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I'm doing a web app, and I need to make a branch for some major changes, the thing is, these changes require changes to the database schema, so I'd like to put the entire database under git as well.

How do I do that? is there a specific folder that I can keep under a git repository? How do I know which one? How can I be sure that I'm putting the right folder?

I need to be sure, because these changes are not backward compatible; I can't afford to screw up.

The database in my case is PostgreSQL

Edit:

Someone suggested taking backups and putting the backup file under version control instead of the database. To be honest, I find that really hard to swallow.

There has to be a better way.

Update:

OK, so there' no better way, but I'm still not quite convinced, so I will change the question a bit:

I'd like to put the entire database under version control, what database engine can I use so that I can put the actual database under version control instead of its dump?

Would sqlite be git-friendly?

Since this is only the development environment, I can choose whatever database I want.

Edit2:

What I really want is not to track my development history, but to be able to switch from my "new radical changes" branch to the "current stable branch" and be able for instance to fix some bugs/issues, etc, with the current stable branch. Such that when I switch branches, the database auto-magically becomes compatible with the branch I'm currently on. I don't really care much about the actual data.

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To be honest, I just make copies of the database if I'm introducing schema changes and have to deal with multiple development branches at the same time... dev databases should hopefully be small enough to do that. I'd regard any system that tried to be clever and make DB changes just because I changed source branch with suspicion. And I'd also like to be sure things to keep on working if I simply cloned my workspace and had one branch in one location, and the other in the new one. – araqnid May 11 at 21:17

5 Answers

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Take a database dump, and version control that instead. This way it is a flat text file.

Personally I suggest that you keep both a data dump, and a schema dump. This way using diff it becomes fairly easy to see what changed in the schema from revision to revision.

If you are making big changes, you should have a secondary database that you make the new schema changes to and not touch the old one since as you said you are making a branch.

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What? There's gotta be a better way. – hasen j May 11 at 4:18
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PostGreSQL database files are binary files, feel free to put them in your git repository, you just won't be able to do any diffs on them, and any changes will most likely change the whole database and thus you now have to send the full database over the wire to your git repo and store it. This is inefficient, slow, and makes it extremely hard to work with. Also, I am not sure that the database files stored on disk without VACUUM and shutting PostgreSQL down to make a copy are "stable" as in all of the data is always correct, thereby possibly leaving you with corrupt data. – X-Istence May 11 at 4:28
Hmm, I see! Well, are there db systems that are more git-friendly? – hasen j May 11 at 5:34
This type of solution is pretty standard and the schema is actually source code. – Dana the Sane May 11 at 5:55
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I'm starting to think of a really simple solution, don't know why I didn't think of it before!!

  • Duplicate the database, (both the schema and the data).
  • In the branch for the new-major-changes, simply change the project configuration to use the new duplicate database.

This way I can switch branches without worrying about database schema changes.

EDIT:

By duplicate, I mean create another database with a different name (like my_db_2); not doing a dump or anything like that.

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This is what I was trying to get at. Sorry if I wasn't clear enough. – Dana the Sane May 12 at 2:48
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I think X-Istence is on the right track, but there are a few more improvements you can make to this strategy. First, use:

$pg_dump --schema ...

to dump the tables, sequences, etc and place this file under version control. You'll use this to separate the compatibility changes between your branches.

Next, perform a data dump for the set of tables that contain configuration required for your application to operate (should probably skip user data, etc), like form defaults and other data non-user modifiable data. You can do this selectively by using:

$pg_dump --table=.. <or> --exclude-table=..

This is a good idea because the repo can get really clunky when your database gets to 100Mb+ when doing a full data dump. A better idea is to back up a more minimal set of data that you require to test your app. If your default data is very large though, this may still cause problems though.

If you absolutely need to place full backups in the repo, consider doing it in a branch outside of your source tree. An external backup system with some reference to the matching svn rev is likely best for this though.

Also, I suggest using text format dumps over binary for revision purposes (for the schema at least) since these are easier to diff. You can always compress these to save space prior to checking in.

Finally, have a look at the postgres backup documentation if you haven't already. The way you're commenting on backing up 'the database' rather than a dump makes me wonder if you're thinking of file system based backups (see section 23.2 for caveats).

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isn't the dump just a backup? – hasen j May 11 at 20:52
Yes, but you can restore it to an alternate database and make your modifications there. – Dana the Sane May 12 at 2:48
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Check out Refactoring Databases (http://databaserefactoring.com/) for a bunch of good techniques for maintaining your database in tandem with code changes.

Suffice to say that you're asking the wrong questions. Instead of putting your database into git you should be decomposing your changes into small verifiable steps so that you can migrate/rollback schema changes with ease.

If you want to have full recoverability you should consider archiving your postgres WAL logs and use the PITR (point in time recovery) to play back/forward transactions to specific known good states.

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You can't do it without atomicity, and you can't get atomicity without either using pg_dump or a snapshotting filesystem.

My postgres instance is on zfs, which I snapshot occasionally. It's approximately instant and consistent.

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