Dead simple Go database migration library.
- Simple code
- Usage as a library, embeddable and extensible on your behalf
- Support of any database supported by
database/sql
- Go code migrations, either transactional or transaction-less, using
*sql.Tx
(migrator.Migration
) or*sql.DB
(migrator.MigrationNoTx
) - No need to use
//go:embed
or others, since all migrations are just Go code
Although any database supported by database/sql and one of its recommended drivers SQLDrivers should work OK, at the moment only PostgreSQL
and MySQL
are being explicitly tested.
If you find any issues with any of the databases included under the umbrella of database/sql
, feel free to contribute by opening an issue or sending a pull request.
The following example assumes:
- A working
postgres
DB conn on localhost, with a user namedpostgres
, empty password, and db namedfoo
Customize this to your needs by changing the driver and/or connection settings.
package main
import (
"database/sql"
"log"
_ "github.com/jackc/pgx/v4/stdlib" // postgres driver
"github.com/lopezator/migrator"
)
func main() {
// Configure migrations
m, err := migrator.New(
migrator.Migrations(
&migrator.Migration{
Name: "Create table foo",
Func: func(tx *sql.Tx) error {
if _, err := tx.Exec("CREATE TABLE foo (id INT PRIMARY KEY)"); err != nil {
return err
}
return nil
},
},
),
)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// Open database connection
db, err := sql.Open("pgx", "postgres://postgres@localhost/foo?sslmode=disable")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// Migrate up
if err := m.Migrate(db); err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
}
Notes on examples above:
- Migrator creates/manages a table named
migrations
to keep track of the applied versions. However, if you want to customize the table namemigrator.TableName("my_migrations")
can be passed tomigrator.New
function as an additional option.
By default, migrator prints applying/applied migration info to stdout. If that's enough for you, you can skip this section.
If you need some special formatting or want to use a 3rd party logging library, this could be done by using WithLogger
option as follows:
logger := migrator.WithLogger(migrator.LoggerFunc(func(msg string, args ...interface{}) {
// Your code here
})))
Then you will only need to pass the logger as an option to migrator.New
.
Just examine the migrator_test.go file.
You still can use your favorite embedding tool to write your migrations inside .sql
files and load them into migrator!
I provide a simple example using //go:embed
on the Using tx, one embedded query
test here: migrator_test
In order to avoid problems with different identifiers, ID collisions, etc... the order of the migrations is just the order being passed to the migrator.
Adding the functionality to reverse a migration introduces complexity to the API, the code, and the risk of losing the synchrony between the defined list of migrations and current state of the database. In addition to this, depending on the case, not all the migrations are easily reversible, or they cannot be reversed.
We also think that it's a good idea to follow an "append-only" philosophy when coming to database migrations, so correcting a defective migration comes in the form of adding a new migration instead of reversing it.
e.g. After a CREATE TABLE foo
we'll simply add a new DROP TABLE foo
instead of reverting the first migration, so both states are reflected both in the code and the database.
- The name of the migrations must be SQL-safe for your engine of choice. Avoiding conflicting characters like
'
is recommended, otherwise, you will have to escape them by yourself e.g.''
for PostgreSQL and\'
for MySQL.
Why another migration library?
- Lightweight dummy implementation with just
database/sql
support. Migrator doesn't need any ORM or other heavy libraries as a dependency. It's just made from a single file in less than 200 lines of code! - Easily embedabble into your application, no need to install/use a separate binary
- Supports Go migrations, either transactional or transaction-less
- Flexible usage
- Add support to databases outside
database/sql
- Complicate the code/logic to add functionality that could be accomplished easily on userland, like view current version, list of applied versions, etc.
- Add a bunch of dependencies just to provide a CLI/standalone functionality
-
rubenv/sql-migrate doesn't support Go migrations. Sometimes you need Go code to accomplish complex tasks that can't be done using just SQL.
-
Boostport/migration is a nice tool with support for many databases. Migrator code is inspired by its codebase. It supports both Go and SQL migrations. Unfortunately, when using Go migrations you have to write your own logic to retrieve and update version info in the database. Additionally I didn't find a nice way to encapsulate both migration and version logic queries inside the same transaction.
-
golang-migrate/migrate doesn't support Go migrations. Sometimes you need Go code to accomplish complex tasks that couldn't be done using just SQL. Additionally it feels a little heavy for the task.
-
pressly/goose supports both Go and SQL migrations. Unfortunately it doesn't support transaction-less Go migrations. Sometimes using transactions is either not possible with the combination of queries you need in a single migration, or others could be very slow and you simply don't need them for that specific case. It's also pretty big, with internals that are difficult to follow. It's crowded with a lot of functionality that could be done in userland pretty fast.
Pull requests are welcome, this is an early implementation and work is needed in all areas: docs, examples, tests, ci...
The easiest way to contribute is by installing docker and docker-compose, and ensure you comply with code standards and pass all the tests before submitting a PR by running:
$> docker-compose up -d --build
$> docker-compose exec migrator make prepare
$> docker-compose exec migrator make sanity-check
$> docker-compose exec migrator make test
$> docker-compose down
Make sure you also provide relevant information in your PR as detailed in the pull request template.
The logo was taken from @ashleymcnamara's gophers repo. I've just applied slight modifications to it.