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.. _tutorial-dbinit:
Step 4: Creating The Database
=============================
As outlined earlier, Flaskr is a database powered application, and more
precisely, it is an application powered by a relational database system. Such
systems need a schema that tells them how to store that information. So
before starting the server for the first time it's important to create
that schema.
Such a schema can be created by piping the `schema.sql` file into the
`sqlite3` command as follows::
sqlite3 /tmp/flaskr.db < schema.sql
The downside of this is that it requires the sqlite3 command to be
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installed which is not necessarily the case on every system. This also
requires that we provide the path to the database which can introduce
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errors. It's a good idea to add a function that initializes the database
for you to the application.
To do this we can create a function and hook it into the ``flask`` command
that initializes the database. Let me show you the code first. Just add
this function below the `connect_db` function in `flaskr.py`::
def init_db():
db = get_db()
with app.open_resource('schema.sql', mode='r') as f:
db.cursor().executescript(f.read())
db.commit()
@app.cli.command('initdb')
def initdb_command():
"""Initializes the database."""
init_db()
print 'Initialized the database.'
The ``app.cli.command()`` decorator registers a new command with the
``flask`` script. When the command executes Flask will automatically
create a application context for us bound to the right application.
Within the function we can then access :attr:`flask.g` and other things as
we would expect. When the script ends, the application context tears down
and the database connection is released.
We want to keep an actual functions around that initializes the database
though so that we can easily create databases in unittests later. (For
more information see :ref:`testing`.)
The :func:`~flask.Flask.open_resource` method of the application object
is a convenient helper function that will open a resource that the
application provides. This function opens a file from the resource
location (your `flaskr` folder) and allows you to read from it. We are
using this here to execute a script on the database connection.
The connection object provided by SQLite can give us a cursor object.
On that cursor there is a method to execute a complete script. Finally we
only have to commit the changes. SQLite 3 and other transactional
databases will not commit unless you explicitly tell it to.
Now it is possible to create a database with the ``flask`` script::
flask --app=flaskr initdb
Initialized the database.
.. admonition:: Troubleshooting
If you get an exception later that a table cannot be found check that
you did execute the `initdb` command and that your table names are
correct (singular vs. plural for example).
Continue with :ref:`tutorial-views`