column_default(:suppliers, :qualification, 'new')
change_column_default(:accounts, :authorized, 1)
14
votes

The following snippet I use to make NULL columns NOT NULL, but skip DEFAULT at schema level:

def self.up
  change_column :table, :column, :string, :null => false, :default => ""
  change_column_default(:table, :column, nil)
end
-3
votes

Rails 4

change_column :courses, :name, :string, limit: 100, null: false