How Hasura migrations work¶
Table of contents
Introduction¶
This is an explanation on how the Hasura migration system works. To understand how to use the system, refer to Migrations & Metadata.
Metadata¶
Let’s first talk about metadata. Whenever you do certain actions on the console
or via the API, Hasura records it in the metadata catalogue
which is a schema called hdb_catalog
in your Postgres database. For example, if you track
a table, a new entry is created in the hdb_catalog.hdb_table
table in Postgres.
Similarly, there are more tables in this schema to track relationships, event triggers,
functions and remote schemas.
All information in this schema can be exported as files. Export
options are available on the console, CLI and via the API. These files when
imported to an existing or new Hasura instance, will clear out the
hdb_catalog
schema on that instance and populates it again with the imported
data. One thing to note is that all the Postgres resources the metadata refers
to should already exist when the import happens, otherwise Hasura will throw an
error.
Migrations¶
While metadata can be exported as files as a representation of the state of Hasura, you might want more granular step-by-step checkpoints on the evolution of the state. You might also want to track the Postgres schema changes through Hasura’s migration system.
Migrations are stored and applied as steps (or versions). A migration step (or
version) contains changes to the Postgres schema. The
migration version can also store the up
migration (creating resources) and
the down
migration (deleting resources). For example, migration version
1
can include the SQL statements required to create a table called
profile
as the up
migration and SQL statements to drop this table as
the down
migration.
The migration versions can be automatically generated by the Hasura console or
can be written by hand. They are stored as SQL files in a directory
called migrations
.
For more details on the format of these files, refer to Migration file format reference.
When someone executes migrate apply
using the Hasura CLI, the CLI will first
read the migration files present in the designated directory. The CLI would then
contact the Hasura Server and get the status of all migrations applied to the
server by reading the hdb_catalog.schema_migrations
table. Each row in this
table denotes a migration version that is already applied on the server.
By comparing these two sets of versions, the CLI derives which versions are
already applied and which are not. The CLI would then go ahead and apply the
migrations on the server. This is done by executing the actions against the
database through the Hasura metadata APIs. Whenever the apply
command is
used, all migrations that are to be applied are executed in a Postgres
transaction (through a bulk
API call). The advantage of doing this is that if
there are any errors, all actions are rolled back and the user can properly
debug the error without worrying about partial changes.
The default action of the migrate apply
command is to execute all the up
migrations. In order to roll back changes, you would need to execute down
migrations using the --down
flag on the CLI.
This guide provides an overall idea of how the system works. For more details on how to actually use the system, refer to Migrations & Metadata.