+++ date = "2008-05-06" title = "The migration that cannot be undone: Irreversible Migration" tags = ["General"] slug = "the-migration-that-cannot-be-undone-irreversible-migration" +++ Migrations have up and down methods, as we all know. But in some cases, your up method does things you can't undo in your down method. For example: ```ruby def self.up # Change the zipcode from the current :integer to a :string type. change_column :address, :zipcode, :string end ``` Now, converting integers to strings will always work. But, you feel it coming, converting a string into an integer will not always be possible. In other words, we can't reverse this migration. That's why we should raise ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration in the down method. ```ruby def self.down raise ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration end ``` Now, if you run your migration (upwards), you'll see it being applied like it shoud. However, if you try to go back, you'll see rake aborting with ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration. ```sh $ rake db:migrate VERSION=4 -- Database is migrated $ rake db:migrate VERSION=3 -- Rake aborted! -- ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration ``` So, if you have things you can't undo, raise ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration in your migration's down method.