Gormigrate is a minimalistic migration helper for Gorm. Gorm already has useful migrate functions, just misses proper schema versioning and migration rollback support.
IMPORTANT: If you need support to Gorm v1 (which uses
github.com/jinzhu/gorm
as its import path), please import Gormigrate by using thegopkg.in/gormigrate.v1
import path.The current Gorm version (v2) is supported by using the
github.com/go-gormigrate/gormigrate/v2
import path as described in the documentation below.
It supports any of the databases Gorm supports:
- MySQL
- PostgreSQL
- SQLite
- Microsoft SQL Server
- TiDB
- Clickhouse
package main
import (
"log"
"github.com/go-gormigrate/gormigrate/v2"
"github.com/google/uuid"
"gorm.io/driver/sqlite"
"gorm.io/gorm"
"gorm.io/gorm/logger"
)
func main() {
db, err := gorm.Open(sqlite.Open("./data.db"), &gorm.Config{
Logger: logger.Default.LogMode(logger.Info),
})
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
m := gormigrate.New(db, gormigrate.DefaultOptions, []*gormigrate.Migration{{
// create `users` table
ID: "201608301400",
Migrate: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
// it's a good pratice to copy the struct inside the function,
// so side effects are prevented if the original struct changes during the time
type user struct {
ID uuid.UUID `gorm:"type:uuid;primaryKey;uniqueIndex"`
Name string
}
return tx.Migrator().CreateTable(&user{})
},
Rollback: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
return tx.Migrator().DropTable("users")
},
}, {
// add `age` column to `users` table
ID: "201608301415",
Migrate: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
// when table already exists, define only columns that are about to change
type user struct {
Age int
}
return tx.Migrator().AddColumn(&user{}, "Age")
},
Rollback: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
type user struct {
Age int
}
return db.Migrator().DropColumn(&user{}, "Age")
},
}, {
// create `organizations` table where users belong to
ID: "201608301430",
Migrate: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
type organization struct {
ID uuid.UUID `gorm:"type:uuid;primaryKey;uniqueIndex"`
Name string
Address string
}
if err := tx.Migrator().CreateTable(&organization{}); err != nil {
return err
}
type user struct {
OrganizationID uuid.UUID `gorm:"type:uuid"`
}
return tx.Migrator().AddColumn(&user{}, "OrganizationID")
},
Rollback: func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
type user struct {
OrganizationID uuid.UUID `gorm:"type:uuid"`
}
if err := db.Migrator().DropColumn(&user{}, "OrganizationID"); err != nil {
return err
}
return tx.Migrator().DropTable("organizations")
},
}})
if err = m.Migrate(); err != nil {
log.Fatalf("Migration failed: %v", err)
}
log.Println("Migration did run successfully")
}
If you have a lot of migrations, it can be a pain to run all them, as example, when you are deploying a new instance of the app, in a clean database. To prevent this, you can set a function that will run if no migration was run before (in a new clean database). Remember to create everything here, all tables, foreign keys and what more you need in your app.
type Organization struct {
gorm.Model
Name string
Address string
}
type User struct {
gorm.Model
Name string
Age int
OrganizationID uint
}
m := gormigrate.New(db, gormigrate.DefaultOptions, []*gormigrate.Migration{
// your migrations here
})
m.InitSchema(func(tx *gorm.DB) error {
err := tx.AutoMigrate(
&Organization{},
&User{},
// all other tables of you app
)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if err := tx.Exec("ALTER TABLE users ADD CONSTRAINT fk_users_organizations FOREIGN KEY (organization_id) REFERENCES organizations (id)").Error; err != nil {
return err
}
// all other constraints, indexes, etc...
return nil
})
This is the options struct, in case you don't want the defaults:
type Options struct {
// TableName is the migration table.
TableName string
// IDColumnName is the name of column where the migration id will be stored.
IDColumnName string
// IDColumnSize is the length of the migration id column
IDColumnSize int
// UseTransaction makes Gormigrate execute migrations inside a single transaction.
// Keep in mind that not all databases support DDL commands inside transactions.
UseTransaction bool
// ValidateUnknownMigrations will cause migrate to fail if there's unknown migration
// IDs in the database
ValidateUnknownMigrations bool
}
Gormigrate was born to be a simple and minimalistic migration tool for small projects that uses Gorm. You may want to take a look at more advanced solutions like golang-migrate/migrate if you plan to scale.
Be aware that Gormigrate has no builtin lock mechanism, so if you're running it automatically and have a distributed setup (i.e. more than one executable running at the same time), you might want to use a distributed lock/mutex mechanism to prevent race conditions while running migrations.
To run integration tests, some preparations are needed. Please ensure you have task and docker installed. Then:
- Ensure target or all databases are available and ready to accept connections.
You can start databases locally with
task docker:compose:up
- Copy
integration-test/.example.env
asintegration-test/.env
and adjust the database connection ports and credentials when needed. - Run integration test for single database or for all
# run test for MySQL
task test:mysql
# run test for PostgreSQL
task test:postgres
# run test for SQLite
task test:sqlite
# run test for Microsoft SQL Server
task test:sqlserver
# run test for all databases
task test:all
Alternatively, you can run everything in one step: task docker:test