Files
Aurora.3/SQL
Werner 7b6a759361 Cleans up the Database. (#6893)
* Cleans up the Database.

Changes the charset to utf8mb4
Changes the collation to utf8mb4_unicode_ci
Adds foreign keys to various tables that use the ckey
Cleans up various inconsistencies (key used in a ckey field, wrong dates, ...)
Changes the columns in ss13_cargo_items that hold json to JSON

* Corrects Migration Number

* Only drop tables if they exist.

* Attempts to please travis

* Moves another comment

* Moves the sol swords out of energy and into misc
2019-08-26 23:08:53 +02:00
..
2019-08-26 23:08:53 +02:00
2017-02-07 18:46:39 +02:00

Prerequisites

The server connects to a mysql-compatible server (mysql, mariadb, percona), so you'll need one of those with a database and user/password pair ready.

We use flyway to manage database migrations. To set up the database, you'll need to download flyway.

You'll also need some proficiency with the command line.


Attribution

Credit to Mloc from Baystation12 for the initial readme.


Creating migrations

As a coder, creating migrations is relatively easy. And they're a lot more flexible than just updating the initial schema would be.

First, figure out the changes you need to make. From table alteration and creation commands, to simply update and insert statements.

Write them into a .sql file in the SQL/migrate folder, in a valid order of execution. Name the file in the following format:

Vxxx__Description_goes_here.sql

Where xxx is the next version number from the last existing file (include the 0s), and the descrption is a short description for the migration, with spaces replaced by underscores.

Push this to your branch, and you're done!


Initial setup

In the root project directory, run:

path/to/flyway migrate -user=USER -password=PASSWORD -url=jdbc:mysql://HOST/DATABASE

Where USER is your mysql username, PASSWORD is your mysql password, HOST is the hostname of the mysql server and DATABASE is the database to use.


Migrating

Use the same command as above. Handy, isn't it?


Using a pre-flyway database

Note that this is not recommended! You may run into issues with some migrations, due to improper versioning. The best way to utilize this system is to set everything up on an empty schema. The next alternative is to make sure your database structure matches the V001 file within the migrate folder by manually modifying the structure to avoid dataloss, and then doing the steps described below.

If you're using a database since before we moved to flyway, it's a bit more involved to get migrations working.

In the root project directory, run:

path/to/flyway baseline -user=USER -password=PASSWORD -url=jdbc:mysql://HOST/DATABASE -baselineVersion=001 -baselineDescription="Initial schema"

From there, you can run migrations as normal.


Configuration file

Instead of putting -user, -password and -url in the command line every time you execute flyway, you can use a config file. Create it somewhere in the root of your project (we're calling it 'db.conf'):

flyway.url=jdbc:mysql://HOST/DATABASE
flyway.user=USER
flyway.password=PASSWORD

Now you can just run flyway migrate -configFile=db.conf, and the settings will be loaded from config.


Misc tables

We included a set of miscellanious tables in the misc folder. These are primarily used for debugging and are not meant to be pushed into production. As such, they're not included in the migration folder.

Ignoring or implementing them should not cause issues with the system.