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Emigrate

The modern, modular and flexible migration tool for any database

It's effectively a successor of klei-migrate and Immigration.

📖 Read the documentation for more information!

Features

  • Database agnostic
    • Emigrate can migrate any database
  • Works at any scale
    • Supports any database as storage so multiple instances of the same app can share the same migration history
    • Supports multiple projects/apps doing migrations on the same database without interfering with each other
    • Uses smart locking to ensure only one instance migrates a certain migration at a time
    • Thanks to the smart locking it's safe to run migrations in parallel
  • Can be run inside containers
    • It's common for Docker or Kubernetes to kill containers with health checks if migrations takes too long to run
    • Emigrate makes sure the migration history does not get stuck in a locked state if that's the case
  • Supports any file type for your migration files
    • You can easily write migrations in JavaScript, TypeScript or plain SQL (or any other language)
    • JavaScript migration files written using CommonJS or ES modules (ESM) are supported out of the box
    • You can customize the template for your migration files to fit your needs (or use a plugin to do it for you)
  • Easy to debug
    • Emigrate will store any errors that occur during migration in the migration history so you can easily debug them

Installation

Install the Emigrate CLI in your project:

npm install @emigrate/cli
# or
pnpm add @emigrate/cli
# or
yarn add @emigrate/cli
# or
bun add @emigrate/cli

Usage

Usage: emigrate up [options]

Run all pending migrations

Options:

  -h, --help              Show this help message and exit

  -d, --directory <path>  The directory where the migration files are located (required)

  -i, --import <module>   Additional modules/packages to import before running the migrations (can be specified multiple times)
                          For example if you want to use Dotenv to load environment variables or when using TypeScript

  -s, --storage <name>    The storage to use for where to store the migration history (required)

  -p, --plugin <name>     The plugin(s) to use (can be specified multiple times)

  -r, --reporter <name>   The reporter to use for reporting the migration progress

  -l, --limit <count>     Limit the number of migrations to run

  -f, --from <name/path>  Start running migrations from the given migration name or relative file path to a migration file,
                          the given name or path needs to exist. The same migration and those after it lexicographically will be run

  -t, --to <name/path>    Skip migrations after the given migration name or relative file path to a migration file,
                          the given name or path needs to exist. The same migration and those before it lexicographically will be run

  --dry                   List the pending migrations that would be run without actually running them

  --color                 Force color output (this option is passed to the reporter)

  --no-color              Disable color output (this option is passed to the reporter)

  --no-execution          Mark the migrations as executed and successful without actually running them,
                          which is useful if you want to mark migrations as successful after running them manually

  --abort-respite <sec>   The number of seconds to wait before abandoning running migrations after the command has been aborted (default: 10)

Examples:

  emigrate up --directory src/migrations -s fs
  emigrate up -d ./migrations --storage @emigrate/mysql
  emigrate up -d src/migrations -s postgres -r json --dry
  emigrate up -d ./migrations -s mysql --import dotenv/config
  emigrate up --limit 1
  emigrate up --to 20231122120529381_some_migration_file.js
  emigrate up --to 20231122120529381_some_migration_file.js --no-execution

Examples

Create a new migration:

npx emigrate new -d migrations create some fancy table
# or
pnpm emigrate new -d migrations create some fancy table
# or
yarn emigrate new -d migrations create some fancy table
# or
bunx --bun emigrate new -d migrations create some fancy table

Will create a new empty JavaScript migration file with the name "YYYYMMDDHHmmssuuu_create_some_fancy_table.js" in the migrations directory.

License

Emigrate is licensed under the MIT license. See LICENSE for the full license text.