Skip to content

db-schema/core

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

DbSchema Build Status Gem Version Join the chat at https://gitter.im/7even/db_schema

DbSchema is an opinionated database schema management tool that lets you maintain your DB schema with a single ruby file.

It works like this:

  • you create a schema.rb file where you describe the schema you want in a special DSL
  • you make your application load this file as early as possible during the application bootup in development and test environments
  • you create a rake task that loads your schema.rb and tell your favorite deployment tool to run it on each deploy
  • each time you need to change the schema you just change the schema.rb file and commit it to your VCS

As a result you always have an up-to-date database schema. No need to run and rollback migrations, no need to even think about the extra step - DbSchema compares the schema you want with the schema your database has and applies all necessary changes to the latter. This operation is idempotent - if DbSchema sees that the database already has the requested schema it does nothing.

Currently DbSchema only supports PostgreSQL.

Reasons to use

With DbSchema you almost never need to write migrations by hand and manage a collection of migration files. This gives you a list of important benefits:

  • no more YouHaveABunchOfPendingMigrations errors - all needed operations are computed from the differences between the schema definition and the actual database schema
  • no need to write separate :up and :down migrations - this is all handled automatically
  • there is no structure.sql with a database dump that constantly changes without reason

But the main reason of DbSchema existence is the pain of switching between long-running VCS branches with different migrations without resetting the database. Have you ever switched to a different branch only to see something like this?

Yeah, you must remember the oldest NO FILE migration, switch back to the previous branch, roll back every migration up to that NO FILE, discard all changes in schema.rb/structure.sql (and model annotations if you have any), then switch the branch again and migrate these down migrations. If you already wrote some code to be committed to the new branch you need to make sure it won't get discarded so a simple git reset --hard won't do. Every migration or rollback loads the whole app, resulting in 10+ seconds wasted. And at the end of it all you are trying to recall why did you ever want to switch to that branch.

DbSchema does not rely on migration files and/or schema_migrations table in the database so it seamlessly changes the schema to the one defined in the branch you switched to. There is no step 2.

Of course if you are switching from a branch that defines table A to a branch that doesn't define table A then you lose that table with all the data in it. But you would lose it even with manual migrations.

Installation

Add these lines to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'db_schema', '~> 0.5.0'
gem 'db_schema-reader-postgres', '~> 0.2.0'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install db_schema db_schema-reader-postgres

The db_schema-reader-postgres gem is a PostgreSQL adapter for DbSchema::Reader (a module which is responsible for reading the current database schema).

Upgrading to 0.5

Version 0.5 introduced full support for serial fields and primary keys slightly changing the DSL for defining the primary key:

db.table :users do |t|
  # before 0.5
  t.primary_key :id
  # since 0.5
  t.serial :id, primary_key: true
end

So if you get an Index "users_pkey" refers to a missing field "users.id" error you should change your schema definition to the new syntax.

Usage

First you need to configure DbSchema so it knows how to connect to your database. This should happen in a file that is loaded during the application boot process - a Rails or Hanami initializer would do.

DbSchema can be configured with a call to DbSchema.configure:

# config/initializers/db_schema.rb
DbSchema.configure(
  database: 'my_app_development'
)

There is also a Rails' database.yml-compatible configure_from_yaml method. DbSchema configuration is discussed in detail here.

After DbSchema is configured you can load your schema definition file:

# config/initializers/db_schema.rb

# ...
load application_root.join('db/schema.rb')

This db/schema.rb file will contain a description of your database structure (you can choose any filename you want). When you load this file it instantly applies the described structure to your database. Be sure to keep this file under version control as it will be the single source of truth about the database structure.

# db/schema.rb
DbSchema.describe do |db|
  db.table :users do |t|
    t.serial      :id,              primary_key: true
    t.varchar     :email,           null: false, unique: true
    t.varchar     :password_digest, length: 40
    t.timestamptz :created_at
    t.timestamptz :updated_at
  end
end

Database schema definition DSL is documented here.

If you want to analyze your database structure in any way from your app (e.g. defining methods with #define_method for each enum value) you can use DbSchema.current_schema - it returns a cached copy of the database structure as a DbSchema::Definitions::Schema object which you can query in different ways. It is available after the schema was applied by DbSchema (DbSchema.describe remembers the current schema of the database and exposes it at .current_schema). Documentation for schema analysis DSL can be found here.

Production setup

In order to get an always-up-to-date database schema in development and test environments you need to load the schema definition when your application is starting up. But if you use an application server with multiple workers (puma in cluster mode, unicorn) in other environments (production, staging) you may get yourself into situation when different workers simultaneously run DbSchema code applying the same changes to your database. If this is the case you will need to disable loading the schema definition in those environments and do that from a rake task called from your deploy script:

# config/initializers/db_schema.rb
DbSchema.configure(url: ENV['DATABASE_URL'])

if ENV['APP_ENV'] == 'development' || ENV['APP_ENV'] == 'test'
  load application_root.join('db/schema.rb')
end

# lib/tasks/db_schema.rake
namespace :db do
  namespace :schema do
    desc 'Apply database schema'
    task apply: :environment do
      load application_root.join('db/schema.rb')
    end
  end
end

Then you just call rake db:schema:apply from your deploy script before restarting the app.

If your production setup doesn't include multiple application processes starting simultaneously (for example if you run one Puma process per docker container and replace containers successively on deploy) you can go the simple way and just load application_root.join('db/schema.rb') in any environment right from the initializer. The first puma process will apply the schema while the subsequent ones will see there's nothing left to do.

How it works

When you call DbSchema.describe with a block that describes the database structure for your application DbSchema compares this desired structure with the actual structure your database has at the moment.

The database structure is a tree; it's top-level node is a Schema object that has several child nodes - tables, enums and extensions. Table objects in turn have child nodes describing everything that belongs to a table - fields, indexes etc. The full tree structure looks like this:

  • Schema
    • Table
      • Field
      • Index
      • Check constraint
      • Foreign key
    • Enum type
    • Extension

DbSchema compares two structure trees by finding objects with matching names in both trees. Desired objects that don't have a match in the actual schema produce a create operation, while actual objects that don't have a counterpart in the desired schema generate a drop operation.

Then each matching pair is compared by attributes and child objects:

  • if the objects differ in their attributes they make an alter operation if it is supported for that kind of object (that's tables, fields and enum types at the moment) or a pair of drop and create operations if it's not
  • if the objects differ in their child nodes then the process continues recursively for these two sets of child objects
  • if the objects are identical no operations take place on them

Then DbSchema runs all these operations inside a transaction.

For example if desired schema has tables users, cities and posts, and actual schema only has users and posts (where posts lack a couple of fields compared to the desired version), then the cities table will be created and new fields will be added to posts.

The fact that objects are compared by name implies a very important detail: you can't rename anything just by changing the name in the definition.

Imagine that you have a foo table in your schema definition and an identical table in the database. If you change it's name to bar in the definition and run your app DbSchema will see there is a bar table in the desired schema but no match in the database so a new bar table will be created; and since there is a foo table in the actual schema without a counterpart in the desired schema DbSchema will drop this table. Of course all data in the foo table will be lost.

This can be solved with conditional migrations - a tool that allows you to make some changes to your database before the schema comparison described earlier takes control. A migration describes all required operations in an imperative manner (rename_table, drop_index etc) with a dedicated DSL. DbSchema doesn't store anything about migrations in the database though (as opposed to ActiveRecord or Sequel migrations); instead you have to provide some conditions required to run the migration (the goal here is to come up with conditions that a) will only trigger if the migration wasn't applied yet and b) are necessary for the migration to work) - like "rename the users table to people only if the database has a users table" (DbSchema also provides a simple DSL for schema analysis). This way the migration won't be applied again and the whole DbSchema process stays idempotent. Also you don't have to keep these migrations forever - once a migration is applied to databases in all environments you can safely delete it (though you can give your teammates a week or two to keep up).

Conditional migrations are described here.

Known problems and limitations

  • array element type attributes are not supported
  • precision in all date/time types isn't supported
  • no support for databases other than PostgreSQL

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment. To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at db-schema/core.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.