10 KiB
Database Migration
Like source code, the structure of a database is evolving as we develop and maintain a database-driven application. For example, during development, we may want to add a new table; or after the application is put into production, we may realize the need of adding an index on a column. It is important to keep track of these structural database changes (called migration) like we do with our source code. If the source code and the database are out of sync, it is very likely the whole system may break. For this reason, Yii provides a database migration tool that can keep track of database migration history, apply new migrations, or revert existing ones.
The following steps show how we can use database migration during development:
- Tim creates a new migration (e.g. create a new table)
- Tim commits the new migration into source control system (e.g. GIT, Mercurial)
- Doug updates from source control system and receives the new migration
- Doug applies the migration to his local development database
Yii supports database migration via the yiic migrate
command line tool. This
tool supports creating new migrations, applying/reverting/redoing migrations, and
showing migration history and new migrations.
Creating Migrations
To create a new migration (e.g. create a news table), we run the following command:
yiic migrate/create <name>
The required name
parameter specifies a very brief description of the migration
(e.g. create_news_table
). As we will show in the following, the name
parameter
is used as part of a PHP class name. Therefore, it should only contain letters,
digits and/or underscore characters.
yiic migrate/create create_news_table
The above command will create under the protected/migrations
directory a new
file named m101129_185401_create_news_table.php
which contains the following
initial code:
[php]
class m101129_185401_create_news_table extends \yii\db\Migration
{
public function up()
{
}
public function down()
{
echo "m101129_185401_create_news_table cannot be reverted.\n";
return false;
}
}
Notice that the class name is the same as the file name which is of the pattern
m<timestamp>_<name>
, where <timestamp>
refers to the UTC timestamp (in the
format of yymmdd_hhmmss
) when the migration is created, and <name>
is taken
from the command's name
parameter.
The up()
method should contain the code implementing the actual database
migration, while the down()
method may contain the code reverting what is
done in up()
.
Sometimes, it is impossible to implement down()
. For example, if we delete
table rows in up()
, we will not be able to recover them in down()
. In this
case, the migration is called irreversible, meaning we cannot roll back to
a previous state of the database. In the above generated code, the down()
method returns false
to indicate that the migration cannot be reverted.
As an example, let's show the migration about creating a news table.
[php]
class m101129_185401_create_news_table extends \yii\db\Migration
{
public function up()
{
$this->db->createCommand()->createTable('tbl_news, array(
'id' => 'pk',
'title' => 'string NOT NULL',
'content' => 'text',
))->execute();
}
public function down()
{
$this->db->createCommand()->dropTable('tbl_news')->execute();
}
}
The base class [\yii\db\Migration] exposes a database connection via db
property. You can use it for manipulating data and schema of a database.
Transactional Migrations
While performing complex DB migrations, we usually want to make sure that each migration succeed or fail as a whole so that the database maintains the consistency and integrity. In order to achieve this goal, we can exploit DB transactions.
We could explicitly start a DB transaction and enclose the rest of the DB-related code within the transaction, like the following:
[php]
class m101129_185401_create_news_table extends \yii\db\Migration
{
public function up()
{
$transaction=$this->getDbConnection()->beginTransaction();
try
{
$this->db->createCommand()->createTable('tbl_news, array(
'id' => 'pk',
'title' => 'string NOT NULL',
'content' => 'text',
))->execute();
$transaction->commit();
}
catch(Exception $e)
{
echo "Exception: ".$e->getMessage()."\n";
$transaction->rollback();
return false;
}
}
// ...similar code for down()
}
Note: Not all DBMS support transactions. And some DB queries cannot be put into a transaction. In this case, you will have to implement
up()
anddown()
, instead. And for MySQL, some SQL statements may cause implicit commit.
Applying Migrations
To apply all available new migrations (i.e., make the local database up-to-date), run the following command:
yiic migrate
The command will show the list of all new migrations. If you confirm to apply
the migrations, it will run the up()
method in every new migration class, one
after another, in the order of the timestamp value in the class name.
After applying a migration, the migration tool will keep a record in a database
table named tbl_migration
. This allows the tool to identify which migrations
have been applied and which are not. If the tbl_migration
table does not exist,
the tool will automatically create it in the database specified by the db
application component.
Sometimes, we may only want to apply one or a few new migrations. We can use the following command:
yiic migrate/up 3
This command will apply the 3 new migrations. Changing the value 3 will allow us to change the number of migrations to be applied.
We can also migrate the database to a specific version with the following command:
yiic migrate/to 101129_185401
That is, we use the timestamp part of a migration name to specify the version that we want to migrate the database to. If there are multiple migrations between the last applied migration and the specified migration, all these migrations will be applied. If the specified migration has been applied before, then all migrations applied after it will be reverted (to be described in the next section).
Reverting Migrations
To revert the last one or several applied migrations, we can use the following command:
yiic migrate/down [step]
where the optional step
parameter specifies how many migrations to be reverted
back. It defaults to 1, meaning reverting back the last applied migration.
As we described before, not all migrations can be reverted. Trying to revert such migrations will throw an exception and stop the whole reverting process.
Redoing Migrations
Redoing migrations means first reverting and then applying the specified migrations. This can be done with the following command:
yiic migrate/redo [step]
where the optional step
parameter specifies how many migrations to be redone.
It defaults to 1, meaning redoing the last migration.
Showing Migration Information
Besides applying and reverting migrations, the migration tool can also display the migration history and the new migrations to be applied.
yiic migrate/history [limit]
yiic migrate/new [limit]
where the optional parameter limit
specifies the number of migrations to be
displayed. If limit
is not specified, all available migrations will be displayed.
The first command shows the migrations that have been applied, while the second command shows the migrations that have not been applied.
Modifying Migration History
Sometimes, we may want to modify the migration history to a specific migration version without actually applying or reverting the relevant migrations. This often happens when developing a new migration. We can use the following command to achieve this goal.
yiic migrate/mark 101129_185401
This command is very similar to yiic migrate/to
command, except that it only
modifies the migration history table to the specified version without applying
or reverting the migrations.
Customizing Migration Command
There are several ways to customize the migration command.
Use Command Line Options
The migration command comes with four options that can be specified in command line:
-
interactive
: boolean, specifies whether to perform migrations in an interactive mode. Defaults to true, meaning the user will be prompted when performing a specific migration. You may set this to false should the migrations be done in a background process. -
migrationPath
: string, specifies the directory storing all migration class files. This must be specified in terms of a path alias, and the corresponding directory must exist. If not specified, it will use themigrations
sub-directory under the application base path. -
migrationTable
: string, specifies the name of the database table for storing migration history information. It defaults totbl_migration
. The table structure isversion varchar(255) primary key, apply_time integer
. -
connectionID
: string, specifies the ID of the database application component. Defaults to 'db'. -
templateFile
: string, specifies the path of the file to be served as the code template for generating the migration classes. This must be specified in terms of a path alias (e.g.application.migrations.template
). If not set, an internal template will be used. Inside the template, the token{ClassName}
will be replaced with the actual migration class name.
To specify these options, execute the migrate command using the following format
yiic migrate/up --option1=value1 --option2=value2 ...
For example, if we want to migrate for a forum
module whose migration files
are located within the module's migrations
directory, we can use the following
command:
yiic migrate/up --migrationPath=ext.forum.migrations
Configure Command Globally
While command line options allow us to configure the migration command on-the-fly, sometimes we may want to configure the command once for all. For example, we may want to use a different table to store the migration history, or we may want to use a customized migration template. We can do so by modifying the console application's configuration file like the following,
TBD
Now if we run the migrate
command, the above configurations will take effect
without requiring us to enter the command line options every time.