Migrat is a pluggable Node.js migration tool designed for diverse stacks and processes. It is not tied any particular database engine and supports multi-node environments by differentiating migrations that should run on one node (to update a global database, for instance) and migrations that should run on all nodes (like updating a per-node cache).
$ npm install -g migrat
- Migrations can be set to set to run once globally, or once per server.
- Supports global locking during migration runs, to prevent multiple servers attempting to perform global migrations at the same time.
- Pass context through to each migration. This can be a logging interface, a set of database connections, ... it's up to you.
- Custom hooks throughout the migration process.
- Perform dry runs to see the migration plan before it's executed.
- Plugin-friendly (see below)
Migrat works great on its own, but it's even better with plugins to reduce boilerplate. Plugin list (the ones without links haven't been developed yet – help welcome (see the "Writing Plugins" guide):
migrat-postgres
– Locks, state storage, and migration files in pure SQL.migrat-sh
– Execute shell script migration files.migrat-mysql
– Locks, state storage, and migration files in pure SQL.migrat-hipchat
– Send live migration status to a HipChat room.migrat-slack
– Send live migration status to a Slack channel.migrat-datadog
– Send migration results to a Datadog dashboard.migrat-php
– Execute PHP migration files.
With plugins, you can have a migration directory that looks like:
./1414275876214-create-schema.psql
./1414275879591-backfill-avatars.js
./1414275876214-process-something.php
$ migrat create add-user-table
# creates migrations/1413963352671-add-user-table.js
$ migrat create add-user-table --all-nodes
# creates migrations/1413963352671-add-user-table.all.js
$ migrat init # set up a migrat project in the current directory
$ migrat up --dry-run # show which migrations need to be run
$ migrat up [filename] # get up to date (only forward)
$ migrat down <filename> # go back to a specific migration
Migration files are pretty standard:
// (required) apply the change
module.exports.up = function(context, callback) { /* ... */ };
// (required) revert the change
module.exports.down = function(context, callback) { /* ... */ };
// (optional) verify the change took place
module.exports.check = function(context, callback) { /* ... */ };
You can also use async methods:
// (required) apply the change
module.exports.up = async function(context) { /* ... */ };
// (required) revert the change
module.exports.down = async function(context) { /* ... */ };
// (optional) verify the change took place
module.exports.check = async function(context) { /* ... */ };
Migrat will look for for a migrat.config.js
in your project directory, unless overriden by --config
:
module.exports = {
// REQUIRED. The folder to store migration scripts in.
migrationsDir: './migrations',
// REQUIRED. Where the current migration state specific to the
// current machine is to be stored. This is only used to for
// migrations created with the `--all-nodes` flag. Make sure
// it is writable by the user executing migrat and isn't wiped
// out between deploys.
localState: '/var/lib/my_app/.migratdb',
// OPTIONAL. Invoked at the beginning of a run, this method
// should return an object with any details you want passed
// through to all migrations. This can be database connections,
// logging interfaces, etc.
context: function(callback) {
callback(null, {});
},
// REQUIRED. Persists the current migration state. The `state`
// argument will always be a variable-length string. Store it
// to redis, disk, database, ... whatever suits you.
storeState: function(state, callback) {
callback();
},
// REQUIRED. This method is responsible for fetching the
// current migration state, persisted by `storeState`.
fetchState: function(callback) {
callback(null, state);
},
// OPTIONAL. Provide a function that returns a string to use
// as the source for a new migration file. The `details`
// argument will be an object containing:
// * "user" The current user.
// * "filename" The name of migration file.
// * "timestamp" The Date object used to put the timestamp
// at the beginning of the migration filename.
migrationTemplate: function(details, callback) {
fs.readFile('path/to/template.js', 'utf8', callback);
},
// OPTIONAL. Invoked at the beginning of a migration
// run. Use this to establish a global lock. You can
// either wait for a lock to become available, or fail.
lock: function(callback) {
callback();
},
// OPTIONAL (unless `lock` is implemented). Implement this to
// release any global lock acquired by the `lock` function.
unlock: function(callback) {
callback();
},
// OPTIONAL. The number of milliseconds to give up after if
// a lock cannot be obtained or released. This is only
// applicable if the `lock` function is implemented.
lockTimeout: 0,
// OPTIONAL. Invoked at the very beginning of a run before
// any locks are acquired or state is read. Use this to
// establish any connections needed by `fetchState`,
// `storeState`, `lock`, `unlock`, and `context`.
initialize: function(callback) {
callback();
},
// OPTIONAL. Callback executed right before all
// queued migrations are executed.
beforeRun: function(runlist, callback) {
callback();
},
// OPTIONAL. Callback executed before each migration.
beforeEach: function(runlist_item, callback) {
callback();
},
// OPTIONAL. Callback executed after each migration.
afterEach: function(err, runlist_item, callback) {
callback();
},
// OPTIONAL. Callback executed right after all
// queued migrations are executed.
afterRun: function(err, runlist, callback) {
callback();
},
// OPTIONAL. Invoked at the very tail end of a run once locks
// are released and state has been stored. Use this to tear
// down any connections established in `initialize`.
terminate: function(callback) {
callback();
}
};
Before submitting pull requests, please update the tests and make sure they all pass.
$ npm test
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