Database migration framework for node.js
$ npm install db-migrate
- Mysql (https://github.com/felixge/node-mysql)
- PostgreSQL (https://github.com/brianc/node-postgres)
- sqlite3 (https://github.com/developmentseed/node-sqlite3)
Usage: db-migrate [up|down|create] migrationName [options]
Options:
--env, -e The environment to run the migrations under. [default: "dev"]
--migrations-dir, -m The directory containing your migration files. [default: "./migrations"]
--count, -c Max number of migrations to run.
--dry-run Prints the SQL but doesn't run it. [boolean]
--verbose, -v Verbose mode. [default: false]
--config Location of the database.json file. [default: "./database.json"]
--force-exit Call system.exit() after migration run [default: false]
To create a migration, execute db-migrate create
with a title. node-db-migrate
will create a node module within ./migrations/
which contains the following two exports:
exports.up = function (db, callback) {
callback();
};
exports.down = function (callback) {
callback();
};
All you have to do is populate these, invoking callback()
when complete, and you are ready to migrate!
For example:
$ db-migrate create add-pets
$ db-migrate create add-owners
The first call creates ./migrations/20111219120000-add-pets.js
, which we can populate:
exports.up = function (db, callback) {
db.createTable('pets', {
id: { type: 'int', primaryKey: true },
name: 'string'
}, callback);
};
exports.down = function (db, callback) {
db.dropTable('pets', callback);
};
The second creates ./migrations/20111219120005-add-owners.js
, which we can populate:
exports.up = function (db, callback) {
db.createTable('owners', {
id: { type: 'int', primaryKey: true },
name: 'string'
}, callback);
};
exports.down = function (db, callback) {
db.dropTable('owners', callback);
};
Executing multiple statements against the database within a single migration requires a bit more care. You can either nest the migrations like:
exports.up = function (db, callback) {
db.createTable('pets', {
id: { type: 'int', primaryKey: true },
name: 'string'
}, createOwners);
function createOwners(err) {
if (err) { callback(err); return; }
db.createTable('owners', {
id: { type: 'int', primaryKey: true },
name: 'string'
}, callback);
}
};
exports.down = function (db, callback) {
db.dropTable('pets', function(err) {
if (err) { callback(err); return; }
db.dropTable('owners', callback);
});
};
or use the async library to simplify things a bit, such as:
var async = require('async');
exports.up = function (db, callback) {
async.series([
db.createTable.bind(db, 'pets', {
id: { type: 'int', primaryKey: true },
name: 'string'
}),
db.createTable.bind(db, 'owners', {
id: { type: 'int', primaryKey: true },
name: 'string'
});
], callback);
};
exports.down = function (db, callback) {
async.series([
db.dropTable.bind(db, 'pets'),
db.dropTable.bind(db, 'owners')
], callback);
};
When first running the migrations, all will be executed in sequence. A table named migrations
will also be created in your database to track which migrations have been applied.
$ db-migrate up
[INFO] Processed migration 20111219120000-add-pets
[INFO] Processed migration 20111219120005-add-owners
[INFO] Done
Subsequent attempts to run these migrations will result in the following output
$ db-migrate up
[INFO] No migrations to run
[INFO] Done
If we were to create another migration using db-migrate create
, and then execute migrations again, we would execute only those not previously executed:
$ db-migrate up
[INFO] Processed migration 20111220120210-add-kennels
[INFO] Done
You can also run migrations incrementally by specifying a date substring. The example below will run all migrations created on or before December 19, 2011:
$ db-migrate up 20111219
[INFO] Processed migration 20111219120000-add-pets
[INFO] Processed migration 20111219120005-add-owners
[INFO] Done
You can also run a specific number of migrations with the -c option:
$ db-migrate up -c 1
[INFO] Processed migration 20111219120000-add-pets
[INFO] Done
All of the down migrations work identically to the up migrations by substituting the word down
for up
.
db-migrate supports the concept of environments. For example, you might have a dev, test, and prod environment where you need to run the migrations at different times. Environment settings are loaded from a database.json file like the one shown below:
{
"dev": {
"driver": "sqlite3",
"filename": "~/dev.db"
},
"test": {
"driver": "sqlite3",
"filename": ":memory:"
},
"prod": {
"driver": "mysql",
"user": "root",
"password": "root"
},
"pg": {
"driver": "pg",
"user": "test",
"password": "test",
"host": "localhost",
"database": "mydb"
},
"other": "postgres://uname:[email protected]/dbname"
}
You can also specify environment variables in your config file by using a special notation. Here is an example:
{
"prod": {
"driver": "mysql",
"user": {"ENV": "PRODUCTION_USERNAME"},
"password": {"ENV": "PRODUCTION_PASSWORD"}
},
}
In this case, db-migrate will search your environment for variables
called PRODUCTION_USERNAME
and PRODUCTION_PASSWORD
, and use those values for the corresponding configuration entry.
Note that if the settings for an environment are represented by a single string that string will be parsed as a database URL.
You can pass the -e or --env option to db-migrate to select the environment you want to run migrations against. The --config option can be used to specify the path to your database.json file if it's not in the current working directory.
db-migrate up --config config/database.json -e prod
The above will run all migrations that haven't yet been run in the prod environment, grabbing the settings from config/database.json.
Alternatively, you can specify a DATABASE_URL environment variable that will be used in place of the configuration file settings. This is helpful for use with Heroku.
Below are examples of all the different migrations supported by db-migrate. Please note that not all migrations are supported by all databases. For example, SQLite does not support dropping columns.
Creates a new table with the specified columns.
Arguments
- tableName - the name of the table to create
- columnSpec - a hash of column definitions
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after table creation
Examples
// with no table options
exports.up = function (db, callback) {
db.createTable('pets', {
id: { type: 'int', primaryKey: true, autoIncrement: true },
name: 'string' // shorthand notation
}, callback);
}
// with table options
exports.up = function (db, callback) {
db.createTable('pets', {
columns: {
id: { type: 'int', primaryKey: true, autoIncrement: true },
name: 'string' // shorthand notation
},
ifNotExists: true
}, callback);
}
Column Specs
The following options are available on column specs
- type - the column data type. Supported types can be found in lib/data_type.js
- length - the column data length, where supported
- primaryKey - true to set the column as a primary key. Compound primary keys are supported by setting the
primaryKey
option to true on multiple columns - autoIncrement - true to mark the column as auto incrementing
- notNull - true to mark the column as non-nullable
- unique - true to add unique constraint to the column
- defaultValue - set the column default value
Drop a database table
Arguments
- tableName - name of the table to drop
- options - table options
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after dropping the table
Table Options
- ifExists - Only drop the table if it already exists
Rename a database table
Arguments
- tableName - existing table name
- options - new table name
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after renaming the table
Add a column to a database table
Arguments
- tableName - name of table to add a column to
- columnName - name of the column to add
- columnSpec - a hash of column definitions
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after adding the column
Column spec is the same as that described in createTable
Remove a column from an existing database table
- tableName - name of table to remove a column from
- columnName - name of the column to remove
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after removing the column
Rename a column
Arguments
- tableName - table containing column to rename
- oldColumnName - existing column name
- newColumnName - new name of the column
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after renaming the column
Change the definition of a column
Arguments
- tableName - table containing column to change
- columnName - existing column name
- columnSpec - a hash containing the column spec
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after changing the column
Add an index
Arguments
- tableName - table to add the index too
- indexName - the name of the index
- columns - an array of column names contained in the index
- unique - whether the index is unique (optional, default false)
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after adding the index
Insert an item into a given column
Arguments
- tableName - table to insert the item into
- columnNameArray - the array existing column names for each item being inserted
- valueArray - the array of values to be inserted into the associated column
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked once the insert has been completed.
Remove an index
Arguments
- tableName - name of the table that has the index (Required for mySql)
- indexName - the name of the index
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after removing the index
Run arbitrary SQL
Arguments
- sql - the SQL query string, possibly with ? replacement parameters
- params - zero or more ? replacement parameters
- callback(err) - callback that will be invoked after executing the SQL
Execute a select statement
Arguments
- sql - the SQL query string, possibly with ? replacement parameters
- params - zero or more ? replacement parameters
- callback(err, results) - callback that will be invoked after executing the SQL
The following command runs the vows tests.
npm test
Running the tests requires a one-time setup of the MySQL and Postgres databases.
mysql -u root -e "CREATE DATABASE db_migrate_test;"
createdb db_migrate_test
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2013 Jeff Kunkle
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.