I have delivered a Product to the customer. Now I have upgraded the Product, which includes changes to the database.
Customer wants to upgrade the Product. Now will Flyway help in the migration of Customer data from older version to newer version. Please let me know, if this is a valid use case. The flyway documentation talks about its use during development only.
Flyway allows you to change your database by running a set of scripts in a defined order. These scripts are called 'migrations' as they allow you to 'migrate' your database from one version to another.
The idea is you can start with an an empty database and each migration script will successively bring that database up from empty up to the current version. However, it's also possible to start with an existing database by creating a 'baseline' migration.
As SudhirR said, Flyway's primary use case is to define schema changes. However, it's perfectly possible to change data also. Since Flyway is just running plain SQL, in principle almost anything you can do in a SQL script you can also do in a Flyway migration.
In the case you described it should be possible to use Flyway to migrate the customer database. The steps you could take are:
Generate a sql script that includes the entire DDL (including indexes, triggers, procedures, ...) of the production database. To do this you will need to add insert statements for all the reference data present in the database.
Save this script in your Flyway project as something like 'V1__base_version.sql'
Run the flyway baseline command against your production database
This will set up your production database for use with Flyway
Add a new migration script to migrate your customer's data to the new version
e.g. create new table, copy data from old table to new table, delete old table
Run flyway migrate to upgrade production
These steps are adapted from the Flyway documentation page here.
Of course you should read the Flyway docs and manually test on a throwaway DB before you run anything against production. However I think in principle Flyway could be a good fit for your use case.
Flyway should be used for schema migrations and any reference data (basic data that is required by the system/application in order to function properly).
Putting client specific data migrations would not be a use case. However, if you can represent the data migration "generically" by not using IDs and instead use names or types than it could be a candidate. Meaning if you could write a migration in a way that could be applied to all clients, then that would be the use case to put it in as a flyway migration.
Otherwise data migrations would be applied in some other way outside of the process like requesting special access to the database or having some team that manages the database to apply the scripts.
If you are doing custom data modifications quite often then I'd say something is wrong in some other area of the SDLC and you may need to increase testing so that bugs don't mess up the data in the first place.
Related
We have a production system with a large DB (several hundred tables) and would like to begin using Flyway to manage DDL changes that occur through the dev cycle. However, the organization is setup in such a way that there are production DB changes that sometimes occur, mostly just data changes but possibly DDL, that will happen outside of a data migration tool. While this is obviously an organizational challenge, does this fact alone cripple a tool like Flyway? Or is there a workflow where Flyway could rebuild its indices on demand such that any out-of-band DB change like this is pulled in?
We'd love to use Flyway, but would need to integrate it incrementally until all teams using the system are trained/bought in.
When introducing Flyway to a DB with existing data you will need to baseline Flyway to integrate with your existing data. See baseline.
For changes made after this, Flyway will only track and version changes made from its own migration scripts and not changes made externally to it. However, this does not mean you cannot use the two together, but you would need to be more aware of your database structure to avoid conflicts between your flyway migrations and external changes.
Transactional data changes made to production shouldn't impact Flyway as these won't be versioned.
If you're referring to static data (eg lookup data) that you'd like Flyway to manage, then this isn't detected by Flyway (at least not today). If you discover that you have drift you'll need to add the changes as a new migration script using idempotent syntax to ensure that next time this runs against production it doesn't try to make the same changes again.
For out-of-band schema changes, The enterprise edition of Flyway has a drift check, so at least you'd be made aware of them. However, as for the data changes described above, you'll need to manually add these schema changes as an idempotent migration script.
We have not used Flyway from the beginning of our project. We are at an advanced state of development. An expert review has suggested to use Flyway in our project.
The problem is that we have moved part of our services (microservices) into another testing environment as well.
What is the best way to properly implement Flyway? The requirements are:
In Development environment, no need to alter the schema which is already existing. But all new scripts should be done using Flyway.
In Testing environment, no need to alter the schema which is already existing. But what is not available in testing environment should be created automatically using Flyway when we do migrate project from Dev to test.
When we do migration to a totally new envrionment (UAT, Production etc) the entire schema should be created automatically using Flyway.
From the documentation, what I understood is:
Take a backup of the development schema (both DDL and DML) as SQL script files, give a file name like V1_0_1__initial.sql.
Clean the development database using "flyway clean".
Baseline the Development database "flyway baseline -baselineversion=1.0.0"
Now, execute "flyway migrate" which will apply the SQL script file V1_0_1__initial.sql.
Any new scripts should be written with higher version numbers (like V2_0_1__account_table.sql)
Is this the correct way or is there any better way to do this?
The problem is that I have a test database where we have different set of data (Data in Dev and test are different and I would like to keep the data as it is in both the environments). If so, is it good to separate the DDL and DML in different script files when we take it from the Dev environment and apply them separately in each environment? The DML can be added manually as required; but bit confused if I am doing the right thing.
Thanks in advance.
So, there are actually two questions here. Data management and Flyway management.
In terms of data management, yes, that should be a separate thing. Data grows and grows. Trying to manage data, beyond simple lookup tables, from source control quickly becomes very problematic. Not to mention that you want different data in different environments. This also makes automating deployments much more difficult (branching would be your friend if you insist on going this route, one branch for each data set, then deploy appropriately).
You can implement Flyway on an existing project, yes. The key is establishing the baseline. You don't have to do all the steps you outlined above. Let's say you have an existing database. You have to get the script that defines that database. That single script should include all appropriate DDL (and, if you want, DML). Name it following the Flyway standards. Something like V1.0__Baseline.sql.
With that in place, all you must do is run:
flyway baseline
That will establish your existing code base as the start point. From there, you just have to create scripts following the naming standard: V1.1xxx V2.0xxx V53000.1xxx. And run
flyway migrate
To deploy appropriate changes.
The only caveat to this is that, as the documentation states, you must ensure that all your databases match this V1.0 that you're creating and marking as the baseline. Any deviation will cause errors as you introduce new changes and migrate them into place. As long as you've got matching baseline points, you should be able to proceed with different data in different environments with no issues.
This is my how-to instruction on integration flyway with prod DB: https://delicious-snipe-938.notion.site/How-to-integrate-Flyway-with-existing-MySQL-DB-in-Prod-PostgreSQL-is-similar-1eabafa8a0e844e88205c2f32513bbbe.
scenario: I have two databases.
The first database is a blank database used for testing. I essentially run flyway:migrate and build the database with complete schema and run my integration tests against that blank database. Any data that the integration tests need are inserted before the tests are run. Finally, the database is tore down by using flyway:clean to make sure the next build that comes through has a clean db to work with.
The second database has data in it.
Problem: The build fails in the integration phase because I have migration scripts that depends on data which database 1 doesn't have. Basically I'm inserting data based on certain data existing in the db.
Is the best common practice for flyway to only have ddl change type migration scripts and no data insert/update scripts?
Consider adding your reference data behind an IF statement in an afterMigrate callback:
http://flywaydb.org/documentation/callbacks.html
In the best case you add it as a migration and change it in the future via migrations. Including production. Things can be more complicated if that data can be changed on real environments by other means. In such case I would personally prefer to have a (shared) test fixture to insert the sample data.
I am working with doctrine:migrations:diff in order to prepare database evolutions.
This command creates files into app/DoctrineMigrations
Thoses files contains sql commands in order to upgrade or downgrade database scructure.
I want to store those sql commands into the database itself. In fact, i have several instances of databases. If sql commands are store into files, it is a big problem.
I have read somewhere that DoctrineMigrations bundle can create a table called "migration_versions", but i do not manage to find where i have read this...
I cannot really understand what you're trying to do.
Migrations are used when your code needs altered database structure. For example, a new table or a new column. These new requirements for a table or column comes from your newly written code, so it's only natural to place the migrations also as a code in your repository.
How and when would migrations even get to your database? How would you guarantee that migration is executed before the code changes, which use that new structure?
Generally, migrations are used in this way:
You develop your code, add new features, change existing ones. Your code needs changes to database.
You generate doctrine migration class, which contains needed SQL statements for your current database to get to the needed state.
You alter the class adding any more required SQL statements. For example, UPDATE statements to migrate your data, not only the structure.
You execute migration locally.
You test your code with database changes. If you need more changes, you either add new migration, or execute migration down, delete it and regenerate it. Never change the migration class, as you'll loose what's supposed to be in the database and what's not.
You commit your migration together with code that uses it.
Then comes the deployment part:
- For each server, upload the code, clear and warm-up cache, run other installation scripts. Then run migrations. And only then switch to the new code.
This way your database is always in-sync with current code in the server that uses that database.
migration_versions database table is created automatically by doctrine migrations. It holds only the version numbers of migration classes - it's used for keeping track which migrations were already run and which was not.
This way when you run doctrine:migrations:migrate all not-yet-ran migrations are executed. This allows to migrate few commits at once, have several migrations in a commit etc.
I looked at the Flyway samples and documentation and tried to understand if it is useful in my environment.
The following conceptual detail is unclear to me: How does Flyway manage the changes between database versions? It obviously does NOT compare database life-instances (see answer here:Can Flyway find out and generate migration files from datamodel?)
In detail my setup looks like this:
I create SQL create and insert scripts when coding (automatically and manually). This means every version of my database is represented by a number of insert/create statements.
In my world I execute these scripts through a database tool (sqlplus from Oracle). Each run would setup the database _from_scratch_ (!).
Can I put these very same scripts 1 to 1 inside the "migration" path of Flyway? What happens if the target database is way older than the last "migration step" I did (or flyway did not yet exist when it was installed)?
Update:
I got some input from another Flyway user:
It seems like each "migration" (version of the database) has to be hand-written SQL/Java code and contains only "updates" from the previous "migration" of database.
If this is true, I wonder how this can be used with traditional coding technics: in my world SQL statements are generated automatically and contain all database init/create statements, not just "updates" to some previous version. If my SQL code generator could do that, then I wouldn't even need a tool like Flyway :-).
Your question about "how to handle a DB that has a longer history than there are migration scripts?" You need to create a V1_ migration/sql script that matches/recreates your latest DB schema. Something that can take a blank DB to what you have today. Create/generate that sql script using your existing DB tools and then put it in flyways migration directory. (And test V1 by using flyway against a clean DB and see if you get what you expect.) http://flywaydb.org/documentation/existing.html
After that point in time, all later versions must be added in as you work. When you decide you need a new table, in your dev environment, write a new V*_.sql that modifies your schema to the way you need it.
This blog goes over this situation for a Spring/SQL application. https://blog.synyx.de/2012/10/database-migration-using-flyway-and-spring-and-existing-data/