Migration
Simple and pragmatic migrations for Go applications.
Features
- Super simple driver interface to allow easy implementation for more database/migration drivers.
- Embeddable migration files.
- Support for up/down migrations.
- Atomic migrations (where possible, depending on database support).
- Support for using Go code as migrations
Drivers
- Apache Phoenix
- Golang (runs generic go functions)
- MySQL
- PostgreSQL
- SQLite
Quickstart
// Create migration source
packrSource := &migration.PackrMigrationSource{
Box: packr.NewBox("migrations"),
}
// Create driver
driver, err := phoenix.New("http://localhost:8765")
// Run all up migrations
applied, err := Migrate(driver, packrSource, migration.Up, 0)
// Remove the last 2 migrations
applied, err := Migrate(driver, packrSource, migration.Down, 2)
Writing migrations
Migrations are extremely simple to write:
- Separate your up and down migrations into different files. For example,
1_init.up.sql
and 1_init.down.sql
.
- Prefix your migration with a number or timestamp for versioning:
1_init.up.sql
or 1475813115_init.up.sql
.
- The file-extension can be anything you want, but must be present. For example,
1_init.up.sql
is valid, but
1_init.up
is not,
- Note: Underscores (
_
) must be used to separate the number and description in the filename.
Let's say we want to write our first migration to initialize the database.
In that case, we would have a file called 1_init.up.sql
containing SQL statements for the
up migration:
CREATE TABLE test_data (
id BIGINT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
)
We also create a 1_init.down.sql
file containing SQL statements for the down migration:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test_data
By default, migrations are run within a transaction. If you do not want a migration to run within a transaction,
start the migration file with -- +migration NoTransaction
:
-- +migration NoTransaction
CREATE TABLE test_data1 (
id BIGINT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
)
CREATE TABLE test_data2 (
id BIGINT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
)
If you would like to create stored procedures, triggers or complex statements that contain semicolns, use BeginStatement
and EndStatement
to delineate them:
CREATE TABLE test_data1 (
id BIGINT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
)
CREATE TABLE test_data2 (
id BIGINT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
)
-- +migration BeginStatement
CREATE TRIGGER`test_trigger_1`BEFORE UPDATE ON`test_data1`FOR EACH ROW BEGIN
INSERT INTO test_data2
SET id = OLD.id;
END
-- +migration EndStatement
Embedding migration files
Assuming your migration files are in migrations/
, initialize a PackrMigrationSource
:
packrSource := &migration.PackrMigrationSource{
Box: packr.NewBox("migrations"),
}
If your migrations are contained in a subdirectory inside your packr box, you can point to it using the Dir
property:
packrSource := &migration.PackrMigrationSource{
Box: packr.NewBox("."),
Dir: "migrations",
}
During development, packr will read the migration files from disk. When building for production, run packr
to generate
a Go file containing your migrations, or use packr build
to build for your binary. For more information, see the
packr documenation.
Note: We recommend using packr as it allows you to use migrations from disk during development
In the simplest case, assuming your migration files are in migrations/
, just run:
go-bindata -o bindata.go -pkg myapp migrations/
Then, use GoBindataMigrationSource
to find the migrations:
goBindataSource := &migration.GoBindataMigrationSource{
Asset: Asset,
AssetDir: AssetDir,
Dir: "test-migrations",
}
The Asset
and AssetDir
functions are generated by go-bindata
.
Using Go for migrations
Sometimes, we might be working with a database or have a situation where the query language is not expressive enough
to perform the required migrations. For example, we might have to get some data out of the database, perform some
transformations and then write it back. For these type of situations, you can use Go for migrations.
When using Go for migrations, create a golang.Source
using golang.NewSource()
. Then, simply add migrations to the source
using the AddMigration()
method. You will need to pass in the name of the migration without the extension and direction, e.g.
1_init
. For the second parameter, pass in the direction (migration.Up
or migration.Down
) and for the third parameter,
pass in a function or method with this signature: func() error
for running the migration.
Finally, you need to define 2 functions:
- A function for writing or deleting an applied migration matching this signature:
func(id string, direction migration.Direction) error
- A function for getting a list of applied migrations matching this signature:
func() ([]string, error)
These are required for initializing the driver:
driver, err := golang.New(source, updateVersion, applied)
Here's a quick example:
source := golang.NewSource()
source.AddMigration("1_init", migration.Up, func() error {
// Run up migration here
})
source.AddMigration("1_init", migration.Down, func() error {
// Run down migration here
})
// Define functions
applied := func() ([]string, error) {
// Return list of applied migrations
}
updateVersion := func(id string, direction migration.Direction) error {
// Write or delete applied migration in storage
}
// Create driver
driver, err := golang.New(source, updateVersion, applied)
// Run migrations
count, err = migration.Migrate(driver, source, migration.Up, 0)
TODO (Pull requests welcomed!)
- Command line program to run migrations
- More drivers
Why yet another migration library?
We wanted a migration library with the following features:
- Open to extension for all sorts of databases, not just
database/sql
drivers or an ORM.
- Easily embeddable in a Go application.
- Support for embedding migration files directly into the app.
We narrowed our focus down to 2 contenders: sql-migrate
and migrate
sql-migrate
leans heavily on the gorp ORM library to perform migrations.
Unfortunately, this means that we were restricted to databases supported by gorp
. It is easily embeddable in a
Go app and supports embedding migration files directly into the Go binary. If database support was a bit more flexible,
we would have gone with it.
migrate
is highly extensible, and adding support for another database is extremely trivial. However, due to it using
the scheme in the dsn to determine which database driver to use, it prevented us from easily implementing an Apache
Phoenix driver, which uses the scheme to determine if we should connect over http
or https
. Due to the way the
project is structured, it was also almost impossible to add support for embeddable migration files without major
changes.
License
This library is licensed under the Apache 2 License.