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I feel that my shop has a hole because we don't have a solid process in place for versioning our database schema changes. We do a lot of backups so we're more or less covered, but it's bad practice to rely on your last line of defense in this way.

Surprisingly, this seems to be a common thread. Many shops I have spoken to ignore this issue because their databases don't change often, and they basically just try to be meticulous.

However, I know how that story goes. It's only a matter of time before things line up just wrong and something goes missing.

Are there any best practices for this? What are some strategies that have worked for you?

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53 Answers

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vote up 136 vote down check

Must read Get your database under version control. Check the series of posts by Scott Allen.

When it comes to version control, the database is often a second or even third-class citizen. From what I've seen, teams that would never think of writing code without version control in a million years-- and rightly so-- can somehow be completely oblivious to the need for version control around the critical databases their applications rely on. I don't know how you can call yourself a software engineer and maintain a straight face when your database isn't under exactly the same rigorous level of source control as the rest of your code. Don't let this happen to you. Get your database under version control.

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vote up 60 vote down

The databases themselves? No

The scripts that create them, including static data inserts, stored procedures and the like; of course. They're text files, they are included in the project and are checked in and out like everything else.

Of course in an ideal world your database management tool would do this; but you just have to be disciplined about it.

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With Mysql Workbench you can have all that in a structured file(xml) that can be opened and handled with a GUI. Being xml just text, yes it can be versioning without having to type single sql sentence. – levhita Sep 22 '08 at 17:22
vote up 5 vote down

I do by saving create/update scripts and a script that generates sampledata.

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vote up 1 vote down

Yes ... our databases are designed in ERwin and the DDLs for each version are automatically generated. The ERwin files are kept in our source code control system (actually, so are our engineering documents).

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vote up 14 vote down

I absolutely love Rails ActiveRecord migrations. It abstracts the DML to ruby script which can then be easily version'd in your source repository.

However, with a bit of work, you could do the same thing. Any DML changes (ALTER TABLE, etc.) can be stored in text files. Keep a numbering system (or a date stamp) for the file names, and apply them in sequence.

Rails also has a 'version' table in the DB that keeps track of the last applied migration. You can do the same easily.

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vote up 0 vote down

We have a weekly sql dump into a subversion repo. It's fully automated but it's a REALLY beefy task.

You'll want to limit the number of revisions because it really chows disk space after a while!

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vote up 5 vote down

Yes, we do it by keeping our SQL as part of our build -- we keep DROP.sql, CREATE.sql, USERS.sql, VALUES.sql and version control these, so we can revert back to any tagged version.

We also have ant tasks which can recreate the db whenever needed.

Plus, the SQL is then tagged along with your source code that goes with it.

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vote up 6 vote down

YES, I think it is important to version your database. Not the data, but the schema for certain.

In Ruby On Rails, this is handled by the framework with "migrations". Any time you alter the db, you make a script that applies the changes and check it into source control.

My shop liked that idea so much that we added the functionality to our Java-based build using shell scripts and Ant. We integrated the process into our deployment routine. It would be fairly easy to write scripts to do the same thing in other frameworks that don't support DB versioning out-of-the-box.

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vote up 2 vote down

I source control the database schema by scripting out all objects (table definitions, indexes, stored procedures, etc.). But, as for the data itself, simply rely on regular backups. This ensures that all structural changes are captured with proper revision history, but doesn't burden the database each time data changes.

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vote up 7 vote down

The best practice I have seen is creating a build script to scrap and rebuild your database on a staging server. Each iteration was given a folder for database changes, all changes were scripted with "Drop... Create" 's . This way you can rollback to an earlier version at any time by pointing the build to folder you want to version to.

I believe this was done with NaNt/CruiseControl.

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vote up 1 vote down

We use replication and clustering to manage our databases, as well as backups. We use Serena to manage our SQL scripts and configuration implementations. Before a configuration change is made, we perform a backup as part of the change management process. This backup satisfies our rollback requirement.

I think it all depends on scale. Are you talking about enterprise applications that need offsite backups and disaster recovery? A small workgroup running an accounting application? Or everywhere in between?

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vote up 2 vote down

Hey Brian,

I have everything necessary to recreate my DB from bare metal, minus the data itself. I'm sure there are lots of ways to do it, but all my scripts and such are stored off in subversion and we can rebuild the DB structure and such by pulling all that out of subversion and running an installer.

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vote up 5 vote down

Yes. Code is code. My rule of thumb is that I need to be able to build and deploy the application from scratch, without looking at a development or production machine.

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vote up 2 vote down

At our business we use database change scripts. When a script is run, it's name is stored in the database and won't run again, unless that row is removed. Scripts are named based on date, time and code branch, so controlled execution is possible.

Lots and lots of testing is done before the scripts are run in the live environment, so "oopsies" only happen, generally speaking, on development databases.

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vote up 3 vote down

The most successful scheme I've ever used on a project has combined backups and differential SQL files. Basically we would take a backup of our db after every release and do an SQL dump so that we could create a blank schema from scratch if we needed to as well. Then anytime you needed to make a change to the DB you would add an alter scrip to the sql directory under version control. We would always prefix a sequence number or date to the file name so the first change would be something like 01_add_created_on_column.sql, and the next script would be 02_added_customers_index. Our CI machine would check for these and run them sequentially on a fresh copy of the db that had been restored from the backup.

We also had some scripts in place that devs could use to re-initialize their local db to the current version with a single command.

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vote up 0 vote down

I suppose it depends on what you mean by 'your databases'.

Data should be backed up regularly, as part of a maintenance schedule (ie. frequent log file backups, regular data file backups and preferably offsite backup).

The schema scripts should be under Source control. I prefer the baseline and incremental change script approach, with all database changes (data and schema) scripted, versioned and in Source control. This approach also means that you can rebuild databases to specific versiond as part of automated build processes.

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vote up 1 vote down

We have our Create/Alter scripts under source control. As for the database itself, when you have hundreds of tables and a lot of processing data every minutes, it would be CPU and HDD killer to version all the database. That's why backup is still, according to me, the best way to control your data.

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vote up 0 vote down

We insist upon change scrips and a master data definition script. These are checked into CVS along with any other source code. The PL/SQL (were are an Oracle shop) is also source controlled in CVS. The change scripts are repeatable and can be passed to everyone on the team. Basically, just because it is a database, there is never an excuse not to code it and use a source control system to track the changes.

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vote up 17 vote down

You should never just log in and start entering "ALTER TABLE" commands to change a production database. The project I'm on has database on every customer site, and so every change to the database is made in two places, a dump file that is used to create a new database on a new customer site, and an update file that is run on every update which checks your current database version number against the highest number in the file, and updates your database in place. So for instance, the last couple of updates:

if [ $VERSION \< '8.0.108' ] ; then
  psql -U cosuser $dbName << EOF8.0.108
    BEGIN TRANSACTION;
    --
    -- Remove foreign key that shouldn't have been there.
    -- PCR:35665
    --
    ALTER TABLE     migratorjobitems
    DROP CONSTRAINT migratorjobitems_destcmaid_fkey;
    -- 
    -- Increment the version
    UPDATE          sys_info
    SET             value = '8.0.108'
    WHERE           key = 'DB VERSION';
    END TRANSACTION;
EOF8.0.108
fi

if [ $VERSION \< '8.0.109' ] ; then
  psql -U cosuser $dbName << EOF8.0.109
    BEGIN TRANSACTION;
    --
    -- I missed a couple of cases when I changed the legacy playlist
    -- from reporting showplaylistidnum to playlistidnum
    --
    ALTER TABLE     featureidrequestkdcs
    DROP CONSTRAINT featureidrequestkdcs_cosfeatureid_fkey;
    ALTER TABLE     featureidrequestkdcs
    ADD CONSTRAINT  featureidrequestkdcs_cosfeatureid_fkey
    FOREIGN KEY     (cosfeatureid)
    REFERENCES      playlist(playlistidnum)
    ON DELETE       CASCADE;
    --
    ALTER TABLE     ticket_system_ids
    DROP CONSTRAINT ticket_system_ids_showplaylistidnum_fkey;
    ALTER TABLE     ticket_system_ids
    RENAME          showplaylistidnum
    TO              playlistidnum;
    ALTER TABLE     ticket_system_ids
    ADD CONSTRAINT  ticket_system_ids_playlistidnum_fkey
    FOREIGN KEY     (playlistidnum)
    REFERENCES      playlist(playlistidnum)
    ON DELETE       CASCADE;
    -- 
    -- Increment the version
    UPDATE          sys_info
    SET             value = '8.0.109'
    WHERE           key = 'DB VERSION';
    END TRANSACTION;
EOF8.0.109
fi

I'm sure there is a better way to do this, but it's worked for me so far.

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vote up 4 vote down

I typically build an SQL script for every change I make, and another to revert those changes, and keep those scripts under version control.

Then we have a means to create a new up-to-date database on demand, and can easily move between revisions. Every time we do a release, we lump the scripts together (takes a bit of manual work, but it's rarely actually hard) so we also have a set of scripts that can convert between versions.

Yes, before you say it, this is very similar to the stuff Rails and others do, but it seems to work pretty well, so I have no problems admitting that I shamelessly lifted the idea :)

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vote up 1 vote down

We're in the process of moving all the databases to source control. We're using sqlcompare to script out the database (a profession edition feature, unfortunately) and putting that result into SVN.

The success of your implementation will depend a lot on the culture and practices of your organization. People here believe in creating a database per application. There is a common set of databases that are used by most applications as well causing a lot of interdatabase dependencies (some of them are circular). Putting the database schemas into source control has been notoriously difficult because of the interdatabase dependencies that our systems have.

Best of luck to you, the sooner you try it out the sooner you'll have your issues sorted out.

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vote up 3 vote down

We do source control all our dabase created objects. And just to keep developers honest (because you can create objects without them being in Source Control), our dbas periodically look for anything not in source control and if they find anything, they drop it without asking if it is ok.

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vote up 6 vote down

I'm ashamed, but we don't do this at all. My project's database is 30GB so we've been lazy about it. But thanks to stacko, it's going on my list right now. Good job, website! "Better programming through shame"

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Thanks for the honesty Kevin. :) – Brian MacKay Sep 22 '08 at 15:33
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I have used the dbdeploy tool from ThoughtWorks at http://dbdeploy.com/. It encourages the use of migration scripts. Each release, we consolidated the change scripts into a single file to ease understanding and to allow DBAs to 'bless' the changes.

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vote up 1 vote down

I always check my database structure dumps into source control. Full database dumps however I normally just compress and put away for storage.

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vote up 0 vote down

I version control the create script, and I use the svn version tag within it. Then, whenever I get a version that is going to be used, I create a script in a dbpatches/ directory named as the version to roll up to. The job of that script is to modify a current database without destroying the data. dbpatches/, for example, might have files named 201, 220, and 240. If the database is currently at level 201, apply patch 220, then patch 240.

DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `meta`;
CREATE TABLE `meta` (
  `property` varchar(255),
  `value` varchar(255),
  PRIMARY KEY (`property`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
INSERT INTO `meta` VALUES ('version', '$Rev: 240 $');

Don't forget to test your code before considering a patch good. Caveat emptor!

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vote up 0 vote down

We maintain DDL (and sometime DML) scripts generated by our ER Tool (PowerAMC).

We have a bench of shell scripts which rename the scripts starting with a number on the trunk branch. Each script is committed and tagged with the bugzilla number.

These scripts are then at need merged within the release branches along with the application code.

We have a table recording the scripts and their status. Each script is executed in order and recorded in this table on each install by the deploying tool.

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vote up 2 vote down

I use SQL CREATE scripts exported from MySQL Workbech, then using theirs "Export SQL ALTER" functionality I end up with a series of create scripts(numbered of course) and the alter scripts that can apply the changes between them.

3.- Export SQL ALTER script Normally you would have to write the ALTER TABLE statements by hand now, reflecting your changes you made to the model. But you can be smart and let Workbench do the hard work for you. Simply select File -> Export -> Forward Engineer SQL ALTER Script… from the main menu.

This will prompt you to specify the SQL CREATE file the current model should be compared to.

Select the SQL CREATE script from step 1. The tool will then generate the ALTER TABLE script for you and you can execute this script against your database to bring it up to date.

You can do this using the MySQL Query Browser or the mysql client.Voila! Your model and database have now been synchronized!

Source: MySQL Workbench Community Edition: Guide to Schema Synchronization

All this scripts of course are inside under version control.

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vote up 1 vote down

My team versions our database schema as C# classes with the rest of our code. We have a homegrown C# program (<500 lines of code) that reflects the classes and creates SQL commands to build, drop and update the database. After creating the database we run sqlmetal to generate a linq mapping, which is then compiled in another project that is used to generate test data. The whole things works really well because data access is checked at compile time. We like it because the schema is stored in a .cs file which is easy to track compare in trac/svn.

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vote up 12 vote down

Check out LiquiBase for managing database changes using source control.

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