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migration

v0.3.0

Published

Abstract migration framework for node

Downloads

259

Readme

migration

Abstract migration framework for node, support javascript and any js preprocessor

Origin

This project is based on TJ's node-migrate.

The main difference:

  • js preprocessor support (using --compiler <ext>:<module> flag)
  • env flag
  • migrate.opts default flag setting
  • timestamp instead of sequnece number in file name when creating migrate file

Installation

$ npm install migration

Usage

Usage: migrate [options] [command]

Options:

   -c, --chdir <path>           change the working directory
   -e, --env                    set NODE_ENV, default is development
   --compiler <ext>:<module>    use the given module to create or compile files

Commands:

   down   [name]    migrate down till given migration
   up     [name]    migrate up till given migration (the default command)
   create [title]   create a new migration file with optional [title]

Creating Migrations

To create a migration, execute migrate create with an optional title. node-migrate will create a node module within ./migrations/ which contains the following two exports:

exports.up = function(next){
  next();
};

exports.down = function(next){
  next();
};

All you have to do is populate these, invoking next() when complete, and you are ready to migrate!

For example:

$ migrate create add-pets
$ migrate create add-owners

The first call creates ./migrations/20130601000000000-add-pets.js, which we can populate:

var db = require('./db');

exports.up = function(next){
  db.rpush('pets', 'tobi');
  db.rpush('pets', 'loki');
  db.rpush('pets', 'jane', next);
};

exports.down = function(next){
  db.rpop('pets');
  db.rpop('pets', next);
};

The second creates ./migrations/20130601000001000-add-owners.js, which we can populate:

var db = require('./db');

exports.up = function(next){
  db.rpush('owners', 'taylor');
  db.rpush('owners', 'tj', next);
};

exports.down = function(next){
  db.rpop('owners');
  db.rpop('owners', next);
};

Running Migrations

When first running the migrations, all will be executed in sequence.

$ migrate
up : migrations/20130601000000000-add-pets.js
up : migrations/20130602000000000-add-jane.js
migration : complete

Subsequent attempts will simply output "complete", as they have already been executed in this machine. node-migrate knows this because it stores the current state in ./migrations/.migrate which is typically a file that SCMs like GIT should ignore.

$ migrate
migration : complete

If we were to create another migration using migrate create, and then execute migrations again, we would execute only those not previously executed:

$ migrate
up : migrates/20130603000000000-coolest-owner.js

You can also run migrations incrementally by specifying a migration.

$ migrate up 20130605000000000-coolest-pet.js
up : migrations/20130604000000000-add-pets.js
up : migrations/20130605000000000-coolest-pet.js
migration : complete

This will run up-migrations upto (and including) 002-coolest-pet.js. Similarly you can run down-migrations upto (and including) a specific migration, instead of migrating all the way down.

$ migrate down 20130601000000000-add-jane.js
down : migrations/20130602000000000-add-owners.js
down : migrations/20130601000000000-add-jane.js
migration : complete

License

Copyright (c) 2013 Jarvis Ao Ieong
Licensed under the MIT license.