Note: this project is not actively maintained. It's also kind of an ugly hack, and most probably there are better ways to solve the same problem these days.
The package allows to detect migration conflicts in Django application via static code analysis. In other words, it doesn't run or import any of your code, but finds and parses Django migration files.
The package should work fine with Python 3.6+, and migrations generated by Django 1.7 and later.
Example:
>>> from django_migration_checker import get_conflicts >>> get_conflicts(app_dir='./django-project/apps') [('accounts', ['0001_initial', '0002_new_migration'])]
- Free software: MIT license
pip install django-migration-checker
The initial goal was to have some way to quickly analyze pull requests to a Django project and detect if the new changes introduce migration conflicts if they are merged to master
.
Here are a few features:
Fast
No database connections, heavy modules loading, or checks are performed, so why would it be slow?
No up-to-date environment needed
You don't need to have a working Django environment (valid
settings.py
file, all installed dependencies, etc.) to use this package. The only requirement is to have properly generated migration files.No dependencies
The package doesn't require Django itself, NumPy, left-pad, or any other packages.
After installing the package you can use the command-line script django-find-conflicts
to detect migration conflicts from your console.
Here's how it looks like:
$ django-find-conflicts ./django-project/apps [('accounts', ['0001_initial', '0002_new_migration'])] $ django-find-conflicts ./another-django-project/apps No conflicts detected.
This package was created with Cookiecutter and the audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage project template.