[Django]-Adding indexes to model fields in Django with migrations

9πŸ‘

βœ…

OK, I managed to create the indexes using Meta.index_together. It is not the cleanest way, since I am not actually indexing multiple fields together but it works with makemigrations:

class Person(models.Model):
    class Meta():
        index_together = [['last_name']]
    first_name = models.CharField()
    last_name = models.CharField()

Now makemigrations does make a new migration:

./manage.py makemigrations app-name

>>Migrations for 'app-name':
>>  0005_auto_20140929_1540.py:
>>    - Alter index_together for Person (1 constraint(s))

And the corresponding sql command is actually CREATE INDEX.

./manage.py sqlmigrate app-name 0005_auto_20140929_1540

>>BEGIN;
>>CREATE INDEX app-name_person_last_name_7...4_idx ON `app-name_person` (`last_name`);
>>COMMIT;
πŸ‘€Nima

24πŸ‘

This problem still exists in django2.1.
I solved it by using the indexes Meta option. This is a bit cleaner than the index_together solution.

class Person(models.Model):
    first_name = models.CharField()
    last_name = models.CharField()

    class Meta:
        indexes = [
            models.Index(fields=['last_name']),
        ]
πŸ‘€ilse2005

9πŸ‘

You can do this explicitly in your migration using Django’s AddIndex and Index classes.

First create an empty migration with manage.py makemigrations --empty and then simply fill it out as follows:

from django.db import migrations
from django.db.models.indexes import Index
from django.db.migrations import AddIndex


class Migration(migrations.Migration):

    dependencies = [
        ('app_name', 'ref_to_previous_migration'),
    ]

    operations = [
        AddIndex('ModelName', Index(fields=['field_name'], name='my_index'))
    ]

You can use options on the Index class to specify fields, add a name, and do special custom things like index only part of the table, etc. Check the doc links above.

πŸ‘€galarant

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