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Top 3 Go schema-change Projects
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bytebase
The GitLab/GitHub for database DevOps. World's most advanced database DevOps and CI/CD for Developer, DBA and Platform Engineering teams.
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
Project mention: Ask HN: What tool(s) do you use to code review and deploy SQL scripts? | news.ycombinator.com | 2024-04-14We have been building https://github.com/bytebase/bytebase for 3+ years. You can think it of as GitHub/GitLab for SQL changes, with integrated GitOps, code review and deployment.
You can further check out this tutorial to get a feel of our GitOps solution
https://www.bytebase.com/docs/tutorials/database-change-mana...
Project mention: We built our customer data warehouse all on Postgres | news.ycombinator.com | 2024-02-02Thanks! Yeah definitely agree that building out declarative table management for Postgres would be a major effort. A few open source projects I've seen in that area include:
https://github.com/sqldef/sqldef (Go)
https://github.com/bikeshedder/tusker (Python but being ported to Rust)
https://github.com/tyrchen/renovate (Rust)
https://github.com/blainehansen/postgres_migrator (Rust)
Some of these are based on parsing SQL, and others are based on running the CREATEs in a temporary location and introspecting the result.
The schema export side can be especially tricky for Postgres, since it lacks a built-in equivalent to MySQL's SHOW CREATE TABLE. So most of these declarative pg tools shell out to pg_dump, or require the user to do so. But sqldef actually implements CREATE TABLE dumping in pure Golang if I recall correctly, which is pretty cool.
There's also the question of implementing the table diff logic from scratch, vs shelling out to another tool or using a library. For the latter path, there's a nice blog post from Supabase about how they evaluated the various options: https://supabase.com/blog/supabase-cli#choosing-the-best-dif...
If a tool blindly drops columns, that's just a bad tool! It doesn't mean the concept is flawed.
Thousands of companies successfully use declarative schema management. Google and Facebook are two examples at a large scale, but it's equally beneficial at smaller scales too. As long as the workflow has sufficient guardrails, it's safe and it speeds up development time.
Some companies use it to auto-generate migrations (which are then reviewed/edited), while others use a fully declarative flow (no "migrations", but automated guardrails and human review).
I'm the author of Skeema (https://github.com/skeema/skeema) which has provided declarative flow for MySQL and MariaDB since 2016. Hundreds of companies use it, including GitHub, SendGrid, Cash App, Wix, Etsy, and many others you have likely heard of. Safety is the primary consideration throughout all of Skeema's design: https://www.skeema.io/docs/features/safety/
Meanwhile a few declarative solutions that support Postgres include sqldef, Migra, Tusker (which builds on Migra), and Atlas.
Go schema-changes related posts
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Features I wish PostgreSQL had as a developer
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How Meta Built the Infrastructure for Threads
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🚛 Deploy Database Schema Migrations with Bytebase
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Bytebase – The Only Database CI/CD Workspace
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Automagically generate migrations for GORM
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database changes tracking tools
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Best open-source database schema migration tool to automate migrations?
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A note from our sponsor - SaaSHub
www.saashub.com | 10 May 2024
Index
What are some of the best open-source schema-change projects in Go? This list will help you:
Project | Stars | |
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1 | bytebase | 10,107 |
2 | sqldef | 1,817 |
3 | skeema | 1,235 |
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