Gormigrate is a minimalistic migration helper for Gorm. Gorm already has useful migrate functions, just misses proper schema versioning and migration rollback support.
It supports any of the databases Gorm supports:
- PostgreSQL
- MySQL
- SQLite
- Microsoft SQL Server
go get -u gopkg.in/gormigrate.v1
package main
import (
"log"
"gopkg.in/gormigrate.v1"
"github.com/jinzhu/gorm"
_ "github.com/jinzhu/gorm/dialects/sqlite"
)
func main() {
db, err := gorm.Open("sqlite3", "mydb.sqlite3")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
db.LogMode(true)
m := gormigrate.New(db, gormigrate.DefaultOptions, []*gormigrate.Migration{
// create persons table
{
ID: "201608301400",
Migrate: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
// it's a good pratice to copy the struct inside the function,
// so side effects are prevented if the original struct changes during the time
type Person struct {
gorm.Model
Name string
}
return tx.AutoMigrate(&Person{}).Error
},
Rollback: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
return tx.DropTable("people").Error
},
},
// add age column to persons
{
ID: "201608301415",
Migrate: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
// when table already exists, it just adds fields as columns
type Person struct {
Age int
}
return tx.AutoMigrate(&Person{}).Error
},
Rollback: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
return tx.Table("people").DropColumn("age").Error
},
},
// add pets table
{
ID: "201608301430",
Migrate: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
type Pet struct {
gorm.Model
Name string
PersonID int
}
return tx.AutoMigrate(&Pet{}).Error
},
Rollback: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
return tx.DropTable("pets").Error
},
},
})
if err = m.Migrate(); err != nil {
log.Fatalf("Could not migrate: %v", err)
}
log.Printf("Migration did run successfully")
}
If you have a lot of migrations, it can be a pain to run all them, as example, when you are deploying a new instance of the app, in a clean database. To prevent this, you can set a function that will run if no migration was run before (in a new clean database). Remember to create everything here, all tables, foreign keys and what more you need in your app.
type Person struct {
gorm.Model
Name string
Age int
}
type Pet struct {
gorm.Model
Name string
PersonID int
}
m := gormigrate.New(db, gormigrate.DefaultOptions, []*gormigrate.Migration{
// you migrations here
})
m.InitSchema(func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
err := tx.AutoMigrate(
&Person{},
&Pet{},
// all other tables of you app
).Error
if err != nil {
return err
}
if err := tx.Model(Pet{}).AddForeignKey("person_id", "people (id)", "RESTRICT", "RESTRICT").Error; err != nil {
return err
}
// all other foreign keys...
return nil
})
This is the options struct, in case you don't want the defaults:
type Options struct {
// TableName is the migration table.
TableName string
// IDColumnName is the name of column where the migration id will be stored.
IDColumnName string
// IDColumnSize is the length of the migration id column
IDColumnSize int
// UseTransaction makes Gormigrate execute migrations inside a single transaction.
// Keep in mind that not all databases support DDL commands inside transactions.
UseTransaction bool
// ValidateUnknownMigrations will cause migrate to fail if there's unknown migration
// IDs in the database
ValidateUnknownMigrations bool
}
Gormigrate was born to be a simple and minimalistic migration tool for small projects that uses Gorm. You may want to take a look at more advanced solutions like golang-migrate/migrate if you plan to scale.
Be aware that Gormigrate has no builtin lock mechanism, so if you're running it automatically and have a distributed setup (i.e. more than one executable running running at the same time), you might want to use a distributed lock/mutex mechanism to prevent race conditions while running migrations.
To run tests, first copy .sample.env
as sample.env
and edit the connection
string of the database you want to run tests against. Then, run tests like
below:
# running tests for PostgreSQL
go test -tags postgresql
# running test for MySQL
go test -tags mysql
# running tests for SQLite
go test -tags sqlite
# running tests for SQL Server
go test -tags sqlserver
# running test for multiple databases at once
go test -tags 'sqlite postgresql mysql'
Or altenatively, you could use Docker to easily run tests on all databases at once. To do that, make sure Docker is installed and running in your machine and then run:
task docker