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139

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 137 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 0 vote down

One of Kira's prime use cases is database upgrades by explicitly specify the schema outside the database as code. It then can manage the database and upgrade it to any version from any version.

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vote up 0 vote down

I use ActiveRecord Migrations. This Ruby gem can be used outside of a Rails project and there are adapters to handle most databases you'll come across. My tip: if you are able to run your project off Postgres, you get transactional schema migrations. That means you don't end up with a broken database if a migration only half-applies.

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vote up 0 vote down

I believe that every DB should be under source control, and developers should have an easy way to create their local database from scratch. Inspired by Visual Studio for Database Professionals, I've created an open-source tool that scripts MS SQL databases, and provides and easy way of deploying them to your local DB engine. Try http://dbsourcetools.codeplex.com/ . Have fun, - Nathan.

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vote up 0 vote down

Sadly, I've seen more than one team developing PL/SQL programs (stored procedures in Oracle) - sometimes ten thousands LOC - just by editing the code in TOAD (a database tool), without even saving the source to files (except for deployment). Even if the database is backuped regulary (wouldn't take that for granted, though), the only way to retrieve an old version of a stored procedure is to restore the whole database, which is many GB large. And of course sometimes concurrent changes in one file lead to loss of work, when more than one developer works on the same project.

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vote up 3 vote down

I use SchemaBank to version control all my database schema changes:

  • from day 1, I import my db schema dump into it
  • i started to change my schema design using a web browser (because they are SaaS / cloud-based)
  • when i want to update my db server, i generate the change (SQL) script from it and apply to the db. In Schemabank, they mandate me to commit my work as a version before I can generate an update script. I like this kind of practice so that I can always trace back when I need to.

Our team rule is NEVER touch the db server directly without storing the design work first. But it happens, somebody might be tempted to break the rule, in sake of convenient. We would import the schema dump again into schemabank and let it do the diff and bash someone if a discrepancy is found. Although we could generate the alter scripts from it to make our db and schema design in sync, we just hate that.

By the way, they also let us create branches within the version control tree so that I can maintain one for staging and one for production. And one for coding sandbox.

A pretty neat web-based schema design tool with version control n change management.

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vote up 0 vote down

In a previous employ, we had a good system for versioning the database (that said there was still room for improvement).

All create and update scripts were version controlled, further to this each distinct change (or set of changes) to the database was given it's own version number.

Each new build of the (server portion) of our software had knowledge of what database version it needed to work with. Therefore after an upgrade the server would refuse client connections until it had been updated to the correct database version. This in turn was straightforward with a utility on the server that would run the appropriate update scripts.

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vote up 0 vote down

Dear friends,

You are talking about coding and finding the best way for source control, but theres a much easier way!

SQL tools is what we doing, and we have the 1st and the best third party tool for SQL Version control

This tool is a unique solution that revolutionizes the way version control and change management is done for SQL Server. It shifts the responsibility for versioning from the users to the software. Its light-weight, easy to use tool that runs in the background and keeps track of all your databases schema and data changes over time, and enables full review of databases' history, and full rollback to any point in time, as well as optionally push changes into Subversion or SourceSafe.

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vote up 1 vote down

We version and source control everything surrounding our databases:

  • DDL (create and alters)
  • DML (reference data, codes, etc.)
  • Data Model changes (using ERwin or ER/Studio)
  • Database configuration changes (permissions, security objects, general config changes)

We do all this with automated jobs using Change Manager and some custom scripts. We have Change Manager monitoring these changes and notifying when they are done.

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vote up 1 vote down

funny , i was thinking why no one has built version control into a database

there has been many times in doing database management where it would have been nice to be able to do a checkin so i could roll back to a previous revision

yes transactions do this to a certain extent in a temporary or short term way , but i can still see the benefit to having vcs right in the database and be able to roll back to a previous revision if a database management path doesnt work

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vote up 0 vote down

Yes, of course. We generate dumps of our PostgreSQL schemas whenever there's a change and check it in. It's already saved us many times, and I've only been at my job a few months.

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vote up 1 vote down

Here is a sample poor man's solution for a trigger implementing tracking of changes on db objects ( via DDL stateements ) on a sql server 2005 / 2008 database. I contains also a simple sample of how-to enforce the usage of required someValue xml tag in the source code for each sql command ran on the database + the tracking of the current db version and type ( dev , test , qa , fb , prod) One could extend it with additional required attributes such as , etc. The code is rather long - it creates the empty database + the needed tracking table structure + required db functions and the populating trigger all running under a [ga] schema.

USE [master]
GO

/****** Object:  Database [DBGA_DEV]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:22:01 ******/
CREATE DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] ON  PRIMARY 
( NAME = N'DBGA_DEV', FILENAME = N'D:\GENAPP\DATA\DBFILES\DBGA_DEV.mdf' , SIZE = 3072KB , MAXSIZE = UNLIMITED, FILEGROWTH = 1024KB )
 LOG ON 
( NAME = N'DBGA_DEV_log', FILENAME = N'D:\GENAPP\DATA\DBFILES\DBGA_DEV_log.ldf' , SIZE = 6208KB , MAXSIZE = 2048GB , FILEGROWTH = 10%)
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET COMPATIBILITY_LEVEL = 100
GO

IF (1 = FULLTEXTSERVICEPROPERTY('IsFullTextInstalled'))
begin
EXEC [DBGA_DEV].[dbo].[sp_fulltext_database] @action = 'enable'
end
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET ANSI_NULL_DEFAULT OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET ANSI_NULLS OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET ANSI_PADDING ON 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET ANSI_WARNINGS OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET ARITHABORT OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET AUTO_CLOSE OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET AUTO_CREATE_STATISTICS ON 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET AUTO_SHRINK OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET AUTO_UPDATE_STATISTICS ON 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET CURSOR_CLOSE_ON_COMMIT OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET CURSOR_DEFAULT  GLOBAL 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET CONCAT_NULL_YIELDS_NULL OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET NUMERIC_ROUNDABORT OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET RECURSIVE_TRIGGERS OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET  DISABLE_BROKER 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET AUTO_UPDATE_STATISTICS_ASYNC OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET DATE_CORRELATION_OPTIMIZATION OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET TRUSTWORTHY OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET PARAMETERIZATION SIMPLE 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET READ_COMMITTED_SNAPSHOT OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET HONOR_BROKER_PRIORITY OFF 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET  READ_WRITE 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET RECOVERY FULL 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET  MULTI_USER 
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET PAGE_VERIFY CHECKSUM  
GO

ALTER DATABASE [DBGA_DEV] SET DB_CHAINING OFF 
GO

EXEC [DBGA_DEV].sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'DbType', @value=N'DEV' 
GO

EXEC [DBGA_DEV].sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'DbVersion', @value=N'0.0.1.20090414.1100' 
GO



USE [DBGA_DEV]
GO
/****** Object:  Schema [ga]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:29 ******/
CREATE SCHEMA [ga] AUTHORIZATION [dbo]
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'MS_Description', @value=N'Contains the objects of the Generic Application database' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga'
GO
/****** Object:  Table [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:40 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
CREATE TABLE [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog](
	[LogId] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
	[TimeStamp] [timestamp] NOT NULL,
	[DatabaseName] [varchar](256) NOT NULL,
	[SchemaName] [varchar](256) NOT NULL,
	[DbVersion] [varchar](20) NOT NULL,
	[DbType] [varchar](20) NOT NULL,
	[EventType] [varchar](50) NOT NULL,
	[ObjectName] [varchar](256) NOT NULL,
	[ObjectType] [varchar](25) NOT NULL,
	[Version] [varchar](50) NULL,
	[SqlCommand] [varchar](max) NOT NULL,
	[EventDate] [datetime] NOT NULL,
	[LoginName] [varchar](256) NOT NULL,
	[FirstName] [varchar](256) NULL,
	[LastName] [varchar](50) NULL,
	[ChangeDescription] [varchar](1000) NULL,
	[Description] [varchar](1000) NULL,
	[ObjVersion] [varchar](20) NOT NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'MS_Description', @value=N'The database version as written in the extended prop of the database' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'TABLE',@level1name=N'tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog', @level2type=N'COLUMN',@level2name=N'DbVersion'
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'MS_Description', @value=N'dev , test , qa , fb or prod' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'TABLE',@level1name=N'tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog', @level2type=N'COLUMN',@level2name=N'DbType'
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'MS_Description', @value=N'The name of the object as it is registered in the sys.objects ' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'TABLE',@level1name=N'tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog', @level2type=N'COLUMN',@level2name=N'ObjectName'
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'MS_Description', @value=N'' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'TABLE',@level1name=N'tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog', @level2type=N'COLUMN',@level2name=N'Description'
GO
SET IDENTITY_INSERT [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] ON
INSERT [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] ([LogId], [DatabaseName], [SchemaName], [DbVersion], [DbType], [EventType], [ObjectName], [ObjectType], [Version], [SqlCommand], [EventDate], [LoginName], [FirstName], [LastName], [ChangeDescription], [Description], [ObjVersion]) VALUES (3, N'DBGA_DEV', N'en', N'0.0.1.20090414.1100', N'DEV', N'DROP_TABLE', N'tb_BL_Products', N'TABLE', N' some', N'<EVENT_INSTANCE><EventType>DROP_TABLE</EventType><PostTime>2009-04-22T11:03:11.880</PostTime><SPID>57</SPID><ServerName>YSG</ServerName><LoginName>ysg\yordgeor</LoginName><UserName>dbo</UserName><DatabaseName>DBGA_DEV</DatabaseName><SchemaName>en</SchemaName><ObjectName>tb_BL_Products</ObjectName><ObjectType>TABLE</ObjectType><TSQLCommand><SetOptions ANSI_NULLS="ON" ANSI_NULL_DEFAULT="ON" ANSI_PADDING="ON" QUOTED_IDENTIFIER="ON" ENCRYPTED="FALSE"/><CommandText>drop TABLE [en].[tb_BL_Products] --<Version> some</Version>&#x0D;
</CommandText></TSQLCommand></EVENT_INSTANCE>', CAST(0x00009BF300B6271C AS DateTime), N'ysg\yordgeor', N'Yordan', N'Georgiev', NULL, NULL, N'0.0.0')
INSERT [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] ([LogId], [DatabaseName], [SchemaName], [DbVersion], [DbType], [EventType], [ObjectName], [ObjectType], [Version], [SqlCommand], [EventDate], [LoginName], [FirstName], [LastName], [ChangeDescription], [Description], [ObjVersion]) VALUES (4, N'DBGA_DEV', N'en', N'0.0.1.20090414.1100', N'DEV', N'CREATE_TABLE', N'tb_BL_Products', N'TABLE', N' 2.2.2 ', N'<EVENT_INSTANCE><EventType>CREATE_TABLE</EventType><PostTime>2009-04-22T11:03:18.620</PostTime><SPID>57</SPID><ServerName>YSG</ServerName><LoginName>ysg\yordgeor</LoginName><UserName>dbo</UserName><DatabaseName>DBGA_DEV</DatabaseName><SchemaName>en</SchemaName><ObjectName>tb_BL_Products</ObjectName><ObjectType>TABLE</ObjectType><TSQLCommand><SetOptions ANSI_NULLS="ON" ANSI_NULL_DEFAULT="ON" ANSI_PADDING="ON" QUOTED_IDENTIFIER="ON" ENCRYPTED="FALSE"/><CommandText>CREATE TABLE [en].[tb_BL_Products](&#x0D;
	[ProducId] [int] NULL,&#x0D;
	[ProductName] [nchar](10) NULL,&#x0D;
	[ProductDescription] [varchar](5000) NULL&#x0D;
) ON [PRIMARY]&#x0D;
/*&#x0D;
<Version> 2.2.2 </Version>&#x0D;
&#x0D;
*/&#x0D;
</CommandText></TSQLCommand></EVENT_INSTANCE>', CAST(0x00009BF300B62F07 AS DateTime), N'ysg\yordgeor', N'Yordan', N'Georgiev', NULL, NULL, N'0.0.0')
INSERT [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] ([LogId], [DatabaseName], [SchemaName], [DbVersion], [DbType], [EventType], [ObjectName], [ObjectType], [Version], [SqlCommand], [EventDate], [LoginName], [FirstName], [LastName], [ChangeDescription], [Description], [ObjVersion]) VALUES (5, N'DBGA_DEV', N'en', N'0.0.1.20090414.1100', N'DEV', N'DROP_TABLE', N'tb_BL_Products', N'TABLE', N' 2.2.2 ', N'<EVENT_INSTANCE><EventType>DROP_TABLE</EventType><PostTime>2009-04-22T11:25:12.620</PostTime><SPID>57</SPID><ServerName>YSG</ServerName><LoginName>ysg\yordgeor</LoginName><UserName>dbo</UserName><DatabaseName>DBGA_DEV</DatabaseName><SchemaName>en</SchemaName><ObjectName>tb_BL_Products</ObjectName><ObjectType>TABLE</ObjectType><TSQLCommand><SetOptions ANSI_NULLS="ON" ANSI_NULL_DEFAULT="ON" ANSI_PADDING="ON" QUOTED_IDENTIFIER="ON" ENCRYPTED="FALSE"/><CommandText>drop TABLE [en].[tb_BL_Products] &#x0D;
</CommandText></TSQLCommand></EVENT_INSTANCE>', CAST(0x00009BF300BC32F1 AS DateTime), N'ysg\yordgeor', N'Yordan', N'Georgiev', NULL, NULL, N'0.0.0')
INSERT [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] ([LogId], [DatabaseName], [SchemaName], [DbVersion], [DbType], [EventType], [ObjectName], [ObjectType], [Version], [SqlCommand], [EventDate], [LoginName], [FirstName], [LastName], [ChangeDescription], [Description], [ObjVersion]) VALUES (6, N'DBGA_DEV', N'en', N'0.0.1.20090414.1100', N'DEV', N'CREATE_TABLE', N'tb_BL_Products', N'TABLE', N' 2.2.2 ', N'<EVENT_INSTANCE><EventType>CREATE_TABLE</EventType><PostTime>2009-04-22T11:25:19.053</PostTime><SPID>57</SPID><ServerName>YSG</ServerName><LoginName>ysg\yordgeor</LoginName><UserName>dbo</UserName><DatabaseName>DBGA_DEV</DatabaseName><SchemaName>en</SchemaName><ObjectName>tb_BL_Products</ObjectName><ObjectType>TABLE</ObjectType><TSQLCommand><SetOptions ANSI_NULLS="ON" ANSI_NULL_DEFAULT="ON" ANSI_PADDING="ON" QUOTED_IDENTIFIER="ON" ENCRYPTED="FALSE"/><CommandText>CREATE TABLE [en].[tb_BL_Products](&#x0D;
	[ProducId] [int] NULL,&#x0D;
	[ProductName] [nchar](10) NULL,&#x0D;
	[ProductDescription] [varchar](5000) NULL&#x0D;
) ON [PRIMARY]&#x0D;
/*&#x0D;
<Version> 2.2.2 </Version>&#x0D;
&#x0D;
*/&#x0D;
</CommandText></TSQLCommand></EVENT_INSTANCE>', CAST(0x00009BF300BC3A69 AS DateTime), N'ysg\yordgeor', N'Yordan', N'Georgiev', NULL, NULL, N'0.0.0')
SET IDENTITY_INSERT [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] OFF
/****** Object:  Table [ga].[tb_BLSec_LoginsForUsers]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:40 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
CREATE TABLE [ga].[tb_BLSec_LoginsForUsers](
	[LoginsForUsersId] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
	[LoginName] [nvarchar](100) NOT NULL,
	[FirstName] [varchar](100) NOT NULL,
	[SecondName] [varchar](100) NULL,
	[LastName] [varchar](100) NOT NULL,
	[DomainName] [varchar](100) NOT NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
SET IDENTITY_INSERT [ga].[tb_BLSec_LoginsForUsers] ON
INSERT [ga].[tb_BLSec_LoginsForUsers] ([LoginsForUsersId], [LoginName], [FirstName], [SecondName], [LastName], [DomainName]) VALUES (1, N'ysg\yordgeor', N'Yordan', N'Stanchev', N'Georgiev', N'yordgeor')
SET IDENTITY_INSERT [ga].[tb_BLSec_LoginsForUsers] OFF
/****** Object:  Table [en].[tb_BL_Products]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:40 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
CREATE TABLE [en].[tb_BL_Products](
	[ProducId] [int] NULL,
	[ProductName] [nchar](10) NULL,
	[ProductDescription] [varchar](5000) NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
/****** Object:  StoredProcedure [ga].[procUtils_SqlCheatSheet]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:37 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
CREATE PROCEDURE [ga].[procUtils_SqlCheatSheet]                

as                 
set nocount on                 

--what was the name of the table with something like role                
/*                
SELECT * from sys.tables where [name] like '%POC%'                
*/                
-- what are the columns of this table                 
/*                
select column_name , DATA_TYPE , CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH,  table_name  from Information_schema.columns where table_name='tbGui_ExecutePOC'                
*/                

-- find proc        
--what was the name of procedure with something like role                
/*                
select * from sys.procedures where [name] like '%ext%'                
exec sp_HelpText procName        
*/                
/*                
exec sp_helpText procUtils_InsertGenerator                
*/                
--how to list all databases in sql server                 
/*                
SELECT database_id AS ID, NULL AS ParentID, name AS Text FROM sys.databases ORDER BY [name]                
*/                

--HOW-TO LIST ALL TABLES IN A SQL SERVER 2005 DATABASE                
/*                
SELECT TABLE_NAME FROM [POC].INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES                
WHERE TABLE_TYPE = 'BASE TABLE'                  
AND TABLE_NAME <> 'dtproperties'                  
ORDER BY TABLE_NAME                


*/                
--HOW-TO ENABLE XP_CMDSHELL START                
-------------------------------------------------------------------------                
-- configure verbose mode temporarily                 
-- EXECUTE sp_configure 'show advanced options', 1                 
-- RECONFIGURE WITH OVERRIDE                 
--GO                 


--ENABLE xp_cmdshell                 
-- EXECUTE sp_configure 'xp_cmdshell', '1'                 
-- RECONFIGURE WITH OVERRIDE                 
-- EXEC SP_CONFIGURE 'show advanced option', '1';                 
-- SHOW THE CONFIGURATION                 
-- EXEC SP_CONFIGURE;                 


--turn show advance options off                 
-- GO                 
--EXECUTE sp_configure 'show advanced options', 0                 
-- RECONFIGURE WITH OVERRIDE                 
-- GO                

--HOW-TO ENABLE XP_CMDSHELL END                
-------------------------------------------------------------------------                

--HOW-TO IMPLEMENT SLEEP                 
-- sleep for 10 seconds                 
-- WAITFOR DELAY '00:00:10' SELECT * FROM My_Table                

/* LIST ALL PRIMARY KEYS                 

SELECT                 
  INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS.TABLE_NAME AS TABLE_NAME,                
  INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE.COLUMN_NAME AS COLUMN_NAME,                 
  REPLACE(INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS.CONSTRAINT_TYPE,' ', '_') AS CONSTRAINT_TYPE                 
FROM                 
  INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS                 
  INNER JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE ON                 
  INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS.CONSTRAINT_NAME =                 
  INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE.CONSTRAINT_NAME                 
WHERE                 
  INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS.TABLE_NAME <> N'sysdiagrams'                 
ORDER BY                 
  INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS.TABLE_NAME ASC                

*/                

--HOW-TO COPY TABLE AND THE WHOLE TABLE DATA , COPY TABLE FROM DB TO DB                
--==================================================START                 
/*                
use Poc_Dev                
go                
drop table tbGui_LinksVisibility                

use POc_test                
go                
select *                 
INTO [POC_Dev].[ga].[tbGui_LinksVisibility]                
from [POC_TEST].[ga].[tbGui_LinksVisibility]                


*/                
--HOW-TO COPY TABLE AND THE WHOLE TABLE DATA , COPY TABLE FROM DB TO DB                
--====================================================END                
--=================================================== SEE TABLE METADATA START                
/*                



SELECT c.name AS [COLUMN_NAME], sc.data_type AS [DATA_TYPE], [value] AS                 
[DESCRIPTION] , c.max_length as [MAX_LENGTH] , c.is_nullable AS [OPTIONAL]                 
, c.is_identity AS [IS_PRIMARY_KEY] FROM sys.extended_properties AS ep                 
INNER JOIN sys.tables AS t ON ep.major_id = t.object_id                 
INNER JOIN sys.columns AS c ON ep.major_id = c.object_id AND ep.minor_id                 
= c.column_id                 
INNER JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS sc ON t.name = sc.table_name and                 
c.name = sc.column_name                 
WHERE class = 1 and t.name = 'tbGui_ExecutePOC' ORDER BY SC.DATA_TYPE                


*/                
--=================================================== SEE TABLE METADATA END               
    /*            
select * from Information_schema.columns                
select table_name , column_name from Information_schema.columns where table_name='tbGui_Wizards'                
    */            


--=================================================== LIST ALL TABLES AND THEIR DESCRIPTOINS START                
/*                

SELECT T.name AS TableName, CAST(Props.value AS varchar(1000)) AS                
TableDescription                
FROM sys.tables AS T LEFT OUTER JOIN                
(SELECT class, class_desc, major_id, minor_id,                
name, value                
FROM sys.extended_properties                
WHERE (minor_id = 0) AND (class = 1)) AS                
Props ON T.object_id = Props.major_id                
WHERE (T.type = 'U') AND (T.name <> N'sysdiagrams')                
ORDER BY TableName                
*/                
--=================================================== LIST ALL TABLES AND THEIR DESCRIPTOINS START                

--=================================================== LIST ALL OBJECTS FROM DB START                
/*                


use DB                
--HOW-TO LIST ALL PROCEDURE IN A DATABASE                
select s.name from sysobjects s where type = 'P'                
--HOW-TO LIST ALL TRIGGERS BY NAME IN A DATABASE                
select s.name from sysobjects s where type = 'TR'                
--HOW-TO LIST TABLES IN A DATABASE                 
select s.name from sysobjects s where type = 'U'                
--how-to list all system tables in a database                
select s.name from sysobjects s where type = 's'                
--how-to list all the views in a database                
select s.name from sysobjects s where type = 'v'                


*/                

/*                
Similarly you can find out other objects created by user, simple change type =                 

C = CHECK constraint                 

D = Default or DEFAULT constraint                 

F = FOREIGN KEY constraint                 

L = Log                 

FN = Scalar function                 

IF = In-lined table-function                 

P = Stored procedure                 

PK = PRIMARY KEY constraint (type is K)                 

RF = Replication filter stored procedure                

S = System table                 

TF = Table function                 

TR = Trigger                 

U = User table ( this is the one I discussed above in the example)                

UQ = UNIQUE constraint (type is K)                 

V = View                 

X = Extended stored procedure                
*/                



--=================================================== HOW-TO SEE ALL MY PERMISSIONS START                


/*                

SELECT * FROM fn_my_permissions(NULL, 'SERVER');                
USE poc_qa;                
SELECT * FROM fn_my_permissions (NULL, 'database');                
GO                

*/                
--=================================================== HOW-TO SEE ALL MY PERMISSIONS END                

/*               
--find table               

use poc_dev               
go               
select s.name from sysobjects s where type = 'u'  and s.name like '%Visibility%'              
select * from tbGui_LinksVisibility              

*/              

/* find cursor              

use poc      
go        
DECLARE @procName varchar(100)        
DECLARE @cursorProcNames CURSOR        
SET @cursorProcNames = CURSOR FOR        
select name from sys.procedures where modify_date > '2009-02-05 13:12:15.273' order by modify_date desc       

OPEN @cursorProcNames        
FETCH NEXT        
FROM @cursorProcNames INTO @procName        
WHILE @@FETCH_STATUS = 0        
BEGIN        

set nocount off;        
exec sp_HelpText @procName --- or print them        
-- print @procName        

FETCH NEXT        
FROM @cursorProcNames INTO @procName        
END        
CLOSE @cursorProcNames        

select @@error    

*/              


/* --  SEE STORED PROCEDURE EXT PROPS            

SELECT ep.name as 'EXT_PROP_NAME' , SP.NAME , [value] as 'DESCRIPTION' FROM sys.extended_properties as ep left join sys.procedures as sp on sp.object_id = ep.major_id where sp.type='P'            


-- what the hell I ve been doing lately on sql server 2005 / 2008
select o.name , 
(SELECT [definition] AS [text()] FROM sys.all_sql_modules where sys.all_sql_modules.object_id=a.object_id FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE) AS Statement_Text
, a.object_id, o.modify_date from sys.all_sql_modules a left join sys.objects o on a.object_id=o.object_id order by 4 desc



-- GET THE RIGHT LANG SCHEMA START 
DECLARE @template AS varchar(max)
SET @template = 'SELECT * FROM {object_name}'

DECLARE @object_name AS sysname

SELECT @object_name = QUOTENAME(s.name) + '.' + QUOTENAME(o.name)
FROM sys.objects o
INNER JOIN sys.schemas s
    ON s.schema_id = o.schema_id
WHERE o.object_id = OBJECT_ID(QUOTENAME(@LANG) + '.[TestingLanguagesInNameSpacesDelMe]')

IF @object_name IS NOT NULL
BEGIN
    DECLARE @sql AS varchar(max)
    SET @sql = REPLACE(@template, '{object_name}', @object_name)
    EXEC (@sql)
END
-- GET THE RIGHT LANG SCHEMA END 

--  SEE STORED PROCEDURE EXT PROPS end*/             
set nocount off
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'AuthorName', @value=N'Yordan Georgiev' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'PROCEDURE',@level1name=N'procUtils_SqlCheatSheet'
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'ProcDescription', @value=N'TODO:ADD HERE DESCRPIPTION' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'PROCEDURE',@level1name=N'procUtils_SqlCheatSheet'
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'ProcVersion', @value=N'0.1.0.20090406.1317' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'PROCEDURE',@level1name=N'procUtils_SqlCheatSheet'
GO
/****** Object:  UserDefinedFunction [ga].[GetDbVersion]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:42 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
CREATE FUNCTION [ga].[GetDbVersion]()
RETURNS VARCHAR(20)
    BEGIN
		RETURN convert(varchar(20) , (select value from sys.extended_properties where name='DbVersion' and class_desc='DATABASE') )
    END
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'AuthorName', @value=N'Yordan Georgiev' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'FUNCTION',@level1name=N'GetDbVersion'
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'ChangeDescription', @value=N'Initial creation' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'FUNCTION',@level1name=N'GetDbVersion'
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'CreatedWhen', @value=N'getDate()' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'FUNCTION',@level1name=N'GetDbVersion'
GO
EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'Description', @value=N'Gets the current version of the database ' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'ga', @level1type=N'FUNCTION',@level1name=N'GetDbVersion'
GO
/****** Object:  UserDefinedFunction [ga].[GetDbType]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:42 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
CREATE FUNCTION [ga].[GetDbType]()
RETURNS VARCHAR(30)
    BEGIN
		RETURN convert(varchar(30) , (select value from sys.extended_properties where name='DbType' and class_desc='DATABASE') )
    END
GO
/****** Object:  Default [DF_tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog_DbVersion]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:40 ******/
ALTER TABLE [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] ADD  CONSTRAINT [DF_tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog_DbVersion]  DEFAULT ('select ga.GetDbVersion()') FOR [DbVersion]
GO
/****** Object:  Default [DF_tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog_EventDate]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:40 ******/
ALTER TABLE [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] ADD  CONSTRAINT [DF_tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog_EventDate]  DEFAULT (getdate()) FOR [EventDate]
GO
/****** Object:  Default [DF_tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog_ObjVersion]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:40 ******/
ALTER TABLE [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog] ADD  CONSTRAINT [DF_tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog_ObjVersion]  DEFAULT ('0.0.0') FOR [ObjVersion]
GO
/****** Object:  DdlTrigger [trigMetaDoc_TraceDbChanges]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:29 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
create trigger [trigMetaDoc_TraceDbChanges]
on database
for create_procedure, alter_procedure, drop_procedure,
create_table, alter_table, drop_table,
create_function, alter_function, drop_function , 
create_trigger , alter_trigger , drop_trigger 
as

set nocount on

declare @data xml
set @data = EVENTDATA()
declare @DbVersion varchar(20)
set @DbVersion =(select ga.GetDbVersion())
declare @DbType varchar(20)
set @DbType =(select ga.GetDbType())
declare @DbName varchar(256)
set @DbName =@data.value('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/DatabaseName)[1]', 'varchar(256)')
declare @EventType varchar(256)
set @EventType =@data.value('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/EventType)[1]', 'varchar(50)')
declare @ObjectName varchar(256)
set @ObjectName  = @data.value('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/ObjectName)[1]', 'varchar(256)')
declare @ObjectType varchar(25)
set @ObjectType = @data.value('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/ObjectType)[1]', 'varchar(25)')
declare @TSQLCommand varchar(max)
set @TSQLCommand = @data.value('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/TSQLCommand)[1]', 'varchar(max)')
declare @opentag varchar(4)
set @opentag= '&lt;'
declare @closetag varchar(4) 
set @closetag= '&gt;'
declare @newDataTxt varchar(max) 
set @newDataTxt= cast(@data as varchar(max))
set @newDataTxt = REPLACE ( REPLACE(@newDataTxt , @opentag , '<') , @closetag , '>')
-- print @newDataTxt
declare @newDataXml xml 
set @newDataXml = CONVERT ( xml , @newDataTxt)
declare @Version varchar(50)
set @Version = @newDataXml.value('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/TSQLCommand/CommandText/Version)[1]', 'varchar(50)')

-- if we are dropping take the version from the existing object 
if  ( SUBSTRING(@EventType , 0 , 5)) = 'DROP'
set @Version =( select top 1 [Version]  from ga.tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog where ObjectName=@ObjectName order by [LogId] desc)



declare @LoginName varchar(256) 
set @LoginName = @data.value('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/LoginName)[1]', 'varchar(256)')
declare @FirstName varchar(50)
set @FirstName= (select [FirstName] from [ga].[tb_BLSec_LoginsForUsers] where [LoginName] = @LoginName)
declare @LastName varchar(50)
set @LastName  = (select [LastName] from [ga].[tb_BLSec_LoginsForUsers] where [LoginName] = @LoginName)
declare @SchemaName sysname 
set @SchemaName = @data.value('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/SchemaName)[1]', 'sysname');
--declare @Description xml 
--set @Description = @data.query('(/EVENT_INSTANCE/TSQLCommand/text())')




--print 'VERSION IS ' + @Version
--print @newDataTxt
--print cast(@data as varchar(max))


-- select column_name from information_schema.columns where table_name ='tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog'
insert into [ga].[tb_DataMeta_ObjChangeLog]
(
[DatabaseName] ,
[SchemaName],
[DbVersion] ,
[DbType],
[EventType],
[ObjectName],
[ObjectType] ,
[Version],
[SqlCommand] ,
[LoginName] ,
[FirstName],
[LastName] 
)

values(

@DbName,
@SchemaName,
@DbVersion,
@DbType,
@EventType, 
@ObjectName, 
@ObjectType , 
@Version,
@newDataTxt, 
@LoginName , 
@FirstName , 
@LastName
)
GO
SET ANSI_NULLS OFF
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER OFF
GO
DISABLE TRIGGER [trigMetaDoc_TraceDbChanges] ON DATABASE
GO
/****** Object:  DdlTrigger [trigMetaDoc_TraceDbChanges]    Script Date: 04/22/2009 13:21:29 ******/
Enable Trigger [trigMetaDoc_TraceDbChanges] ON Database
GO
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vote up 4 vote down

The new Database projects in Visual Studio provide source control and change scripts.

They have a nice tool that compares databases and can generate a script that converts the schema of one into the other, or updates the data in one to match the other.

The db schema is "shredded" to create many, many small .sql files, one per DDL command that describes the DB.

+tom


Additional info 2008-11-30

I have been using it as a developer for the past year and really like it. It makes it easy to compare my dev work to production and generate a script to use for the release. I don't know if it is missing features that DBAs need for "enterprise-type" projects.

Because the schema is "shredded" into sql files the source control works fine.

One gotcha is that you need to have a different mindset when you use a db project. The tool has a "db project" in VS, which is just the sql, plus an automatically generated local database which has the schema and some other admin data -- but none of your application data, plus your local dev db that you use for app data dev work. You rarely are aware of the automatically generated db, but you have to know its there so you can leave it alone :). This special db is clearly recognizable because it has a Guid in its name,

The VS DB Project does a nice job of integrating db changes that other team members have made into your local project/associated db. but you need to take the extra step to compare the project schema with your local dev db schema and apply the mods. It makes sense, but it seems awkward at first.

DB Projects are a very powerful tool. They not only generate scripts but can apply them immediately. Be sure not to destroy your production db with it. ;)

I really like the VS DB projects and I expect to use this tool for all my db projects going forward.

+tom

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1  
I have been using it as a developer for the past year and really like it. It makes it easy to compare my dev work to production and generate a script to use for the release. I don't know if it is missing features that DBAs need for "enterprise-type" projects. I will add more not my entry. +tom – Tom A Nov 30 '08 at 19:48
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

There has been a lot of discussion about the database model itself, but we also keep the required data in .SQL files.

For example, in order to be useful your application might need this in the install:

INSERT INTO Currency (CurrencyCode, CurrencyName) 
VALUES ('AUD', 'Australian Dollars');

INSERT INTO Currency (CurrencyCode, CurrencyName) 
VALUES ('USD', 'US Dollars');

We would have a file called currency.sql under subversion. As a manual step in the build process, we compare the previous currency.sql to the latest one and write an upgrade script.

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vote up 0 vote down

A big problem, often overlooked, is that for larger web based systems, it is required to have a transitional period or bucket testing approach to making new releases. This makes it essential to have both rollback and a mechanism for supporting both the old and new schema in the same DB. This requires a scaffolding approach (made populist by the Agile DB folks). In this scenario, lack of process in DB source control can be a total disaster. You need old schema scripts, new schema scripts and a set of intermediate scripts, as well as a tidy up, once the system is fully on the new version (or rolled back).

Rather than having scripts to recreate schema from scratch, what is required is a state based approach, where you need scripts purely to move the DB into the state you require, both forward and back, from version to version. Your DB becomes a series of state scripts, which can be easily source controlled and tagged along with the rest of the source.

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vote up 0 vote down

Any database interface code absolutely should go into version control (Stored Procedures, Functions, etc).

For structure and data, it is a judgement call. I personally keep a clean structural template of my databases around, but don't store them in version control, due to the size. But storing it in version control can be very beneficial, even for just having a history.

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vote up 0 vote down

Your project team can have a DBA to whom every developer would forward their create alter, delete, insert/update (for master data) sql statements. DBAs would run those queries and on successfully making the required update would add those statements to a text file or a spreadsheet. Each addition can be labeled as a savepoint. Incase you revert back to a particular savepoint, just do a drop all and run the queries uptil the labelled savepoint. This approach is just a thought... a bit of fine tuning here would work for your development environment.

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vote up 1 vote down

I have used RedGate SQL Compare Pro for schema synchronization with script folder, then I commit all my update to version control. It works great.

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vote up 2 vote down

FYI This was also brought up a few days ago by Dana ... Stored procedures/DB schema in source control

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vote up 1 vote down

RedGate is great, we generate new snapshots when database changes are made (a tiny binary file) and keep that file in the projects as a resource. Whenever we need to update the database, we use RedGate's toolkit to update the database, as well as being able to create new databases from empty ones.

RedGate also makes Data snapshots, while I haven't personally worked with them, they are just as robust.

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vote up 1 vote down

RedGate software makes some great tools that will help you version your database. Be sure to try to have your devs build their own isolated local databases for dev work rather than rely on a "dev server" which may or may not be down at some time.

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vote up 3 vote down

Yes, always. You should be able to recreate your production database structure with a useful set of sample data whenever needed. If you don't, over time minor changes to keep things running get forgotten then one day you get bitten, big time. Its insurance that you might not think you need but the day you do it it worth the price 10 times over!

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vote up 2 vote down

This has always been a big annoyance for me too - it seems like it is just way too easy to make a quick change to your development database, save it (forgetting to save a change script), and then you're stuck. You could undo what you just did and redo it to create the change script, or write it from scratch if you want of course too, though that's a lot of time spent writing scripts.

A tool that I have used in the past that has helped with this some is SQL Delta. It will show you the differences between two databases (SQL server/Oracle I believe) and generate all the change scripts necessary to migrate A->B. Another nice thing it does is show all the differences between database content between the production (or test) DB and your development DB. Since more and more apps store configuration and state that is crucial to their execution in database tables, it can be a real pain to have change scripts that remove, add, and alter the proper rows. SQL Delta shows the rows in the database just like they would look in a Diff tool - changed, added, deleted.

An excellent tool. Here is the link: http://www.sqldelta.com/

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vote up 12 vote down

Check out LiquiBase for managing database changes using source 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 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 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 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 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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