Dbmate is a database migration tool, to keep your database schema in sync across multiple developers and your production servers. It is a standalone command line tool, which can be used with any language or framework. This is especially helpful if you are writing many services in different languages, and want to maintain some sanity with consistent development tools.
- Supports MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQLite.
- Powerful, purpose-built DSL for writing schema migrations.
- Migrations are timestamp-versioned, to avoid version number conflicts with multiple developers.
- Supports creating and dropping databases (handy in development/test).
- Database connection URL is definied using an environment variable (
DATABASE_URL
by default), or specified on the command line. - Built-in support for reading environment variables from your
.env
file. - Easy to distribute, single self-contained binary.
OSX
Install using Homebrew:
$ brew tap amacneil/dbmate
$ brew install dbmate
Linux
Download the binary directly:
$ sudo curl -fsSL -o /usr/local/bin/dbmate https://github.com/amacneil/dbmate/releases/download/v1.2.1/dbmate-linux-amd64
$ sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/dbmate
Heroku
To use dbmate on Heroku, the easiest method is to store the linux binary in your git repository:
$ mkdir -p bin
$ curl -fsSL -o bin/dbmate-heroku https://github.com/amacneil/dbmate/releases/download/v1.2.1/dbmate-linux-amd64
$ chmod +x bin/dbmate-heroku
$ git add bin/dbmate-heroku
$ git commit -m "Add dbmate binary"
$ git push heroku master
You can now run dbmate on heroku:
$ heroku run bin/dbmate-heroku up
Other
Dbmate can be installed directly using go get
:
$ go get -u github.com/amacneil/dbmate
dbmate # print help
dbmate new # generate a new migration file
dbmate up # create the database (if it does not already exist) and run any pending migrations
dbmate create # create the database
dbmate drop # drop the database
dbmate migrate # run any pending migrations
dbmate rollback # roll back the most recent migration
dbmate down # alias for rollback
Dbmate locates your database using the DATABASE_URL
environment variable by default. If you are writing a twelve-factor app, you should be storing all connection strings in environment variables.
To make this easy in development, dbmate looks for a .env
file in the current directory, and treats any variables listed there as if they were specified in the current environment (existing environment variables take preference, however).
If you do not already have a .env
file, create one and add your database connection URL:
$ cat .env
DATABASE_URL="postgres://[email protected]:5432/myapp_development?sslmode=disable"
DATABASE_URL
should be specified in the following format:
protocol://username:password@host:port/database_name?options
protocol
must be one ofmysql
,postgres
,postgresql
,sqlite
,sqlite3
host
can be either a hostname or IP addressoptions
are driver-specific (refer to the underlying Go SQL drivers if you wish to use these)
MySQL
DATABASE_URL="mysql://username:[email protected]:3306/database_name"
PostgreSQL
When connecting to Postgres, you may need to add the sslmode=disable
option to your connection string, as dbmate by default requires a TLS connection (some other frameworks/languages allow unencrypted connections by default).
DATABASE_URL="postgres://username:[email protected]:5432/database_name?sslmode=disable"
SQLite
SQLite databases are stored on the filesystem, so you do not need to specify a host. By default, files are relative to the current directory. For example, the following will create a database at ./db/database_name.sqlite3
:
DATABASE_URL="sqlite:///db/database_name.sqlite3"
To specify an absolute path, add an additional forward slash to the path. The following will create a database at /tmp/database_name.sqlite3
:
DATABASE_URL="sqlite:////tmp/database_name.sqlite3"
To create a new migration, run dbmate new create_users_table
. You can name the migration anything you like. This will create a file db/migrations/20151127184807_create_users_table.sql
in the current directory:
-- migrate:up
-- migrate:down
To write a migration, simply add your SQL to the migrate:up
section:
-- migrate:up
create table users (
id integer,
name varchar(255),
email varchar(255) not null
);
-- migrate:down
Note: Migration files are named in the format
[version]_[description].sql
. Only the version (defined as all leading numeric characters in the file name) is recorded in the database, so you can safely rename a migration file without having any effect on its current application state.
Run dbmate up
to run any pending migrations.
$ dbmate up
Creating: myapp_development
Applying: 20151127184807_create_users_table.sql
Note:
dbmate up
will create the database if it does not already exist (assuming the current user has permission to create databases). If you want to run migrations without creating the database, rundbmate migrate
.
By default, dbmate doesn't know how to roll back a migration. In development, it's often useful to be able to revert your database to a previous state. To accomplish this, implement the migrate:down
section:
-- migrate:up
create table users (
id integer,
name varchar(255),
email varchar(255) not null
);
-- migrate:down
drop table users;
Run dbmate rollback
to roll back the most recent migration:
$ dbmate rollback
Rolling back: 20151127184807_create_users_table.sql
The following command line options are available with all commands. You must use command line arguments in the order dbmate [global options] command [command options]
.
--migrations-dir, -d "./db/migrations"
- where to keep the migration files.--env, -e "DATABASE_URL"
- specify an environment variable to read the database connection URL from.
For example, before running your test suite, you may wish to drop and recreate the test database. One easy way to do this is to store your test database connection URL in the TEST_DATABASE_URL
environment variable:
$ cat .env
TEST_DATABASE_URL="postgres://[email protected]:5432/myapp_test?sslmode=disable"
You can then specify this environment variable in your test script (Makefile or similar):
$ dbmate -e TEST_DATABASE_URL drop
Dropping: myapp_test
$ dbmate -e TEST_DATABASE_URL up
Creating: myapp_test
Applying: 20151127184807_create_users_table.sql
How do I use dbmate under Alpine linux?
Alpine linux uses musl libc, which is incompatible with how we build SQLite support (using cgo). If you want Alpine linux support, and don't mind sacrificing SQLite support, please use the dbmate-linux-musl-amd64
build found on the releases page.
Dbmate is written in Go, pull requests are welcome.
Tests are run against a real database using docker-compose. First, install the Docker Toolbox.
Make sure you have docker running:
$ docker-machine start default && eval "$(docker-machine env default)"
To build a docker image and run the tests:
$ make
To run just the lint and tests (without completely rebuilding the docker image):
$ make lint test