Good to know about native migrations, and the interim solution seems reasonable.
Thanks so much! On Tuesday, June 19, 2012 10:56:38 AM UTC-5, Andrew Godwin wrote: > > On 19/06/12 16:13, Greg Aker wrote: > > Florian: > > > > I don't think waiting for migrations in the Django core is totally > > necessary to fix a bug like this (or others that might be similar). > > With proper documentation in the release/upgrade notes, I think it's > > completely reasonable to expect someone working with Django to be able > > to run a manual SQL query to alter those columns. > > > > If this is a core philosophy not to ask users to run manual queries on > > updates, is starting with a patch to enforce limits here a good thing? > > It's messy to ask people to manually run SQL queries to change this > stuff in general - we'd have to provide four or five different queries, > and the operation isn't even possible on SQLite (you'd have to make a > new table with the right schema and copy things over). I'm working > studiously on getting schema migration stuff in, it'll just take a > release or two till it's ready. > > As for the interim solution, I replied to Stephan's post about that - I > think just increasing max_length will work well enough for now in this > case, as it's one of the few situations where the schema is slightly > decoupled from the models. > > Andrew > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Django developers" group. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/django-developers/-/fuhiKTazQHoJ. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers?hl=en.
