Journey is based on the work of @mattes on his tool "migrate": https://github.com/mattes/migrate/
- Super easy to implement Driver interface.
- Gracefully quit running migrations on
^C
. - No magic search paths routines, no hard-coded config files.
- CLI is build on top of the
migrate
package. - Migration files templating
- PostgreSQL
- Cassandra
- SQLite
- MySQL (experimental)
- Bash (planned)
Need another driver? Just implement the Driver interface and open a PR.
# install
go get github.com/db-journey/journey/v2
# create new migration file in path
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate create migration_file_xyz
# apply all available migrations
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate up
# roll back all migrations
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate down
# roll back the most recently applied migration, then run it again.
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate redo
# run down and then up command
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate reset
# show the current migration version
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate version
# apply the next n migrations
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate migrate +1
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate migrate +2
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate migrate +n
# roll back the previous n migrations
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate migrate -1
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate migrate -2
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate migrate -n
# go to specific migration
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate goto 1
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate goto 10
journey --url driver://url --path ./migrations migrate goto v
Journey also provides a command to run scheduled jobs on databases:
journey --url driver://url --path ./cronjobs scheduler start
Journey supports dynamic migrations files, by using go templates.
If a file in the migrations folder has the extension .tpl
(it must match the driver file extensions, so .sql.tpl
for sql drivers), it will parsed and executed using journey current environment.
Example:
$ echo "create table {{.TABLE}} (id int64, name text);" >> files/20170707204006_template.up.sql.tpl
$ TABLE=a_table journey migrate
For more information about go templating, refer to the official doc: https://golang.org/pkg/text/template/
This feature is particularly usefull to avoid leaving sensitive data in migrations, or to make adjustments based on current environment.