36

In my app, every user has its own database that created when the user registered. Connection and database data (database name, username, password) are saved in a table in the default database.

try{
    DB::transaction(function() {

        $website = new Website();
        $website->user_id = Auth::get()->id;
        $website->save();

        $database_name = 'website_'.$website->id;

        DB::statement(DB::raw('CREATE DATABASE ' . $database_name));

        $websiteDatabase = new WebsiteDatabase();
        $websiteDatabase->website_id = $website->id;
        $websiteDatabase->database_name = $database_name;
        $websiteDatabase->save();

    });
} catch(\Exception $e) {
    echo $e->getMessage();
}

Now I want to run some migrations on new user's database after its creation.

Is it possible?

Muhammad Dyas Yaskur
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Pooya Saberian
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    Add laravel environments for your databases and invoke the artisan tool in these environments? Why are you creating a database for each of your customers? It sounds like an usual decision for a Laravel app. – Niels B. Sep 20 '14 at 19:11
  • Our Web app is something like http://wix.com. every user can create websites for its own and we want every website has its own separate database. In this code I created separate database for every user and save its data in default database, now I want run some migrations on this new database for creating new database schema. – Pooya Saberian Sep 21 '14 at 17:53

8 Answers8

59

In your app/config/database.php you have to:

<?php
return array(

    'default' => 'mysql',

    'connections' => array(

        # Our primary database connection
        'mysql' => array(
            'driver'    => 'mysql',
            'host'      => 'host1',
            'database'  => 'database1',
            'username'  => 'user1',
            'password'  => 'pass1'
            'charset'   => 'utf8',
            'collation' => 'utf8_unicode_ci',
            'prefix'    => '',
        ),

        # Our secondary database connection
        'mysql2' => array(
            'driver'    => 'mysql',
            'host'      => 'host2',
            'database'  => 'database2',
            'username'  => 'user2',
            'password'  => 'pass2'
            'charset'   => 'utf8',
            'collation' => 'utf8_unicode_ci',
            'prefix'    => '',
        ),
    ),
);

Now that you prepared two database connections in your migration you can do:

Schema::connection('mysql2')->create('some_table', function($table)
{
    $table->increments('id');
});

This should work. More infos on: http://fideloper.com/laravel-multiple-database-connections

George
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pietrovismara
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58

If you place database config on the database.php file, this can help you:

php artisan migrate --database=**otherDatabase**
Yoel
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Fernando
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14

If you mean using different database connection, it exists in the docs:

Schema::connection('foo')->create('users', function (Blueprint $table) {
    $table->bigIncrements('id');
});
A.Soliman
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6

I have the same problem, my solution is to change the database using Config::set first then run Artisan::call("migrate"). so based on your code:

DB::statement(DB::raw('CREATE DATABASE ' . $database_name));
Config::set('database.connections.mysql.database', $database_name);
Artisan::call("migrate --database=mysql");

the config only changed on your session then reset later as your current setting.

Muhammad Dyas Yaskur
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2

This is tedious to remember which migration corresponds to which database.

For Laravel 5.5 I used this approach:

public function up()
{

 // this line is important
  Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB::setDefaultConnection('anotherDatabaseConnection');


   Schema::table('product',
          function (Blueprint $table)
     {
        $table->string('public_id', 85)->nullable()->after('ProductID');
     });

  // this line is important, Probably you need to set this to 'mysql'
   Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB::setDefaultConnection('nameOfYourDefaultDatabaseConnection');
}

All migrations can be run automatically without taking care of specifying database manually when running them.

Please note that migrations table is stored inside your default database.

Tebe
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1

I actually faced the same problem and the answer of Joe did not work in my case, as I have different database connections (so different host, port, user and pass).

Therefore the migration must do a lot of reconnects all the time:

  • Migration starts with default database (in my case that is client_1)
  • Fetches stuff from table migrations and clients
  • Disconnect default database
  • Connect to database of client_2, run migration parts, disconnect client_2
  • Connect to default database again, store migration "log"

And then loop it for each client.

    /**
     * Run the migrations.
     *
     * @return void
     */
    public function up()
    {
        $defaultConnection = BackendConfig::getDatabaseConfigArray();
        $clients = ClientController::returnDatabasesForArtisan();

        foreach ($clients as $client) {
            BackendConfig::setDatabaseFromClient($client);

            Schema::create('newtable', function (Blueprint $table) {
                $table->increments('id')->unsigned();
                $table->timestamps();
            });
            BackendConfig::setDatabaseFromArray($defaultConnection);
        }
    }

And the class where the magic is stored:

class BackendConfig
{
    public static function getDatabaseConfigArray($client_id = 1)
    {
        $connection = config('database.default');

        return [
            'id' => $client_id,
            'host' => config("database.connections.$connection.host"),
            'port' => config("database.connections.$connection.port"),
            'username' => config("database.connections.$connection.username"),
            'password' => config("database.connections.$connection.password"),
        ];
    }

    public static function setDatabaseFromArray($array)
    {
        self::setDatabase($array['id'], $array['host'], $array['port'], $array['username'], $array['password'], true);
        DB::disconnect();
    }

    public static function setDatabaseFromClient(Client $client)
    {
        DB::disconnect();
        self::setDatabase($client->id, $client->database->host, $client->database->port, $client->database->username, $client->database->password, true);
    }

    public static function setDatabase($client_id, $host, $port, $username, $password)
    {
        $connection = config('database.default');

        $database_name = $connection . '_' . $client_id;

        config([
            "database.connections.$connection.database" => $database_name,
            "database.connections.$connection.host" => $host,
            "database.connections.$connection.port" => $port,
            "database.connections.$connection.username" => $username,
            "database.connections.$connection.password" => $password,
        ]);
}

With this solution I can run the exact same migrations on every client, yet the migration is just stored in client_1, my sort of master client.

However, pay attention to the two DB::disconnect();. It will screw up the situation without those as then migrations logs are stored in another client's database or such.

Ah and by the way, ClientController does nothing special:

public static function returnDatabasesForArtisan()
{
    return Client::select('*')->with('database')->get();
}
andi79h
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0

I think I finally figured out this mess... This solution doesn't need a configuration for each tenant's database and has to be run only once.

class MigrationBlah extends Migration {
  public function up() {
    $dbs = DB::connection('tenants')->table('tenants')->get();
    foreach ($dbs as $db) {
      Schema::table($db->database . '.bodegausuarios', function($table){
        $table->foreign('usuario')->references('usuarioid')->on('authusuarios');
      });
    }
  }
}

Where I have a connection named "tenants" on my database.php, which contains the database name of all of my tenants. I have the default connection set to my tenants database as well. That database is the one responsible for taking care of the migrations table.

With the foreach statement, it goes through the tenant databases and runs the migration on each one.

On your default connection, you should configure a user that has access to all tenant's databases for it to work.

JoeGalind
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-1

Best solution is you can call this method on AppServiceProvide

it is the best solution for this type of problem. I am using this in my project. In my case, I have two environments Development and Production. so when the project is development mode then it will look on local Server else Live server. So you can set dynamic-DB concept here.

you have to make a function then you have to call this inside of boot() Function on App\Providers\AppServiceProvide.php

    public function boot()
    {
       DBConnection();

    }

I created Helper File for this. so my code in helper.php

 function DBConnection()
 {
  if( env('APP_ENV') ==  'local' )
   {   $databse_name = "test_me";
       $host = '127.0.0.1';
       $user="root";
      $password="";
   }
    else
  {
    $databse_name = 'tic_tac';
    $host = 'localhost';
    $user="";
    $password="";
  }
    $state = true;
   try {
      Config::set('database.connections.myConnection', array(
        'driver'    => 'mysql',
        'host'      => $host,
        'database'  => $databse_name,
        'username'  => $user,
        'password'  => $password,
        'charset'   => 'utf8',
        'collation' => 'utf8_unicode_ci',
        'prefix'    => '',
        'strict' => false,
     ));
    /* \DB::setDefaultConnection('myConnection');
      $state = \DB::connection()->getPdo();*/

     Config::set('database.connections.myConnection.database', $databse_name);
     \DB::setDefaultConnection('myConnection');
      \DB::reconnect('myConnection');

   } catch( \Exception $e) {
      $state = false;
   }
 return $state;
}
pankaj
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