Say you have the following table:
Id | First | Last | Phone
1 Thoring Oakenshield 123456
2 Bilbo Baggins 654321
...and you want to add an extra Email column which should be non-null and default to email@email.com (without losing any data).
In you JPA entity, write:
@Column(nullable = false, columnDefinition = "Varchar(255) default 'email@email.com'")
private String email;
// getter + setter
Make sure you have these external properties set in application.properties:
Read here for more details.
Also, keep in mind that this is not safe. Not to be used in production. Related stackoverflow discussion.
Tested this with
spring-boot-starter-data-jpa:1.3.1 and Oracle Database 11g Express Edition Release 11.2.0.2.0.
Id | First | Last | Phone
1 Thoring Oakenshield 123456
2 Bilbo Baggins 654321
...and you want to add an extra Email column which should be non-null and default to email@email.com (without losing any data).
In you JPA entity, write:
@Column(nullable = false, columnDefinition = "Varchar(255) default 'email@email.com'")
private String email;
// getter + setter
Make sure you have these external properties set in application.properties:
- spring.jpa.generate-ddl
- spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto
Read here for more details.
Also, keep in mind that this is not safe. Not to be used in production. Related stackoverflow discussion.
Tested this with
spring-boot-starter-data-jpa:1.3.1 and Oracle Database 11g Express Edition Release 11.2.0.2.0.
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