As described in the [upgrade guide](https://docs.cal.com/self-hosting/upgrade), you should use the `yarn workspace @calcom/prisma db-migrate` or `yarn workspace @calcom/prisma db-deploy` command to update the database.
We use database migrations in order to handle changes to the database schema in a more secure and stable way. This is actually very common. The thing is that when just changing the schema in `schema.prisma` without creating migrations, the update to the newer database schema can damage or delete all data in production mode, since the system sometimes doesn't know how to transform the data from A to B. Using migrations, each step is reproducable, transparent and can be undone in a simple way.
## Creating migrations
If you are modifying the codebase and make a change to the `schema.prisma` file, you must create a migration.
To create a migration for your previously changed `schema.prisma`, simply run the following:
Now, you must create a short name for your migration to describe what changed (for example, "user_add_email_verified"). Then just add and commit it with the corresponding code that uses your new database schema.
:::caution
Always keep an eye on what migrations Prisma is generating. Prisma often happily will drop entire columns of data because it can't figure out what to do.
:::
## Error: The database schema is not empty
Prisma uses a database called `_prisma_migrations` to keep track of which migrations have been applied and which haven't. If your local migrations database doesn't match up with what's in the actual database, then Prisma will throw the following error:
The database schema for `localhost:5432` is not empty. Read more about how to baseline an existing production database: https://pris.ly/d/migrate-baseline
```
In order to fix this, we need to tell Prisma which migrations have already been applied.
This can be done by running the following command, replacing `migration_name` with each migration that you have already applied: