reshape
sqlc
Our great sponsors
reshape | sqlc | |
---|---|---|
16 | 169 | |
1,621 | 10,837 | |
- | 5.6% | |
7.4 | 9.7 | |
about 1 month ago | 8 days ago | |
Rust | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
reshape
- Show HN: Reshape – Zero-downtime schema migrations for Postgres
-
Pgroll: zero-downtime, undoable, schema migrations for Postgres
Cool stuff! Do you have any thoughts about how this compares to https://github.com/fabianlindfors/reshape?
-
Postgres schema changes are still a PITA
From what I know, there is only one project that tries something close to this: the relatively recent Reshape. It uses Postgres views to expose the two versions of the schema and triggers to upgrade/downgrade the new data. It doesn’t do the constraints part as described above, but shows that this approach is possible. Combined with the Xata pull request based workflow, I think the ideal system described above is possible!
-
Conceptually how do you handle deploys of SQL related things (table definition, scripts, stored procs etc) in a CI/CD way?
My idea is not unique. Reshape is similar, but bigger in scope.
-
The operational relational schema paradigm
This is precisely what I did for my automated zero-downtime migration tool and it works pretty well: https://github.com/fabianlindfors/reshape. At least for Postgres, simple views like these have almost no overhead as queries are simply rewritten for the underlying table.
-
Changing Tires at 100mph: A Guide to Zero Downtime Migrations
Anybody interested in this subject might also be interested in a tool for Postgres I’ve been working on, Reshape: https://github.com/fabianlindfors/reshape. It aims to fully automate away all the pain and manual steps zero-downtime migrations normally requires :)
- Reshape: An experimental, easy-to-use, zero-downtime migration tool for Postgres
-
PostgreSQL at Scale: Database Schema Changes Without Downtime
This post is absolutely terrific and has been been my main reference for Reshape, an automated, zero-downtime schema migration tool: https://github.com/fabianlindfors/reshape
- When Postgres blocks: tips for dealing with locks
- Reshape
sqlc
-
Give Up Sooner
"Is there a way to get sqlc to use pointers for nullable columns instead of the sql.Null types?"
-
Show HN: Sqlbind a Python library to compose raw SQL
I came across this yesterday for golang: https://sqlc.dev which is somewhat like what you want, maybe.
Not sure it allows you to parameterize table names but the basic idea is codegen from sql queries so you are working with go code (autocompletion etc).
- API completa em Golang - Parte 7
-
ORMs are nice but they are the wrong abstraction
Agreed, but tools like https://sqlc.dev, which I mention in the article, are a good trade-off that allows you to have verified, testable, SQL in your code.
- API completa em Golang - Parte 6
-
Go ORMs Compared
sqlc is not strictly a conventional ORM. It offers a unique approach by generating Go code from SQL queries. This allows developers to write SQL, which sqlc then converts into type-safe Go code, reducing the boilerplate significantly. It ensures that your queries are syntactically correct and type-safe. sqlc is ideal for those who prefer writing SQL and are looking for an efficient way to integrate it into a Go application.
-
Type-safe Data Access in Go using Prisma and sqlc
I was browsing awesome-go for ideas on how to setup my data access layer when I stumbled on sqlc. It seemed like a great option. Code generation is a strategy often used in the Go ecosystem and making my queries safe at compile time was an idea I really liked. Knex was great, but it required of me that I test thoroughly my queries at runtime and that I sanitize my query results to ensure type safety within my application.
-
Level UP your RDBMS Productivity in GO
Now, we are going to generate the code. For this purpose, we are going to use sqlc.
-
What 3rd-party libraries do you use often/all the time?
https://github.com/sqlc-dev/sqlc — for use with //go:generate
- API completa em Golang - Parte 1
What are some alternatives?
pg-online-schema-change - Easy CLI tool for making zero downtime schema changes and backfills in PostgreSQL [Moved to: https://github.com/shayonj/pg-osc]
sqlx - general purpose extensions to golang's database/sql
pgroll - PostgreSQL zero-downtime migrations made easy
GORM - The fantastic ORM library for Golang, aims to be developer friendly
migra - Like diff but for PostgreSQL schemas
SQLBoiler - Generate a Go ORM tailored to your database schema.
gh-ost - GitHub's Online Schema-migration Tool for MySQL
ent - An entity framework for Go
atlas - Manage your database schema as code
jet - Type safe SQL builder with code generation and automatic query result data mapping
bytebase.com - Source for bytebase.com
pgx - PostgreSQL driver and toolkit for Go