Some add-ons on ActiveRecord::Migration
to make migration safer in the context of zero downtime deployment.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'birdspotting'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install birdspotting
You can configure the gem (for instance by creating a config/initializers/birdspotting.rb
) with the following options (here with the default values):
Birdspotting.configure do |config|
config.start_check_at_version = nil
config.check_bypass_env_var = "BYPASS_SCHEMA_STATEMENTS_CHECK"
config.add_column_position_check = true
config.encoding_check = true
config.encoding_check_message = "\n/!\\ You are dealing with a %<type>s field" \
"(%<column_name>s): did you think about emojis and used the appropriate encoding? /!\\ \n\n"
config.rename_column_check = true
config.rename_column_message = "Don't use rename_column! https://stackoverflow.com/a/18542147"
config.remove_column_check = true
end
start_check_at_version
allows to start the checks after some migration version only. Set it to a migration
timestamp like 20151209000000 for instance. When nil, all migrations will be checked.
check_bypass_env_var
specify the ENV var allowing to bypass the checks. Use it to bypass temporarily all the checks so you do it intentionally. You can set it to any value, it's just testing it's set.
For instance if check_bypass_env_var is set to BYPASS_SCHEMA_STATEMENTS_CHECK (the default) you can do:
BYPASS_SCHEMA_STATEMENTS_CHECK=true rails db:migrate:up VERSION=20180806142044
We like to keep or columns organised for the case where we don't use the ORM but some other client.
This will raise a Birdspotting::ColumnPositionMissingError
error if neither :first
or :after
is in the add_columns option.
You can skip this validation by setting add_column_position_check
to false
.
This will add a warning when adding a string (or text) column to warn us to think about encoding issues. Like do we want to support emojis, or unusual characters?
You can skip this validation by setting encoding_check
to false
.
You can customise the warning message by using the encoding_check_message
setting.
By default, we don't want to use the rename column possibility as it will break any live application.
And we want to be able to release and run migration without downtime.
Though when a rename_column is used, it will raise a Birdspotting::RenameColumnForbiddenError
.
You can skip this validation by setting rename_column_check
to false
.
You can customise the warning message by using the rename_column_message
setting.
You might like to customize the warning message to be a link to an internal set of instructions for the correct way to do this.
By default, we don't want to be able to remove a columns which is still in use by a the application.
Thus we check if the column is still present in the columns list.
- If we are not able to find the model, we issue a
Birdspotting::ModelNotFoundError
. - If the column is still present in the model, we issue a
Birdspotting::RemoveColumnForbiddenError
.
We advise to set the column in the ignored_columns
of the model. (See this blog article)
You can skip this validation by setting remove_column_check
to false
.
As said above, we like to keep or columns organised for the case where we don't use the ORM but some other client.
This helper allow to reorder all the columns of a table.
Usage:
class ReorderPostsColumns < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.2]
include Birdspotting::ReorderColumns
def change
reorder_columns_for :posts, %i{
id
author
body
subject
posted_at
created_at
updated_at
}
end
end
CAVEAT:
- All columns must be passed in parameters (or it will raise a
Birdspotting::MismatchedColumnsError
). - For now, it only works on mysql (or it will raise a
Birdspotting::UnsupportedAdapterError
).
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
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/drivy/birdspotting. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Everyone interacting in the Birdspotting project’s codebases and issue trackers is expected to follow the code of conduct.