debian-mirror-gitlab/lib/gitlab/database/migration_helpers.rb
2021-03-08 18:12:59 +05:30

1713 lines
65 KiB
Ruby

# frozen_string_literal: true
module Gitlab
module Database
module MigrationHelpers
include Migrations::BackgroundMigrationHelpers
# https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-syntax-lexical.html#SQL-SYNTAX-IDENTIFIERS
MAX_IDENTIFIER_NAME_LENGTH = 63
PERMITTED_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS = %i[created_at updated_at deleted_at].to_set.freeze
DEFAULT_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS = %i[created_at updated_at].freeze
# Adds `created_at` and `updated_at` columns with timezone information.
#
# This method is an improved version of Rails' built-in method `add_timestamps`.
#
# By default, adds `created_at` and `updated_at` columns, but these can be specified as:
#
# add_timestamps_with_timezone(:my_table, columns: [:created_at, :deleted_at])
#
# This allows you to create just the timestamps you need, saving space.
#
# Available options are:
# :default - The default value for the column.
# :null - When set to `true` the column will allow NULL values.
# The default is to not allow NULL values.
# :columns - the column names to create. Must be one
# of `Gitlab::Database::MigrationHelpers::PERMITTED_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS`.
# Default value: `DEFAULT_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS`
#
# All options are optional.
def add_timestamps_with_timezone(table_name, options = {})
options[:null] = false if options[:null].nil?
columns = options.fetch(:columns, DEFAULT_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS)
default_value = options[:default]
validate_not_in_transaction!(:add_timestamps_with_timezone, 'with default value') if default_value
columns.each do |column_name|
validate_timestamp_column_name!(column_name)
# If default value is presented, use `add_column_with_default` method instead.
if default_value
add_column_with_default(
table_name,
column_name,
:datetime_with_timezone,
default: default_value,
allow_null: options[:null]
)
else
add_column(table_name, column_name, :datetime_with_timezone, options)
end
end
end
# To be used in the `#down` method of migrations that
# use `#add_timestamps_with_timezone`.
#
# Available options are:
# :columns - the column names to remove. Must be one
# Default value: `DEFAULT_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS`
#
# All options are optional.
def remove_timestamps(table_name, options = {})
columns = options.fetch(:columns, DEFAULT_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS)
columns.each do |column_name|
remove_column(table_name, column_name)
end
end
#
# Creates a new table, optionally allowing the caller to add check constraints to the table.
# Aside from that addition, this method should behave identically to Rails' `create_table` method.
#
# Example:
#
# create_table_with_constraints :some_table do |t|
# t.integer :thing, null: false
# t.text :other_thing
#
# t.check_constraint :thing_is_not_null, 'thing IS NOT NULL'
# t.text_limit :other_thing, 255
# end
#
# See Rails' `create_table` for more info on the available arguments.
def create_table_with_constraints(table_name, **options, &block)
helper_context = self
check_constraints = []
with_lock_retries do
create_table(table_name, **options) do |t|
t.define_singleton_method(:check_constraint) do |name, definition|
helper_context.send(:validate_check_constraint_name!, name) # rubocop:disable GitlabSecurity/PublicSend
check_constraints << { name: name, definition: definition }
end
t.define_singleton_method(:text_limit) do |column_name, limit, name: nil|
# rubocop:disable GitlabSecurity/PublicSend
name = helper_context.send(:text_limit_name, table_name, column_name, name: name)
helper_context.send(:validate_check_constraint_name!, name)
# rubocop:enable GitlabSecurity/PublicSend
column_name = helper_context.quote_column_name(column_name)
definition = "char_length(#{column_name}) <= #{limit}"
check_constraints << { name: name, definition: definition }
end
t.instance_eval(&block) unless block.nil?
end
next if check_constraints.empty?
constraint_clauses = check_constraints.map do |constraint|
"ADD CONSTRAINT #{quote_table_name(constraint[:name])} CHECK (#{constraint[:definition]})"
end
execute(<<~SQL)
ALTER TABLE #{quote_table_name(table_name)}
#{constraint_clauses.join(",\n")}
SQL
end
end
# Creates a new index, concurrently
#
# Example:
#
# add_concurrent_index :users, :some_column
#
# See Rails' `add_index` for more info on the available arguments.
def add_concurrent_index(table_name, column_name, options = {})
if transaction_open?
raise 'add_concurrent_index can not be run inside a transaction, ' \
'you can disable transactions by calling disable_ddl_transaction! ' \
'in the body of your migration class'
end
options = options.merge({ algorithm: :concurrently })
if index_exists?(table_name, column_name, options)
Gitlab::AppLogger.warn "Index not created because it already exists (this may be due to an aborted migration or similar): table_name: #{table_name}, column_name: #{column_name}"
return
end
disable_statement_timeout do
add_index(table_name, column_name, options)
end
end
# Removes an existed index, concurrently
#
# Example:
#
# remove_concurrent_index :users, :some_column
#
# See Rails' `remove_index` for more info on the available arguments.
def remove_concurrent_index(table_name, column_name, options = {})
if transaction_open?
raise 'remove_concurrent_index can not be run inside a transaction, ' \
'you can disable transactions by calling disable_ddl_transaction! ' \
'in the body of your migration class'
end
options = options.merge({ algorithm: :concurrently })
unless index_exists?(table_name, column_name, options)
Gitlab::AppLogger.warn "Index not removed because it does not exist (this may be due to an aborted migration or similar): table_name: #{table_name}, column_name: #{column_name}"
return
end
disable_statement_timeout do
remove_index(table_name, options.merge({ column: column_name }))
end
end
# Removes an existing index, concurrently
#
# Example:
#
# remove_concurrent_index :users, "index_X_by_Y"
#
# See Rails' `remove_index` for more info on the available arguments.
def remove_concurrent_index_by_name(table_name, index_name, options = {})
if transaction_open?
raise 'remove_concurrent_index_by_name can not be run inside a transaction, ' \
'you can disable transactions by calling disable_ddl_transaction! ' \
'in the body of your migration class'
end
index_name = index_name[:name] if index_name.is_a?(Hash)
raise 'remove_concurrent_index_by_name must get an index name as the second argument' if index_name.blank?
options = options.merge({ algorithm: :concurrently })
unless index_exists_by_name?(table_name, index_name)
Gitlab::AppLogger.warn "Index not removed because it does not exist (this may be due to an aborted migration or similar): table_name: #{table_name}, index_name: #{index_name}"
return
end
disable_statement_timeout do
remove_index(table_name, options.merge({ name: index_name }))
end
end
# Adds a foreign key with only minimal locking on the tables involved.
#
# This method only requires minimal locking
#
# source - The source table containing the foreign key.
# target - The target table the key points to.
# column - The name of the column to create the foreign key on.
# on_delete - The action to perform when associated data is removed,
# defaults to "CASCADE".
# name - The name of the foreign key.
#
def add_concurrent_foreign_key(source, target, column:, on_delete: :cascade, name: nil, validate: true)
# Transactions would result in ALTER TABLE locks being held for the
# duration of the transaction, defeating the purpose of this method.
if transaction_open?
raise 'add_concurrent_foreign_key can not be run inside a transaction'
end
options = {
column: column,
on_delete: on_delete,
name: name.presence || concurrent_foreign_key_name(source, column)
}
if foreign_key_exists?(source, target, **options)
warning_message = "Foreign key not created because it exists already " \
"(this may be due to an aborted migration or similar): " \
"source: #{source}, target: #{target}, column: #{options[:column]}, "\
"name: #{options[:name]}, on_delete: #{options[:on_delete]}"
Gitlab::AppLogger.warn warning_message
else
# Using NOT VALID allows us to create a key without immediately
# validating it. This means we keep the ALTER TABLE lock only for a
# short period of time. The key _is_ enforced for any newly created
# data.
with_lock_retries do
execute <<-EOF.strip_heredoc
ALTER TABLE #{source}
ADD CONSTRAINT #{options[:name]}
FOREIGN KEY (#{options[:column]})
REFERENCES #{target} (id)
#{on_delete_statement(options[:on_delete])}
NOT VALID;
EOF
end
end
# Validate the existing constraint. This can potentially take a very
# long time to complete, but fortunately does not lock the source table
# while running.
# Disable this check by passing `validate: false` to the method call
# The check will be enforced for new data (inserts) coming in,
# but validating existing data is delayed.
#
# Note this is a no-op in case the constraint is VALID already
if validate
disable_statement_timeout do
execute("ALTER TABLE #{source} VALIDATE CONSTRAINT #{options[:name]};")
end
end
end
def validate_foreign_key(source, column, name: nil)
fk_name = name || concurrent_foreign_key_name(source, column)
unless foreign_key_exists?(source, name: fk_name)
raise missing_schema_object_message(source, "foreign key", fk_name)
end
disable_statement_timeout do
execute("ALTER TABLE #{source} VALIDATE CONSTRAINT #{fk_name};")
end
end
def foreign_key_exists?(source, target = nil, **options)
foreign_keys(source).any? do |foreign_key|
tables_match?(target.to_s, foreign_key.to_table.to_s) &&
options_match?(foreign_key.options, options)
end
end
# Returns the name for a concurrent foreign key.
#
# PostgreSQL constraint names have a limit of 63 bytes. The logic used
# here is based on Rails' foreign_key_name() method, which unfortunately
# is private so we can't rely on it directly.
#
# prefix:
# - The default prefix is `fk_` for backward compatibility with the existing
# concurrent foreign key helpers.
# - For standard rails foreign keys the prefix is `fk_rails_`
#
def concurrent_foreign_key_name(table, column, prefix: 'fk_')
identifier = "#{table}_#{column}_fk"
hashed_identifier = Digest::SHA256.hexdigest(identifier).first(10)
"#{prefix}#{hashed_identifier}"
end
# Long-running migrations may take more than the timeout allowed by
# the database. Disable the session's statement timeout to ensure
# migrations don't get killed prematurely.
#
# There are two possible ways to disable the statement timeout:
#
# - Per transaction (this is the preferred and default mode)
# - Per connection (requires a cleanup after the execution)
#
# When using a per connection disable statement, code must be inside
# a block so we can automatically execute `RESET ALL` after block finishes
# otherwise the statement will still be disabled until connection is dropped
# or `RESET ALL` is executed
def disable_statement_timeout
if block_given?
if statement_timeout_disabled?
# Don't do anything if the statement_timeout is already disabled
# Allows for nested calls of disable_statement_timeout without
# resetting the timeout too early (before the outer call ends)
yield
else
begin
execute('SET statement_timeout TO 0')
yield
ensure
execute('RESET ALL')
end
end
else
unless transaction_open?
raise <<~ERROR
Cannot call disable_statement_timeout() without a transaction open or outside of a transaction block.
If you don't want to use a transaction wrap your code in a block call:
disable_statement_timeout { # code that requires disabled statement here }
This will make sure statement_timeout is disabled before and reset after the block execution is finished.
ERROR
end
execute('SET LOCAL statement_timeout TO 0')
end
end
# Executes the block with a retry mechanism that alters the +lock_timeout+ and +sleep_time+ between attempts.
# The timings can be controlled via the +timing_configuration+ parameter.
# If the lock was not acquired within the retry period, a last attempt is made without using +lock_timeout+.
#
# ==== Examples
# # Invoking without parameters
# with_lock_retries do
# drop_table :my_table
# end
#
# # Invoking with custom +timing_configuration+
# t = [
# [1.second, 1.second],
# [2.seconds, 2.seconds]
# ]
#
# with_lock_retries(timing_configuration: t) do
# drop_table :my_table # this will be retried twice
# end
#
# # Disabling the retries using an environment variable
# > export DISABLE_LOCK_RETRIES=true
#
# with_lock_retries do
# drop_table :my_table # one invocation, it will not retry at all
# end
#
# ==== Parameters
# * +timing_configuration+ - [[ActiveSupport::Duration, ActiveSupport::Duration], ...] lock timeout for the block, sleep time before the next iteration, defaults to `Gitlab::Database::WithLockRetries::DEFAULT_TIMING_CONFIGURATION`
# * +logger+ - [Gitlab::JsonLogger]
# * +env+ - [Hash] custom environment hash, see the example with `DISABLE_LOCK_RETRIES`
def with_lock_retries(*args, **kwargs, &block)
merged_args = {
klass: self.class,
logger: Gitlab::BackgroundMigration::Logger
}.merge(kwargs)
Gitlab::Database::WithLockRetries.new(**merged_args).run(&block)
end
def true_value
Database.true_value
end
def false_value
Database.false_value
end
# Updates the value of a column in batches.
#
# This method updates the table in batches of 5% of the total row count.
# A `batch_size` option can also be passed to set this to a fixed number.
# This method will continue updating rows until no rows remain.
#
# When given a block this method will yield two values to the block:
#
# 1. An instance of `Arel::Table` for the table that is being updated.
# 2. The query to run as an Arel object.
#
# By supplying a block one can add extra conditions to the queries being
# executed. Note that the same block is used for _all_ queries.
#
# Example:
#
# update_column_in_batches(:projects, :foo, 10) do |table, query|
# query.where(table[:some_column].eq('hello'))
# end
#
# This would result in this method updating only rows where
# `projects.some_column` equals "hello".
#
# table - The name of the table.
# column - The name of the column to update.
# value - The value for the column.
#
# The `value` argument is typically a literal. To perform a computed
# update, an Arel literal can be used instead:
#
# update_value = Arel.sql('bar * baz')
#
# update_column_in_batches(:projects, :foo, update_value) do |table, query|
# query.where(table[:some_column].eq('hello'))
# end
#
# Rubocop's Metrics/AbcSize metric is disabled for this method as Rubocop
# determines this method to be too complex while there's no way to make it
# less "complex" without introducing extra methods (which actually will
# make things _more_ complex).
#
# `batch_column_name` option is for tables without primary key, in this
# case another unique integer column can be used. Example: :user_id
#
# rubocop: disable Metrics/AbcSize
def update_column_in_batches(table, column, value, batch_size: nil, batch_column_name: :id)
if transaction_open?
raise 'update_column_in_batches can not be run inside a transaction, ' \
'you can disable transactions by calling disable_ddl_transaction! ' \
'in the body of your migration class'
end
table = Arel::Table.new(table)
count_arel = table.project(Arel.star.count.as('count'))
count_arel = yield table, count_arel if block_given?
total = exec_query(count_arel.to_sql).to_a.first['count'].to_i
return if total == 0
if batch_size.nil?
# Update in batches of 5% until we run out of any rows to update.
batch_size = ((total / 100.0) * 5.0).ceil
max_size = 1000
# The upper limit is 1000 to ensure we don't lock too many rows. For
# example, for "merge_requests" even 1% of the table is around 35 000
# rows for GitLab.com.
batch_size = max_size if batch_size > max_size
end
start_arel = table.project(table[batch_column_name]).order(table[batch_column_name].asc).take(1)
start_arel = yield table, start_arel if block_given?
start_id = exec_query(start_arel.to_sql).to_a.first[batch_column_name.to_s].to_i
loop do
stop_arel = table.project(table[batch_column_name])
.where(table[batch_column_name].gteq(start_id))
.order(table[batch_column_name].asc)
.take(1)
.skip(batch_size)
stop_arel = yield table, stop_arel if block_given?
stop_row = exec_query(stop_arel.to_sql).to_a.first
update_arel = Arel::UpdateManager.new
.table(table)
.set([[table[column], value]])
.where(table[batch_column_name].gteq(start_id))
if stop_row
stop_id = stop_row[batch_column_name.to_s].to_i
start_id = stop_id
update_arel = update_arel.where(table[batch_column_name].lt(stop_id))
end
update_arel = yield table, update_arel if block_given?
execute(update_arel.to_sql)
# There are no more rows left to update.
break unless stop_row
end
end
# Adds a column with a default value without locking an entire table.
#
# @deprecated With PostgreSQL 11, adding columns with a default does not lead to a table rewrite anymore.
# As such, this method is not needed anymore and the default `add_column` helper should be used.
# This helper is subject to be removed in a >13.0 release.
def add_column_with_default(table, column, type, default:, limit: nil, allow_null: false)
raise 'Deprecated: add_column_with_default does not support being passed blocks anymore' if block_given?
add_column(table, column, type, default: default, limit: limit, null: allow_null)
end
# Renames a column without requiring downtime.
#
# Concurrent renames work by using database triggers to ensure both the
# old and new column are in sync. However, this method will _not_ remove
# the triggers or the old column automatically; this needs to be done
# manually in a post-deployment migration. This can be done using the
# method `cleanup_concurrent_column_rename`.
#
# table - The name of the database table containing the column.
# old - The old column name.
# new - The new column name.
# type - The type of the new column. If no type is given the old column's
# type is used.
# batch_column_name - option is for tables without primary key, in this
# case another unique integer column can be used. Example: :user_id
def rename_column_concurrently(table, old, new, type: nil, type_cast_function: nil, batch_column_name: :id)
unless column_exists?(table, batch_column_name)
raise "Column #{batch_column_name} does not exist on #{table}"
end
if transaction_open?
raise 'rename_column_concurrently can not be run inside a transaction'
end
check_trigger_permissions!(table)
create_column_from(table, old, new, type: type, batch_column_name: batch_column_name, type_cast_function: type_cast_function)
install_rename_triggers(table, old, new)
end
# Reverses operations performed by rename_column_concurrently.
#
# This method takes care of removing previously installed triggers as well
# as removing the new column.
#
# table - The name of the database table.
# old - The name of the old column.
# new - The name of the new column.
def undo_rename_column_concurrently(table, old, new)
trigger_name = rename_trigger_name(table, old, new)
check_trigger_permissions!(table)
remove_rename_triggers_for_postgresql(table, trigger_name)
remove_column(table, new)
end
# Installs triggers in a table that keep a new column in sync with an old
# one.
#
# table - The name of the table to install the trigger in.
# old_column - The name of the old column.
# new_column - The name of the new column.
def install_rename_triggers(table, old_column, new_column)
trigger_name = rename_trigger_name(table, old_column, new_column)
quoted_table = quote_table_name(table)
quoted_old = quote_column_name(old_column)
quoted_new = quote_column_name(new_column)
install_rename_triggers_for_postgresql(
trigger_name,
quoted_table,
quoted_old,
quoted_new
)
end
# Changes the type of a column concurrently.
#
# table - The table containing the column.
# column - The name of the column to change.
# new_type - The new column type.
def change_column_type_concurrently(table, column, new_type, type_cast_function: nil, batch_column_name: :id)
temp_column = "#{column}_for_type_change"
rename_column_concurrently(table, column, temp_column, type: new_type, type_cast_function: type_cast_function, batch_column_name: batch_column_name)
end
# Reverses operations performed by change_column_type_concurrently.
#
# table - The table containing the column.
# column - The name of the column to change.
def undo_change_column_type_concurrently(table, column)
temp_column = "#{column}_for_type_change"
undo_rename_column_concurrently(table, column, temp_column)
end
# Performs cleanup of a concurrent type change.
#
# table - The table containing the column.
# column - The name of the column to change.
# new_type - The new column type.
def cleanup_concurrent_column_type_change(table, column)
temp_column = "#{column}_for_type_change"
transaction do
# This has to be performed in a transaction as otherwise we might have
# inconsistent data.
cleanup_concurrent_column_rename(table, column, temp_column)
rename_column(table, temp_column, column)
end
end
# Reverses operations performed by cleanup_concurrent_column_type_change.
#
# table - The table containing the column.
# column - The name of the column to change.
# old_type - The type of the original column used with change_column_type_concurrently.
# type_cast_function - Required if the conversion back to the original type is not automatic
# batch_column_name - option for tables without a primary key, in this case
# another unique integer column can be used. Example: :user_id
def undo_cleanup_concurrent_column_type_change(table, column, old_type, type_cast_function: nil, batch_column_name: :id, limit: nil)
temp_column = "#{column}_for_type_change"
# Using a descriptive name that includes orinal column's name risks
# taking us above the 63 character limit, so we use a hash
identifier = "#{table}_#{column}_for_type_change"
hashed_identifier = Digest::SHA256.hexdigest(identifier).first(10)
temp_undo_cleanup_column = "tmp_undo_cleanup_column_#{hashed_identifier}"
unless column_exists?(table, batch_column_name)
raise "Column #{batch_column_name} does not exist on #{table}"
end
if transaction_open?
raise 'undo_cleanup_concurrent_column_type_change can not be run inside a transaction'
end
check_trigger_permissions!(table)
begin
create_column_from(
table,
column,
temp_undo_cleanup_column,
type: old_type,
batch_column_name: batch_column_name,
type_cast_function: type_cast_function,
limit: limit
)
transaction do
# This has to be performed in a transaction as otherwise we might
# have inconsistent data.
rename_column(table, column, temp_column)
rename_column(table, temp_undo_cleanup_column, column)
install_rename_triggers(table, column, temp_column)
end
rescue
# create_column_from can not run inside a transaction, which means
# that there is a risk that if any of the operations that follow it
# fail, we'll be left with an inconsistent schema
# For those reasons, we make sure that we drop temp_undo_cleanup_column
# if an error is caught
if column_exists?(table, temp_undo_cleanup_column)
remove_column(table, temp_undo_cleanup_column)
end
raise
end
end
# Cleans up a concurrent column name.
#
# This method takes care of removing previously installed triggers as well
# as removing the old column.
#
# table - The name of the database table.
# old - The name of the old column.
# new - The name of the new column.
def cleanup_concurrent_column_rename(table, old, new)
trigger_name = rename_trigger_name(table, old, new)
check_trigger_permissions!(table)
remove_rename_triggers_for_postgresql(table, trigger_name)
remove_column(table, old)
end
# Reverses the operations performed by cleanup_concurrent_column_rename.
#
# This method adds back the old_column removed
# by cleanup_concurrent_column_rename.
# It also adds back the (old_column > new_column) trigger that is removed
# by cleanup_concurrent_column_rename.
#
# table - The name of the database table containing the column.
# old - The old column name.
# new - The new column name.
# type - The type of the old column. If no type is given the new column's
# type is used.
# batch_column_name - option is for tables without primary key, in this
# case another unique integer column can be used. Example: :user_id
def undo_cleanup_concurrent_column_rename(table, old, new, type: nil, batch_column_name: :id)
unless column_exists?(table, batch_column_name)
raise "Column #{batch_column_name} does not exist on #{table}"
end
if transaction_open?
raise 'undo_cleanup_concurrent_column_rename can not be run inside a transaction'
end
check_trigger_permissions!(table)
create_column_from(table, new, old, type: type, batch_column_name: batch_column_name)
install_rename_triggers(table, old, new)
end
# Changes the column type of a table using a background migration.
#
# Because this method uses a background migration it's more suitable for
# large tables. For small tables it's better to use
# `change_column_type_concurrently` since it can complete its work in a
# much shorter amount of time and doesn't rely on Sidekiq.
#
# Example usage:
#
# class Issue < ActiveRecord::Base
# self.table_name = 'issues'
#
# include EachBatch
#
# def self.to_migrate
# where('closed_at IS NOT NULL')
# end
# end
#
# change_column_type_using_background_migration(
# Issue.to_migrate,
# :closed_at,
# :datetime_with_timezone
# )
#
# Reverting a migration like this is done exactly the same way, just with
# a different type to migrate to (e.g. `:datetime` in the above example).
#
# relation - An ActiveRecord relation to use for scheduling jobs and
# figuring out what table we're modifying. This relation _must_
# have the EachBatch module included.
#
# column - The name of the column for which the type will be changed.
#
# new_type - The new type of the column.
#
# batch_size - The number of rows to schedule in a single background
# migration.
#
# interval - The time interval between every background migration.
def change_column_type_using_background_migration(
relation,
column,
new_type,
batch_size: 10_000,
interval: 10.minutes
)
unless relation.model < EachBatch
raise TypeError, 'The relation must include the EachBatch module'
end
temp_column = "#{column}_for_type_change"
table = relation.table_name
max_index = 0
add_column(table, temp_column, new_type)
install_rename_triggers(table, column, temp_column)
# Schedule the jobs that will copy the data from the old column to the
# new one. Rows with NULL values in our source column are skipped since
# the target column is already NULL at this point.
relation.where.not(column => nil).each_batch(of: batch_size) do |batch, index|
start_id, end_id = batch.pluck('MIN(id), MAX(id)').first
max_index = index
migrate_in(
index * interval,
'CopyColumn',
[table, column, temp_column, start_id, end_id]
)
end
# Schedule the renaming of the column to happen (initially) 1 hour after
# the last batch finished.
migrate_in(
(max_index * interval) + 1.hour,
'CleanupConcurrentTypeChange',
[table, column, temp_column]
)
if perform_background_migration_inline?
# To ensure the schema is up to date immediately we perform the
# migration inline in dev / test environments.
Gitlab::BackgroundMigration.steal('CopyColumn')
Gitlab::BackgroundMigration.steal('CleanupConcurrentTypeChange')
end
end
# Renames a column using a background migration.
#
# Because this method uses a background migration it's more suitable for
# large tables. For small tables it's better to use
# `rename_column_concurrently` since it can complete its work in a much
# shorter amount of time and doesn't rely on Sidekiq.
#
# Example usage:
#
# rename_column_using_background_migration(
# :users,
# :feed_token,
# :rss_token
# )
#
# table - The name of the database table containing the column.
#
# old - The old column name.
#
# new - The new column name.
#
# type - The type of the new column. If no type is given the old column's
# type is used.
#
# batch_size - The number of rows to schedule in a single background
# migration.
#
# interval - The time interval between every background migration.
def rename_column_using_background_migration(
table,
old_column,
new_column,
type: nil,
batch_size: 10_000,
interval: 10.minutes
)
check_trigger_permissions!(table)
old_col = column_for(table, old_column)
new_type = type || old_col.type
max_index = 0
add_column(table, new_column, new_type,
limit: old_col.limit,
precision: old_col.precision,
scale: old_col.scale)
# We set the default value _after_ adding the column so we don't end up
# updating any existing data with the default value. This isn't
# necessary since we copy over old values further down.
change_column_default(table, new_column, old_col.default) if old_col.default
install_rename_triggers(table, old_column, new_column)
model = Class.new(ActiveRecord::Base) do
self.table_name = table
include ::EachBatch
end
# Schedule the jobs that will copy the data from the old column to the
# new one. Rows with NULL values in our source column are skipped since
# the target column is already NULL at this point.
model.where.not(old_column => nil).each_batch(of: batch_size) do |batch, index|
start_id, end_id = batch.pluck('MIN(id), MAX(id)').first
max_index = index
migrate_in(
index * interval,
'CopyColumn',
[table, old_column, new_column, start_id, end_id]
)
end
# Schedule the renaming of the column to happen (initially) 1 hour after
# the last batch finished.
migrate_in(
(max_index * interval) + 1.hour,
'CleanupConcurrentRename',
[table, old_column, new_column]
)
if perform_background_migration_inline?
# To ensure the schema is up to date immediately we perform the
# migration inline in dev / test environments.
Gitlab::BackgroundMigration.steal('CopyColumn')
Gitlab::BackgroundMigration.steal('CleanupConcurrentRename')
end
end
# Initializes the conversion of an integer column to bigint
#
# It can be used for converting both a Primary Key and any Foreign Keys
# that may reference it or any other integer column that we may want to
# upgrade (e.g. columns that store IDs, but are not set as FKs).
#
# - For primary keys and Foreign Keys (or other columns) defined as NOT NULL,
# the new bigint column is added with a hardcoded NOT NULL DEFAULT 0
# which allows us to skip a very costly verification step once we
# are ready to switch it.
# This is crucial for Primary Key conversions, because setting a column
# as the PK converts even check constraints to NOT NULL constraints
# and forces an inline re-verification of the whole table.
# - It backfills the new column with the values of the existing primary key
# by scheduling background jobs.
# - It tracks the scheduled background jobs through the use of
# Gitlab::Database::BackgroundMigrationJob
# which allows a more thorough check that all jobs succeeded in the
# cleanup migration and is way faster for very large tables.
# - It sets up a trigger to keep the two columns in sync
# - It does not schedule a cleanup job: we have to do that with followup
# post deployment migrations in the next release.
#
# This needs to be done manually by using the
# `cleanup_initialize_conversion_of_integer_to_bigint`
# (not yet implemented - check #288005)
#
# table - The name of the database table containing the column
# column - The name of the column that we want to convert to bigint.
# primary_key - The name of the primary key column (most often :id)
# batch_size - The number of rows to schedule in a single background migration
# sub_batch_size - The smaller batches that will be used by each scheduled job
# to update the table. Useful to keep each update at ~100ms while executing
# more updates per interval (2.minutes)
# Note that each execution of a sub-batch adds a constant 100ms sleep
# time in between the updates, which must be taken into account
# while calculating the batch, sub_batch and interval values.
# interval - The time interval between every background migration
#
# example:
# Assume that we have figured out that updating 200 records of the events
# table takes ~100ms on average.
# We can set the sub_batch_size to 200, leave the interval to the default
# and set the batch_size to 50_000 which will require
# ~50s = (50000 / 200) * (0.1 + 0.1) to complete and leaves breathing space
# between the scheduled jobs
def initialize_conversion_of_integer_to_bigint(
table,
column,
primary_key: :id,
batch_size: 20_000,
sub_batch_size: 1000,
interval: 2.minutes
)
if transaction_open?
raise 'initialize_conversion_of_integer_to_bigint can not be run inside a transaction'
end
unless table_exists?(table)
raise "Table #{table} does not exist"
end
unless column_exists?(table, primary_key)
raise "Column #{primary_key} does not exist on #{table}"
end
unless column_exists?(table, column)
raise "Column #{column} does not exist on #{table}"
end
check_trigger_permissions!(table)
old_column = column_for(table, column)
tmp_column = "#{column}_convert_to_bigint"
with_lock_retries do
if (column.to_s == primary_key.to_s) || !old_column.null
# If the column to be converted is either a PK or is defined as NOT NULL,
# set it to `NOT NULL DEFAULT 0` and we'll copy paste the correct values bellow
# That way, we skip the expensive validation step required to add
# a NOT NULL constraint at the end of the process
add_column(table, tmp_column, :bigint, default: old_column.default || 0, null: false)
else
add_column(table, tmp_column, :bigint, default: old_column.default)
end
install_rename_triggers(table, column, tmp_column)
end
source_model = Class.new(ActiveRecord::Base) do
include EachBatch
self.table_name = table
self.inheritance_column = :_type_disabled
end
queue_background_migration_jobs_by_range_at_intervals(
source_model,
'CopyColumnUsingBackgroundMigrationJob',
interval,
batch_size: batch_size,
other_job_arguments: [table, primary_key, column, tmp_column, sub_batch_size],
track_jobs: true,
primary_column_name: primary_key
)
if perform_background_migration_inline?
# To ensure the schema is up to date immediately we perform the
# migration inline in dev / test environments.
Gitlab::BackgroundMigration.steal('CopyColumnUsingBackgroundMigrationJob')
end
end
# Performs a concurrent column rename when using PostgreSQL.
def install_rename_triggers_for_postgresql(trigger, table, old, new)
execute <<-EOF.strip_heredoc
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION #{trigger}()
RETURNS trigger AS
$BODY$
BEGIN
NEW.#{new} := NEW.#{old};
RETURN NEW;
END;
$BODY$
LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'
VOLATILE
EOF
execute <<-EOF.strip_heredoc
DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS #{trigger}
ON #{table}
EOF
execute <<-EOF.strip_heredoc
CREATE TRIGGER #{trigger}
BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE
ON #{table}
FOR EACH ROW
EXECUTE FUNCTION #{trigger}()
EOF
end
# Removes the triggers used for renaming a PostgreSQL column concurrently.
def remove_rename_triggers_for_postgresql(table, trigger)
execute("DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS #{trigger} ON #{table}")
execute("DROP FUNCTION IF EXISTS #{trigger}()")
end
# Returns the (base) name to use for triggers when renaming columns.
def rename_trigger_name(table, old, new)
'trigger_' + Digest::SHA256.hexdigest("#{table}_#{old}_#{new}").first(12)
end
# Returns an Array containing the indexes for the given column
def indexes_for(table, column)
column = column.to_s
indexes(table).select { |index| index.columns.include?(column) }
end
# Returns an Array containing the foreign keys for the given column.
def foreign_keys_for(table, column)
column = column.to_s
foreign_keys(table).select { |fk| fk.column == column }
end
# Copies all indexes for the old column to a new column.
#
# table - The table containing the columns and indexes.
# old - The old column.
# new - The new column.
def copy_indexes(table, old, new)
old = old.to_s
new = new.to_s
indexes_for(table, old).each do |index|
new_columns = index.columns.map do |column|
column == old ? new : column
end
# This is necessary as we can't properly rename indexes such as
# "ci_taggings_idx".
unless index.name.include?(old)
raise "The index #{index.name} can not be copied as it does not "\
"mention the old column. You have to rename this index manually first."
end
name = index.name.gsub(old, new)
options = {
unique: index.unique,
name: name,
length: index.lengths,
order: index.orders
}
options[:using] = index.using if index.using
options[:where] = index.where if index.where
unless index.opclasses.blank?
opclasses = index.opclasses.dup
# Copy the operator classes for the old column (if any) to the new
# column.
opclasses[new] = opclasses.delete(old) if opclasses[old]
options[:opclass] = opclasses
end
add_concurrent_index(table, new_columns, options)
end
end
# Copies all foreign keys for the old column to the new column.
#
# table - The table containing the columns and indexes.
# old - The old column.
# new - The new column.
def copy_foreign_keys(table, old, new)
foreign_keys_for(table, old).each do |fk|
add_concurrent_foreign_key(fk.from_table,
fk.to_table,
column: new,
on_delete: fk.on_delete)
end
end
# Returns the column for the given table and column name.
def column_for(table, name)
name = name.to_s
column = columns(table).find { |column| column.name == name }
raise(missing_schema_object_message(table, "column", name)) if column.nil?
column
end
# This will replace the first occurrence of a string in a column with
# the replacement using `regexp_replace`
def replace_sql(column, pattern, replacement)
quoted_pattern = Arel::Nodes::Quoted.new(pattern.to_s)
quoted_replacement = Arel::Nodes::Quoted.new(replacement.to_s)
replace = Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction.new(
"regexp_replace", [column, quoted_pattern, quoted_replacement]
)
Arel::Nodes::SqlLiteral.new(replace.to_sql)
end
def remove_foreign_key_if_exists(...)
if foreign_key_exists?(...)
remove_foreign_key(...)
end
end
def remove_foreign_key_without_error(*args)
remove_foreign_key(*args)
rescue ArgumentError
end
def sidekiq_queue_migrate(queue_from, to:)
while sidekiq_queue_length(queue_from) > 0
Sidekiq.redis do |conn|
conn.rpoplpush "queue:#{queue_from}", "queue:#{to}"
end
end
end
def sidekiq_queue_length(queue_name)
Sidekiq.redis do |conn|
conn.llen("queue:#{queue_name}")
end
end
def check_trigger_permissions!(table)
unless Grant.create_and_execute_trigger?(table)
dbname = Database.database_name
user = Database.username
raise <<-EOF
Your database user is not allowed to create, drop, or execute triggers on the
table #{table}.
If you are using PostgreSQL you can solve this by logging in to the GitLab
database (#{dbname}) using a super user and running:
ALTER #{user} WITH SUPERUSER
This query will grant the user super user permissions, ensuring you don't run
into similar problems in the future (e.g. when new tables are created).
EOF
end
end
# Fetches indexes on a column by name for postgres.
#
# This will include indexes using an expression on the column, for example:
# `CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY index_name ON table (LOWER(column));`
#
# We can remove this when upgrading to Rails 5 with an updated `index_exists?`:
# - https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/edc2b7718725016e988089b5fb6d6fb9d6e16882
#
# Or this can be removed when we no longer support postgres < 9.5, so we
# can use `CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS`.
def index_exists_by_name?(table, index)
# We can't fall back to the normal `index_exists?` method because that
# does not find indexes without passing a column name.
if indexes(table).map(&:name).include?(index.to_s)
true
else
postgres_exists_by_name?(table, index)
end
end
def postgres_exists_by_name?(table, name)
index_sql = <<~SQL
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM pg_catalog.pg_indexes
WHERE schemaname = #{connection.quote(current_schema)}
AND tablename = #{connection.quote(table)}
AND indexname = #{connection.quote(name)}
SQL
connection.select_value(index_sql).to_i > 0
end
def create_or_update_plan_limit(limit_name, plan_name, limit_value)
limit_name_quoted = quote_column_name(limit_name)
plan_name_quoted = quote(plan_name)
limit_value_quoted = quote(limit_value)
execute <<~SQL
INSERT INTO plan_limits (plan_id, #{limit_name_quoted})
SELECT id, #{limit_value_quoted} FROM plans WHERE name = #{plan_name_quoted} LIMIT 1
ON CONFLICT (plan_id) DO UPDATE SET #{limit_name_quoted} = EXCLUDED.#{limit_name_quoted};
SQL
end
# Note this should only be used with very small tables
def backfill_iids(table)
sql = <<-END
UPDATE #{table}
SET iid = #{table}_with_calculated_iid.iid_num
FROM (
SELECT id, ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY project_id ORDER BY id ASC) AS iid_num FROM #{table}
) AS #{table}_with_calculated_iid
WHERE #{table}.id = #{table}_with_calculated_iid.id
END
execute(sql)
end
# Returns the name for a check constraint
#
# type:
# - Any value, as long as it is unique
# - Constraint names are unique per table in Postgres, and, additionally,
# we can have multiple check constraints over a column
# So we use the (table, column, type) triplet as a unique name
# - e.g. we use 'max_length' when adding checks for text limits
# or 'not_null' when adding a NOT NULL constraint
#
def check_constraint_name(table, column, type)
identifier = "#{table}_#{column}_check_#{type}"
# Check concurrent_foreign_key_name() for info on why we use a hash
hashed_identifier = Digest::SHA256.hexdigest(identifier).first(10)
"check_#{hashed_identifier}"
end
def check_constraint_exists?(table, constraint_name)
# Constraint names are unique per table in Postgres, not per schema
# Two tables can have constraints with the same name, so we filter by
# the table name in addition to using the constraint_name
check_sql = <<~SQL
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM pg_catalog.pg_constraint con
INNER JOIN pg_catalog.pg_class rel
ON rel.oid = con.conrelid
INNER JOIN pg_catalog.pg_namespace nsp
ON nsp.oid = con.connamespace
WHERE con.contype = 'c'
AND con.conname = #{connection.quote(constraint_name)}
AND nsp.nspname = #{connection.quote(current_schema)}
AND rel.relname = #{connection.quote(table)}
SQL
connection.select_value(check_sql) > 0
end
# Adds a check constraint to a table
#
# This method is the generic helper for adding any check constraint
# More specialized helpers may use it (e.g. add_text_limit or add_not_null)
#
# This method only requires minimal locking:
# - The constraint is added using NOT VALID
# This allows us to add the check constraint without validating it
# - The check will be enforced for new data (inserts) coming in
# - If `validate: true` the constraint is also validated
# Otherwise, validate_check_constraint() can be used at a later stage
# - Check comments on add_concurrent_foreign_key for more info
#
# table - The table the constraint will be added to
# check - The check clause to add
# e.g. 'char_length(name) <= 5' or 'store IS NOT NULL'
# constraint_name - The name of the check constraint (otherwise auto-generated)
# Should be unique per table (not per column)
# validate - Whether to validate the constraint in this call
#
def add_check_constraint(table, check, constraint_name, validate: true)
validate_check_constraint_name!(constraint_name)
# Transactions would result in ALTER TABLE locks being held for the
# duration of the transaction, defeating the purpose of this method.
if transaction_open?
raise 'add_check_constraint can not be run inside a transaction'
end
if check_constraint_exists?(table, constraint_name)
warning_message = <<~MESSAGE
Check constraint was not created because it exists already
(this may be due to an aborted migration or similar)
table: #{table}, check: #{check}, constraint name: #{constraint_name}
MESSAGE
Gitlab::AppLogger.warn warning_message
else
# Only add the constraint without validating it
# Even though it is fast, ADD CONSTRAINT requires an EXCLUSIVE lock
# Use with_lock_retries to make sure that this operation
# will not timeout on tables accessed by many processes
with_lock_retries do
execute <<-EOF.strip_heredoc
ALTER TABLE #{table}
ADD CONSTRAINT #{constraint_name}
CHECK ( #{check} )
NOT VALID;
EOF
end
end
if validate
validate_check_constraint(table, constraint_name)
end
end
def validate_check_constraint(table, constraint_name)
validate_check_constraint_name!(constraint_name)
unless check_constraint_exists?(table, constraint_name)
raise missing_schema_object_message(table, "check constraint", constraint_name)
end
disable_statement_timeout do
# VALIDATE CONSTRAINT only requires a SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE LOCK
# It only conflicts with other validations and creating indexes
execute("ALTER TABLE #{table} VALIDATE CONSTRAINT #{constraint_name};")
end
end
def remove_check_constraint(table, constraint_name)
validate_check_constraint_name!(constraint_name)
# DROP CONSTRAINT requires an EXCLUSIVE lock
# Use with_lock_retries to make sure that this will not timeout
with_lock_retries do
execute <<-EOF.strip_heredoc
ALTER TABLE #{table}
DROP CONSTRAINT IF EXISTS #{constraint_name}
EOF
end
end
# Copies all check constraints for the old column to the new column.
#
# table - The table containing the columns.
# old - The old column.
# new - The new column.
# schema - The schema the table is defined for
# If it is not provided, then the current_schema is used
def copy_check_constraints(table, old, new, schema: nil)
if transaction_open?
raise 'copy_check_constraints can not be run inside a transaction'
end
unless column_exists?(table, old)
raise "Column #{old} does not exist on #{table}"
end
unless column_exists?(table, new)
raise "Column #{new} does not exist on #{table}"
end
table_with_schema = schema.present? ? "#{schema}.#{table}" : table
check_constraints_for(table, old, schema: schema).each do |check_c|
validate = !(check_c["constraint_def"].end_with? "NOT VALID")
# Normalize:
# - Old constraint definitions:
# '(char_length(entity_path) <= 5500)'
# - Definitionss from pg_get_constraintdef(oid):
# 'CHECK ((char_length(entity_path) <= 5500))'
# - Definitions from pg_get_constraintdef(oid, pretty_bool):
# 'CHECK (char_length(entity_path) <= 5500)'
# - Not valid constraints: 'CHECK (...) NOT VALID'
# to a single format that we can use:
# '(char_length(entity_path) <= 5500)'
check_definition = check_c["constraint_def"]
.sub(/^\s*(CHECK)?\s*\({0,2}/, '(')
.sub(/\){0,2}\s*(NOT VALID)?\s*$/, ')')
constraint_name = begin
if check_definition == "(#{old} IS NOT NULL)"
not_null_constraint_name(table_with_schema, new)
elsif check_definition.start_with? "(char_length(#{old}) <="
text_limit_name(table_with_schema, new)
else
check_constraint_name(table_with_schema, new, 'copy_check_constraint')
end
end
add_check_constraint(
table_with_schema,
check_definition.gsub(old.to_s, new.to_s),
constraint_name,
validate: validate
)
end
end
# Migration Helpers for adding limit to text columns
def add_text_limit(table, column, limit, constraint_name: nil, validate: true)
add_check_constraint(
table,
"char_length(#{column}) <= #{limit}",
text_limit_name(table, column, name: constraint_name),
validate: validate
)
end
def validate_text_limit(table, column, constraint_name: nil)
validate_check_constraint(table, text_limit_name(table, column, name: constraint_name))
end
def remove_text_limit(table, column, constraint_name: nil)
remove_check_constraint(table, text_limit_name(table, column, name: constraint_name))
end
def check_text_limit_exists?(table, column, constraint_name: nil)
check_constraint_exists?(table, text_limit_name(table, column, name: constraint_name))
end
# Migration Helpers for managing not null constraints
def add_not_null_constraint(table, column, constraint_name: nil, validate: true)
if column_is_nullable?(table, column)
add_check_constraint(
table,
"#{column} IS NOT NULL",
not_null_constraint_name(table, column, name: constraint_name),
validate: validate
)
else
warning_message = <<~MESSAGE
NOT NULL check constraint was not created:
column #{table}.#{column} is already defined as `NOT NULL`
MESSAGE
Gitlab::AppLogger.warn warning_message
end
end
def validate_not_null_constraint(table, column, constraint_name: nil)
validate_check_constraint(
table,
not_null_constraint_name(table, column, name: constraint_name)
)
end
def remove_not_null_constraint(table, column, constraint_name: nil)
remove_check_constraint(
table,
not_null_constraint_name(table, column, name: constraint_name)
)
end
def check_not_null_constraint_exists?(table, column, constraint_name: nil)
check_constraint_exists?(
table,
not_null_constraint_name(table, column, name: constraint_name)
)
end
def create_extension(extension)
execute('CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS %s' % extension)
rescue ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid => e
dbname = Database.database_name
user = Database.username
warn(<<~MSG) if e.to_s =~ /permission denied/
GitLab requires the PostgreSQL extension '#{extension}' installed in database '#{dbname}', but
the database user is not allowed to install the extension.
You can either install the extension manually using a database superuser:
CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS #{extension}
Or, you can solve this by logging in to the GitLab
database (#{dbname}) using a superuser and running:
ALTER #{user} WITH SUPERUSER
This query will grant the user superuser permissions, ensuring any database extensions
can be installed through migrations.
For more information, refer to https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/install/postgresql_extensions.html.
MSG
raise
end
def drop_extension(extension)
execute('DROP EXTENSION IF EXISTS %s' % extension)
rescue ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid => e
dbname = Database.database_name
user = Database.username
warn(<<~MSG) if e.to_s =~ /permission denied/
This migration attempts to drop the PostgreSQL extension '#{extension}'
installed in database '#{dbname}', but the database user is not allowed
to drop the extension.
You can either drop the extension manually using a database superuser:
DROP EXTENSION IF EXISTS #{extension}
Or, you can solve this by logging in to the GitLab
database (#{dbname}) using a superuser and running:
ALTER #{user} WITH SUPERUSER
This query will grant the user superuser permissions, ensuring any database extensions
can be dropped through migrations.
For more information, refer to https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/install/postgresql_extensions.html.
MSG
raise
end
private
def validate_check_constraint_name!(constraint_name)
if constraint_name.to_s.length > MAX_IDENTIFIER_NAME_LENGTH
raise "The maximum allowed constraint name is #{MAX_IDENTIFIER_NAME_LENGTH} characters"
end
end
# Returns an ActiveRecord::Result containing the check constraints
# defined for the given column.
#
# If the schema is not provided, then the current_schema is used
def check_constraints_for(table, column, schema: nil)
check_sql = <<~SQL
SELECT
ccu.table_schema as schema_name,
ccu.table_name as table_name,
ccu.column_name as column_name,
con.conname as constraint_name,
pg_get_constraintdef(con.oid) as constraint_def
FROM pg_catalog.pg_constraint con
INNER JOIN pg_catalog.pg_class rel
ON rel.oid = con.conrelid
INNER JOIN pg_catalog.pg_namespace nsp
ON nsp.oid = con.connamespace
INNER JOIN information_schema.constraint_column_usage ccu
ON con.conname = ccu.constraint_name
AND nsp.nspname = ccu.constraint_schema
AND rel.relname = ccu.table_name
WHERE nsp.nspname = #{connection.quote(schema.presence || current_schema)}
AND rel.relname = #{connection.quote(table)}
AND ccu.column_name = #{connection.quote(column)}
AND con.contype = 'c'
ORDER BY constraint_name
SQL
connection.exec_query(check_sql)
end
def statement_timeout_disabled?
# This is a string of the form "100ms" or "0" when disabled
connection.select_value('SHOW statement_timeout') == "0"
end
def column_is_nullable?(table, column)
# Check if table.column has not been defined with NOT NULL
check_sql = <<~SQL
SELECT c.is_nullable
FROM information_schema.columns c
WHERE c.table_schema = #{connection.quote(current_schema)}
AND c.table_name = #{connection.quote(table)}
AND c.column_name = #{connection.quote(column)}
SQL
connection.select_value(check_sql) == 'YES'
end
def text_limit_name(table, column, name: nil)
name.presence || check_constraint_name(table, column, 'max_length')
end
def not_null_constraint_name(table, column, name: nil)
name.presence || check_constraint_name(table, column, 'not_null')
end
def missing_schema_object_message(table, type, name)
<<~MESSAGE
Could not find #{type} "#{name}" on table "#{table}" which was referenced during the migration.
This issue could be caused by the database schema straying from the expected state.
To resolve this issue, please verify:
1. all previous migrations have completed
2. the database objects used in this migration match the Rails definition in schema.rb or structure.sql
MESSAGE
end
def tables_match?(target_table, foreign_key_table)
target_table.blank? || foreign_key_table == target_table
end
def options_match?(foreign_key_options, options)
options.all? { |k, v| foreign_key_options[k].to_s == v.to_s }
end
def on_delete_statement(on_delete)
return '' if on_delete.blank?
return 'ON DELETE SET NULL' if on_delete == :nullify
"ON DELETE #{on_delete.upcase}"
end
def create_column_from(table, old, new, type: nil, batch_column_name: :id, type_cast_function: nil, limit: nil)
old_col = column_for(table, old)
new_type = type || old_col.type
new_limit = limit || old_col.limit
add_column(table, new, new_type,
limit: new_limit,
precision: old_col.precision,
scale: old_col.scale)
# We set the default value _after_ adding the column so we don't end up
# updating any existing data with the default value. This isn't
# necessary since we copy over old values further down.
change_column_default(table, new, old_col.default) unless old_col.default.nil?
old_value = Arel::Table.new(table)[old]
if type_cast_function.present?
old_value = Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction.new(type_cast_function, [old_value])
end
update_column_in_batches(table, new, old_value, batch_column_name: batch_column_name)
add_not_null_constraint(table, new) unless old_col.null
copy_indexes(table, old, new)
copy_foreign_keys(table, old, new)
copy_check_constraints(table, old, new)
end
def validate_timestamp_column_name!(column_name)
return if PERMITTED_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS.member?(column_name)
raise <<~MESSAGE
Illegal timestamp column name! Got #{column_name}.
Must be one of: #{PERMITTED_TIMESTAMP_COLUMNS.to_a}
MESSAGE
end
def validate_not_in_transaction!(method_name, modifier = nil)
return unless transaction_open?
raise <<~ERROR
#{["`#{method_name}`", modifier].compact.join(' ')} cannot be run inside a transaction.
You can disable transactions by calling `disable_ddl_transaction!` in the body of
your migration class
ERROR
end
end
end
end