dbeaver
Flyway
Our great sponsors
dbeaver | Flyway | |
---|---|---|
27 | 81 | |
37,391 | 7,763 | |
3.3% | 1.0% | |
9.9 | 7.2 | |
2 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Java | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dbeaver
-
DBeaver – open-source Database client
Yes but not in the community version:
https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver/wiki/Schema-compare
-
👻Top 8 Free, Open Source SQL Clients🔥
DBeaver is a veteran SQL client. In addition to basic visualization and management capabilities, it has a SQL editor, data and schema migration capabilities, monitor database connections, and more. It supports a full range of databases (both SQL and NoSQL). DBeaver is also hooked up with GPT-3, which converts your natural language to SQL.
-
Does the world need a new SQL editor?
If you want to do something meaningful, here's the DBeaver GitHub repo https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver. Go contribute a ChatGPT plugin & update the UI to look nicer.
-
SQLite is not a toy database
dbeaver is an excellent option as well, plus it supports basically every kind of SQL database in existence.
-
The Firefox snap: Updates and Upgrades
Curiously enough, just yesterday a snap broke on me. People on the github thread said reverting snap didn't work either - I'm not sure whether they simply couldn't revert, or they reverted and still had issues, as I just saw this and slapped on the flatpak instead of messing with my snap. I'm also not sure whether the snap revert didn't work because of something the dbeaver team screwed up there as well, however I'll make sure to avoid automatic/unattended updates in the future. I'm running Arch on my personal machine anyway, so it's not like I mind running updates regularly, but I'd rather do it at my own discretion.
- opensource sqlyog alternatives that beautify sql code
-
Issue with copying and pasting from certain sources
Please create a ticket and describe your issue here: https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver/issues/new/choose
-
DBeaver controls compared to Microsoft SQL
I did find https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver/issues/6064 marked as closed, perhaps that will help?
- BigQuery Table with JSON Error "The specified column type is currently unsupported by the driver for column JSON."
- newly started using dbeaver
Flyway
-
Let's write a simple microservice in Clojure
The session logs show that the application loads configurations and establishes a connection with a PostgreSQL database. This involves initializing a HikariCP connection pool and Flyway for database migrations. The logs confirm that the database schema validation and migration checks were successful. The startup of the Jetty HTTP server follows, and the server becomes operational and ready to accept requests on the specified port.
-
Ask HN: What tool(s) do you use to code review and deploy SQL scripts?
Also RedGate, but Flyway has some reasons to recommend it over RedGate Deploy depending on your DBAs/workflows: https://flywaydb.org/
(Though I don't think it is "complete" or "perfect", either.)
EF Migrations are in a really good place now if you like/don't mind C# as a language (and you can easily embed SQL inside the C#, too, but there are benefits to being able to also run high level C# code). With today's tooling you can package your migration "runner application" as a single deployable executable for most platforms. You can build the executable once and run it in all your environments. (The same tool that updates your QA and Staging updates your Prod, testably running the same migrations.) Given the single executable deployable I might even consider using it for projects not themselves written in C#.
-
PostgreSQL Is Enough
There is a bit of tooling needed but is already around. For Java for example I had very good experience with a combination of flyway [1] for migrations, testcontainers [2] for making integration tests as easy as unit tests and querydsl [3] for a query and mapping layer.
[1] https://github.com/flyway/flyway
[2] https://java.testcontainers.org/modules/databases/postgres/
[3] https://github.com/querydsl/querydsl
-
Using Flyway to version your database
When software starts using a database, it's advisable to have version control, just as we have Github to control our source code. This is all to be sure about what was executed for that specific version. For Java and Spring boot, we have the Flyway framework that aims to resolve this situation, free of charge.
-
CI/CD for Databricks
If you're looking for tools, like https://www.liquibase.com/ or https://flywaydb.org/, which are database-state-based schema migration toolkits - it might be relatively straightforward to build similar ones using Databricks SQL drivers.
-
Working with jOOQ and Flyway using Testcontainers
Honestly I kind of wish there was a Lukas Eder database migration library. Call it whatever jooq-migration. At least I would have more insight of what is going on (<-- seriously look at the commit history).
-
Strategy to run database scripts on Kubernetes
This is a 4th option, which should play nice with ArgoCD. The following example runs flyway as a k8s job. The desired migration changes are recorded as files within the chart. This helm chart can be integrated with your application (Using hooks to determine when the migration job is run) or run manually.
-
How do your teams run DB migrations?
By using an opinionated framework within the app/service (like Flyway, Migrate, Diesel, etc). Schema migrations happen on app/service start-up.
-
I've never created a production database from scratch and am wondering how much trouble it would be to transition a one-to-one relationship to a one-to-many relationship if I determine at some point that the latter is required.
Depending on the language or platform there are libraries you can use to manage this, such as Prisma on node and Flyway for Java/JVM.
-
How should I document and/or automate schema changes?
It's probably overkill but I've used github plus flyway at a couple places in the past which is pretty nice tool for tracking changes to a variety of db's, it's also very helpful if you ever need to replicate a db in a new region/environment.
What are some alternatives?
dbgate - Database manager for MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQL Server, MongoDB, SQLite and others. Runs under Windows, Linux, Mac or as web application
alembic - A database migrations tool for SQLAlchemy.
LINQ to DB - Linq to database provider.
HikariCP - 光 HikariCP・A solid, high-performance, JDBC connection pool at last.
liquibase - Main Liquibase Source
roundhouse - RoundhousE is a Database Migration Utility for .NET using sql files and versioning based on source control
Gravitational Teleport - The easiest, and most secure way to access and protect all of your infrastructure.
H2 - H2 is an embeddable RDBMS written in Java.
LevelDB - LevelDB is a fast key-value storage library written at Google that provides an ordered mapping from string keys to string values.
dbmate - :rocket: A lightweight, framework-agnostic database migration tool.
mondrian - Mondrian is an Online Analytical Processing (OLAP) server that enables business users to analyze large quantities of data in real-time.
Hibernate - Hibernate's core Object/Relational Mapping functionality