A Laravel command scans your application for pending migrations, providing a clear overview of what needs to be migrated. You can then choose to run individual migrations or skip them as needed, short-cutting and optimizing your development workflow.
This package seamlessly handles migrations organized within subdirectories, ensuring that no pending migrations are overlooked regardless of the project's migration structure.
database
└── migrations
├── 2023_01_01
│ ├── 20230101000001_create_table_one.php
│ └── 20230101000002_create_table_two.php
└── 2023_02_01
├── 20230201000001_create_table_three.php
└── 20230201000002_create_table_four.php
composer require levizoesch/laravel-check-migrations
Run the following command in your terminal:
php artisan check-migrations
php artisan check-migrations --skip
This will ignore the migration named 20230101000000_create_example_table from running and prompting for confirmation.
php artisan check-migrations --ignore=20230101000000_create_example_table
Ensure that your Laravel project is properly configured and migrations are set up correctly for this command to work effectively.
Always review pending migrations before running them in production environments to prevent unintended consequences.
When running the check-migrations
command in a production environment, users may encounter double confirmation prompts. This occurs due to Laravel's native migrate
command prompting for confirmation before migrating when in production mode. Since the check-migrations
command internally calls the migrate
command for each pending migration, users may be prompted twice for confirmation for each migration.