This is the official repository for Flyway Command-line images.
The following tags are officially supported:
5.2.0
,5.2
,5
,latest
(Dockerfile)5.2.0-alpine
,5.2-alpine
,5-alpine
,latest-alpine
(alpine/Dockerfile)5.1.4
,5.1
(Dockerfile)5.1.4-alpine
,5.1-alpine
(alpine/Dockerfile)5.0.7
,5.0
(Dockerfile)5.0.7-alpine
,5.0-alpine
(alpine/Dockerfile)
To make it easy to run Flyway the way you want to, the following volumes are supported:
Volume | Usage |
---|---|
/flyway/conf |
Directory containing a flyway.conf configuration file |
/flyway/drivers |
Directory containing the JDBC driver for your database |
/flyway/sql |
The SQL files that you want Flyway to use (for SQL-based migrations) |
/flyway/jars |
The jars files that you want Flyway to use (for Java-based migrations) |
You can switch between the various Flyway editions by setting the FLYWAY_EDITION
environment variable
to any of the following values:
Value | Description |
---|---|
community |
Select the Flyway Community Edition (default) |
trial |
Select the Flyway Trial Edition |
pro |
Select the Flyway Pro Edition |
enterprise |
Select the Flyway Enterprise Edition |
The easiest way to get started is simply to test the image by running
docker run --rm boxfuse/flyway
This will give you Flyway Command-line's usage instructions.
To do anything useful however, you must pass the arguments that you need to the image. For example:
docker run --rm boxfuse/flyway -url=jdbc:h2:mem:test -user=sa info
To add your own SQL files, place them in a directory and mount it as the flyway/sql
volume.
Create a new directory and add a file named V1__Initial.sql
with following contents:
CREATE TABLE MyTable (
MyColumn VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL
);
Now run the image with the volume mapped:
docker run --rm -v /my/sqldir:/flyway/sql boxfuse/flyway -url=jdbc:h2:mem:test -user=sa migrate
If you prefer to store those arguments in a config file you can also do so using the flyway/conf
volume.
Create a file named flyway.conf
with the following contents:
flyway.url=jdbc:h2:mem:test
flyway.user=sa
Now run the image with that volume mapped as well:
docker run --rm -v /my/sqldir:/flyway/sql -v /my/confdir:/flyway/conf boxfuse/flyway migrate
Flyway ships by default with drivers for
- SQL Server
- MySQL
- MariaDB
- PostgreSQL
- Sybase ASE
- H2
- HSQLDB
- Derby
- SQLite
If your database is not in this list, or if you want to ship a different or newer driver than the one included you
can do so using the flyway/drivers
volume.
Create a directory and drop for example the Oracle JDBC driver (ojdbc8.jar
) in there.
You can now let Flyway make use of it my mapping that volume as well:
docker run --rm -v /my/sqldir:/flyway/sql -v /my/confdir:/flyway/conf -v /my/driverdir:/flyway/drivers boxfuse/flyway migrate
To pass in Java-based migrations and callbacks you can use the flyway/jars
volume.
Create a directory and drop for a jar with your Java-based migrations in there.
You can now let Flyway make use of it my mapping that volume as well:
docker run --rm -v /my/sqldir:/flyway/sql -v /my/confdir:/flyway/conf -v /my/jardir:/flyway/jars boxfuse/flyway migrate
To run both Flyway and the database that will be migrated in containers, you can use a docker-compose.yml
file that
starts and links both containers.
version: '3'
services:
flyway:
image: boxfuse/flyway
command: -url=jdbc:mysql://db -schemas=myschema -user=root -password=P@ssw0rd migrate
volumes:
- .:/flyway/sql
depends_on:
- db
db:
image: mysql
environment:
- MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=P@ssw0rd
command: --character-set-server=utf8mb4 --collation-server=utf8mb4_unicode_ci
ports:
- 3306:3306
Run docker-compose up -d db
, wait a minute for MySQL to be initialized (or tail logs with docker-compose logs -f
)
then run docker-compose up flyway
.