@emigrate/postgres
A PostgreSQL plugin for Emigrate. Uses a PostgreSQL database for storing the migration history. Can load and generate .sql migration files.
The table used for storing the migration history is compatible with the immigration-postgres package, so you can use this together with the @emigrate/cli as a drop-in replacement for that package.
Description
This plugin is actually three different Emigrate plugins in one:
- A storage plugin for storing the migration history in a PostgreSQL database.
- A loader plugin for loading .sql migration files and be able to execute them as part of the migration process.
- A template plugin for generating .sql or .js and .ts migration files.
Installation
Install the plugin in your project, alongside the Emigrate CLI:
npm install @emigrate/cli @emigrate/postgres
pnpm add @emigrate/cli @emigrate/postgres
yarn add @emigrate/cli @emigrate/postgres
bun add @emigrate/cli @emigrate/postgres
Usage
Using the storage plugin
See Options below for the default values and how to configure the plugin using environment variables.
Configure the storage in your emigrate.config.js file:
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
storage: 'postgres',
};
Or use the CLI options --storage (or -s)
emigrate up --storage postgres
Storage plugin with custom options
Configure the storage in your emigrate.config.js file by importing the createPostgresStorage function (see Options for available options).
In this mode the plugin will not use any of the environment variables for configuration.
import { createPostgresStorage } from '@emigrate/postgres';
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
storage: createPostgresStorage({ table: 'migrations', connection: { ... } }),
};
Or use the CLI option --storage (or -s) and use environment variables (see Options for available variables).
POSTGRES_URL=postgres://user:pass@host/db emigrate up --storage postgres
Using the loader plugin
The loader plugin is used to transform .sql migration files into JavaScript functions that can be executed by the "up" command.
See Options below for the default values and how to configure the plugin using environment variables.
Configure the loader in your emigrate.config.js file:
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
plugins: ['postgres'],
};
Or by importing the default export from the plugin:
import postgresPlugin from '@emigrate/postgres';
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
plugins: [postgresPlugin],
};
NOTE: Using the root level plugins option will load the plugin for all commands, which means the template plugin will be used by default for the "new" command as well. If you only want to use the loader plugin, use the up.plugins option instead:
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
up: {
plugins: ['postgres'],
plugins: [import('@emigrate/postgres')],
},
};
The loader plugin can also be loaded using the CLI option --plugin (or -p) together with the "up" command:
emigrate up --plugin postgres
Using the template plugin
The template plugin is used to generate skeleton .sql or .js and .ts migration files inside your migration directory.
Configure the template plugin in your emigrate.config.js file:
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
plugins: ['postgres'],
};
Or by importing the default export from the plugin:
import postgresPlugin from '@emigrate/postgres';
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
plugins: [postgresPlugin],
};
Use the extension option or (--extension CLI option for the new command) to chose which of the three formats to use for the generated migration file:
.sql - will generate a .sql migration file
.js - will generate a .js migration file
.ts - will generate a .ts migration file
The loader plugin will automatically figure out if it should be used for loading .js and .ts migration files instead of the built-in loader.
It does this by checking if the migration file contains @emigrate/postgres or not, if it does it will use the loader plugin, otherwise Emigrate will use the built-in loader for .js and .ts files.
But remember to add @emigrate/postgres as a loader plugin for it to work.
NOTE: Using the root level plugins option will load the plugin for all commands, which means the loader plugin will be used by default for the "up" command as well. If you only want to use the template plugin, use the new.plugins option instead:
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
new: {
plugins: ['postgres'],
plugins: [import('@emigrate/postgres')],
},
};
The template plugin can also be loaded using the CLI option --plugin (or -p) together with the "new" command:
emigrate new --plugin postgres My new migration file
Loader plugin with custom options
Configure the loader in your emigrate.config.js file by importing the createPostgresLoader function (see Options for available options).
In this mode the plugin will not use any of the environment variables for configuration.
import { createPostgresLoader } from '@emigrate/postgres';
export default {
directory: 'migrations',
plugins: [
createPostgresLoader({ connection: { ... } }),
],
};
Options
The storage plugin accepts the following options:
table | storage plugin | The name of the table to use for storing the migrations. | migrations | POSTGRES_TABLE |
connection | storage and loader plugins | The connection options to pass to postgres(). | {} | POSTGRES_URL or POSTGRES_HOST, POSTGRES_PORT, POSTGRES_USER, POSTGRES_PASSWORD and POSTGRES_DB |