Skip to main content

Like `diff` but for PostgreSQL schemas

Project description

migra: PostgreSQL migrations made almost painless

migra is a schema diff tool for PostgreSQL. Use it to compare database schemas or autogenerate migration scripts. Use it in your python scripts, or from the command line like this:

$ migra postgresql:///a postgresql:///b
alter table "public"."products" add column newcolumn text;

alter table "public"."products" add constraint "x" CHECK ((price > (0)::numeric));

migra magically figures out all the statements required to get from A to B.

You can also detect changes for a single specific schema only with --schema myschema.

Folks, schemas are good

Schema migrations are without doubt the most cumbersome and annoying part of working with SQL databases. So much so that some people think that schemas themselves are bad!

But schemas are actually good. Enforcing data consistency and structure is a good thing. It’s the migration tooling that is bad, because it’s harder to use than it should be. migra is an attempt to change that, and make migrations easy, safe, and reliable instead of something to dread.

Migra supports PostgreSQL >= 9.4. Known issues exist with earlier versions.

Full documentation

Documentation is at migra.djrobstep.com.

How it Works

Think of migra as a diff tool for schemas. Suppose database A and database B have similar but slightly different schemas. migra will detect the differences and output the SQL needed to transform A to B.

This includes changes to tables, views, functions, indexes, constraints, enums, sequences, and installed extensions.

You can also use migra as a library to build your own migration scripts, tools, and custom migration flows.

With migra, a typical database migration is a simple three step process.

  1. Autogenerate:

     $ migra --unsafe postgresql:///a postgresql:///b > migration_script.sql
    
  2. Review (and tweak if necessary).

     # If you need to move data about during your script, you can add those changes to your script.
    
  3. Apply:

     $ psql a --single-transaction -f migration_script.sql
    

Migration complete!

IMPORTANT: Practice safe migrations

Migrations can never be fully automatic. As noted above ALWAYS REVIEW MIGRATION SCRIPTS CAREFULLY, ESPECIALLY WHEN DROPPING TABLES IS INVOLVED.

Migra manages schema changes but not your data. If you need to move data around, as part of a migration, you'll need to handle that by editing the script or doing it separately before/after the schema changes.

Best practice is to run your migrations against a copy of your production database first. This helps verify correctness and spot any performance issues before they cause interruptions and downtime on your production database.

migra will deliberately throw an error if any generated statements feature the word "drop". This safety feature is by no means idiot-proof, but might prevent a few obvious blunders.

If you want to generate "drop ..." statements, you need to use the --unsafe flag if using the command, or if using the python package directly, set_safety( to false on your Migration object.

Python Code

Here's how the migra command is implemented under the hood (with a few irrelevant lines removed).

As you can see, it's pretty simple (S here is a context manager that creates a database session from a database URL).

from migra import Migration
from sqlbag import S

with S(args.dburl_from) as s0, S(args.dburl_target) as s1:
    m = Migration(s0, s1)

    if args.unsafe:
        m.set_safety(False)

    m.add_all_changes()
    print(m.sql)

Here the code just opens connections to both databases for the Migration object to analyse. m.add_all_changes() generates the SQL statements for the changes required, and adds to the migration object's list of pending changes. The necessary SQL is now available as a property.

Features and Limitations

migra plays nicely with extensions. Schema contents belonging to extensions will be ignored and left to the extension to manage.

New: migra now plays nicely with view dependencies too, and will drop/create them in the correct order.

Only SQL/PLPGSQL functions are confirmed to work so far. migra ignores functions that use other languages.

Installation

Assuming you have pip, all you need to do is install as follows:

$ pip install migra

If you don't have psycopg2-binary (the PostgreSQL driver) installed yet, you can install this at the same time with:

$ pip install migra[pg]

Contributing

Contributing is easy. Jump into the issues, find a feature or fix you'd like to work on, and get involved. Or create a new issue and suggest something completely different. Beginner-friendly issues are tagged "good first issue", and if you're unsure about any aspect of the process, just ask.

Credits

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

migra-1.0.1541154795.tar.gz (10.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

migra-1.0.1541154795-py2.py3-none-any.whl (22.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

File details

Details for the file migra-1.0.1541154795.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: migra-1.0.1541154795.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 10.3 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/0.12.5 CPython/3.7.0 Linux/4.4.0-137-generic

File hashes

Hashes for migra-1.0.1541154795.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 bb44fa22d96208fc40a5ebcc7b2e1ea1a2c4ee6e6463e3ffd7f51dc602772dbd
MD5 dc0e5bed4926776832bb04439336273a
BLAKE2b-256 a054a9e6687852685c129f9ec42d7ea1c0f81b29779cf11c1923f59ffe54465d

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file migra-1.0.1541154795-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: migra-1.0.1541154795-py2.py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 22.7 kB
  • Tags: Python 2, Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/0.12.5 CPython/3.7.0 Linux/4.4.0-137-generic

File hashes

Hashes for migra-1.0.1541154795-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f2f040207a49003b259a99016bacb97d5adf0f5f460b86f63ddf1a9d517e24b8
MD5 f9ff545f0975d34531f13599442aec4f
BLAKE2b-256 e3ca95830cccd07c3e9d350ca3043d260f436e8564464ee5425cdec90e398bf2

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page