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Gondolier

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Description

Gondolier is a library to auto migrate database schemas in Go (golang) using structs. Quick demo:

type Customer struct {
    Id   uint64 `gondolier:"type:bigint;id"`
    Name string `gondolier:"type:varchar(255);notnull"`
    Age  int    `gondolier:"type:integer;notnull"`
}

type Order struct {
    Id    uint64 `gondolier:"type:bigint;id"`
    Buyer uint64 `gondolier:"type:bigint;fk:customer.id;notnull"`
}

type OrderPosition struct {
    Id       uint64 `gondolier:"type:bigint;id"`
    Order    uint64 `gondolier:"type:bigint;fk:order.id;notnull"`
    Quantity int    `gondolier:"type:integer;notnull"`
    Cost     int    `gondolier:"type:integer;notnull"`
}

type Obsolete struct{}

func main() {
    // connect to database
    db, _ := sql.Open("postgres", dbString())
    defer db.Close()

    // migrate your schema
    gondolier.Use(db, &gondolier.Postgres{Schema: "public",
        DropColumns: true,
        Log:         true})
    gondolier.Model(Customer{}, Order{}, OrderPosition{})
    gondolier.Drop(Obsolete{})
    gondolier.Migrate()
}

View the full demo

Features

Supported databases

Limits

Installation

To install Gondolier, go get all dependencies and Gondolier:

go get github.com/lib/pq # for Postgres
go get github.com/emvi/gondolier

Usage

Gondolier consists only out of a few methods. First, you set up Gondolier by passing the database connection and the migrator to Use:

gondolier.Use(dbconn, migrator)

The migrator is an interface which is used by Gondolier to migrate the data model. Example:

gondolier.Postgres{Schema: "public", DropColums: true, Log: true}

This will configure the Postgres migrator to use the schema "public", drop columns when the field is missing in the data model and output executed SQL statements to log (using the standard log library).

Now you can define a naming schema used to name tables and columns:

gondolier.Naming(&gondolier.SnakeCase{})

You can define your own naming schema by implementing the NameSchema interface. Currently SnakeCase is the default. You don't need to call Naming to set it.

Now call Model and pass the models which define your database schema:

gondolier.Model(MyModel{}, &AnotherModel{})

Model accepts objects and pointers. The models must define a decorator with meta information. For more details take a look at the Postgres Migrator or the example implementation. Here is a short example:

type MyModel struct {
    Id       uint64 `gondolier:"type:bigint;id"` // id is a shortcut
    SomeAttr string `gondolier:"type:text;notnull"`
}

type AnotherModel struct {
    Id         uint64   `gondolier:"type:bigint;pk;seq:1,1,-,-,1;default:nextval(seq);notnull"` // long version for "id"
    UniqueAttr int      `gondolier:"type:integer;notnull;unique;default:42"`
    AnArray    []string `gondolier:"type:varchar(100)[]"`
    ForeignKey uint64   `gondolier:"type:bigint;fk:MyModel.Id;notnull"`
}

Afterwards, call Migrate to start the migration:

gondolier.Migrate()

To drop a table that is no longer needed, call Drop. You can remove all attributes from the struct, only the name must match the old struct:

type DropMe struct {}
gondolier.Drop(DropMe{})

Contribute

See CONTRIBUTING.md

License

MIT