Migrana is a Datomic migration tool loosely inspired in a mix of conformity and Rails' Active Record Migrations.
Migrana gives you the control over how your Datomic database evolves. It allows you to either write migrations and ensure that they run once and only once or let Migrana infer schema evolution to you.
Datomic and its immutable nature simplifies migrations tremendously in comparison to more traditional databases. However, every now and again, a few things need change along the way. Two common scenarios are:
- When schema changes are not trivial and you end up needing to deal with
alterations that are not directly possible without a few interventions
beforehand (see Altering Schema Attributes
for more details). An example would be for instance setting an attribute
as
:db/unique
. Since uniqueness will be enforced, then making sure that the transaction takes care of such conflictious cases will guarantee that the new schema setting is applied successfully. - When there are data transformations as part of the migration. An example
is a hypothetical situation for example where all entities that used to
have
:card/ratings
attribute now also need a default:card/has-been-rated?
attached to them).
- Getting Started
- Usage
- Schema Inference
- Dry Running Migrations
- Manual Migrations
- Migrations as Code
- Options
- Bugs
- Help!
The recommended approach is to install Migrana as a user-level plugin on your lein
profiles.clj
file (~/.lein/profiles.clj
). This will make Migrana available globally:
{:user {:plugins [[migrana "<version>"]]}}
Then run from anywhere:
$ lein help migrana
Alternatevely you can use Migrana as a project-level plugin putting
[migrana "<version>"]
into the :plugins
vector of your project.clj
.
Then run from your project root:
$ lein help migrana
Latest Migrana version:
Let's assume you have a Datomic schema file on resources/schema.edn
:
[{:db/ident :person/name
:db/valueType :db.type/string
:db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one}
{:db/ident :person/relationship-status
:db/valueType :db.type/ref
:db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one
:db/doc "Whether the person is married or single."}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/single}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/married}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/divorced}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/widowed}]]
Then run:
$ lein migrana run datomic:dev://localhost:4334/my-db
Note: If you have the environment variable DATOMIC_URI
set, you can call
lein migrana run
and it will connect to the DB specified there.
Migrana will make sure that your schema is in the DB and will also create a
migration for you at resources/migrations
with the timestamp
YYYYMMDDHHMMSS_schema_inference.edn
. I.e.:
$ ls resources/migrations
20171124200143_schema_inference.edn
If you run lein migrana run
again, Migrana will not do anything because it
will detect that the schema file is unchanged and that it has already
been asserted into the DB.
If you check the contents of 20171124200143_schema_inference.edn
you'll see:
{:tx-data [{:db/ident :person/name
:db/valueType :db.type/string
:db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one}
{:db/ident :person/relationship-status
:db/valueType :db.type/ref
:db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one
:db/doc "Whether the person is married or single."}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/single}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/married}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/divorced}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/widowed}]}
Now, let's suppose we need to add a new attribute for :person/email
which we wish to be an identity and let's also add an index to :person/name
.
Let's change our resources/schema.edn
to:
[{:db/ident :person/name
:db/valueType :db.type/string
:db/index true
:db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one}
{:db/ident :person/email
:db/valueType :db.type/string
:db/unique :db.type/identity
:db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one}
{:db/ident :person/relationship-status
:db/valueType :db.type/ref
:db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one
:db/doc "Whether the person is married or single."}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/single}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/married}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/divorced}
{:db/ident :relationship-status/widowed}]]
After the change we run lein migrana run
again:
$ lein migrana run datomic:dev://localhost:4334/my-db
And let's check what Migrana has done to our resources/migrations
:
$ ls resources/migrations
20171124200143_schema_inference.edn 20171124200525_schema_inference.edn
When you check the content of the new file
(20171124200525_schema_inference.edn
), this is what you have:
{:tx-data [{:db/ident :person/name
:db/index true}
{:db/ident :person/email
:db/valueType :db.type/string
:db/unique :db.type/identity
:db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one}]}
You probably noticed that, until now, the migration files are named
YYYYMMDDHHMMSS_schema_inference.edn
. That's because running lein migrana run
as we have been doing will use its schema inference features (Migrana
will infer the migration required based on how the Datomic schema file
has changed).
Migrana can detect only additions (such as we have seen before). Anything else more advanced will require a manual migration.
For those situations where you don't want to run the migrations but would want to
verify which migrations would run against your database, you can simply
run Migrana in the dry-run
mode:
$ lein migrana dry-run
In some cases, the schema inference done by Migrana is not enough. In such cases you can create a manual migration with:
$ lein migrana create retract_name
This will create the migration YYYYMMDDHHMMSS_retract_name.edn
in
the resources/migrations
path:
$ ls resources/migrations
20171124200143_schema_inference.edn 20171124200525_schema_inference.edn 20171124200733_retract_name.edn`
The file will be empty and you can write your own migration steps in as a
vector of the :tx-data
map entry.
After you edit the file, you can run lein migrana
as usual and your
migration will be sent to the DB.
In some cases you might want to have code that interacts with your manual migratation. In these cases, simply create an empty manual migration with:
$ lein migrana create code_as_migration
Then open the migration created in resources/migrations
and edit to look
like something like this:
{:tx-fn 'my-project.migrations/add-suffix-to-all-names}
Then in your src/my_project/migrations.clj
you could have:
(ns my-project.migrations
(:require [datomic.api :as d]))
(defn add-suffix-to-all-names [conn]
(let [names (d/q '[:find (pull ?e [:db/id :person/name])
:where
[?e :person/name]]
(d/db conn))]
(map (fn [n] {:db/id (:db/id (first n))
:person/name (str (:person/name (first n)) "Suffix")})
names)))
After you edit the file, you can run lein migrana run
as usual and your
migration will be sent to the DB.
$ lein help migrana
Datomic migration tool.
Syntax: lein migrana <subtask> <options>
Subtasks available:
info Shows current database information.
create Creates new manual migration.
dry-run Simulates what `run` would do.
run Transacts pending migrations onto database.
set-db Sets the database timestamp.
Run `lein help migrana $SUBTASK` for subtask details.
For dry-run
, run
, and set-db
you also have (NOT IMPLEMENTED YET
this issue:
Options for `run`, `dry-run`, and `set-db` commands:
-s, --schema SCHEMA_FILE Schema file (default resources/schema.edn)
-m, --migrations MIGRATIONS_PATH Migrations path (default resources/migrations/)
--no-inference Runs with no schema change inference
If you find a bug, submit a Github issue.
This project is looking for team members who can help this project succeed! If you are interested in becoming a team member please open an issue.
Copyright © 2017 Tiago Luchini
Distributed under the MIT License. See LICENSE