Large Hadron Migrator ![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/soundcloud/lhm.svg?branch=master)
Rails style database migrations are a useful way to evolve your data schema in
an agile manner. Most Rails projects start like this, and at first, making
changes is fast and easy.
That is until your tables grow to millions of records. At this point, the
locking nature of ALTER TABLE
may take your site down for an hour or more
while critical tables are migrated. In order to avoid this, developers begin
to design around the problem by introducing join tables or moving the data
into another layer. Development gets less and less agile as tables grow and
grow. To make the problem worse, adding or changing indices to optimize data
access becomes just as difficult.
Side effects may include black holes and universe implosion.
There are few things that can be done at the server or engine level. It is
possible to change default values in an ALTER TABLE
without locking the
table. The InnoDB Plugin provides facilities for online index creation, which
is great if you are using this engine, but only solves half the problem.
At SoundCloud we started having migration pains quite a while ago, and after
looking around for third party solutions, we decided to create our
own. We called it Large Hadron Migrator, and it is a gem for online
ActiveRecord and DataMapper migrations.
![LHC](http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3093/2844971993_17f2ddf2a8_z.jpg)
The Large Hadron collider at CERN
The idea
The basic idea is to perform the migration online while the system is live,
without locking the table. In contrast to OAK and the
facebook tool, we only use a copy table and triggers.
The Large Hadron is a test driven Ruby solution which can easily be dropped
into an ActiveRecord or DataMapper migration. It presumes a single auto
incremented numerical primary key called id as per the Rails convention. Unlike
the twitter solution, it does not require the presence of an indexed
updated_at
column.
Requirements
Lhm currently only works with MySQL databases and requires an established
ActiveRecord or DataMapper connection.
It is compatible and continuously tested with MRI 1.9.x, 2.0.x, 2.1.x,
ActiveRecord 2.3.x and 3.x (mysql and mysql2 adapters), as well as DataMapper
1.2 (dm-mysql-adapter).
Lhm also works with dm-master-slave-adapter, it'll bind to the master before
running the migrations.
Limitations
Lhm requires a monotonically increasing numeric Primary Key on the table, due to how
the Chunker works.
Installation
Install it via gem install lhm
or add gem "lhm"
to your Gemfile.
Usage
You can invoke Lhm directly from a plain ruby file after connecting ActiveRecord
to your mysql instance:
require 'lhm'
ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection(
:adapter => 'mysql',
:host => '127.0.0.1',
:database => 'lhm'
)
Lhm.setup(DataMapper.setup(:default, 'mysql://127.0.0.1/lhm'))
Lhm.change_table :users do |m|
m.add_column :arbitrary, "INT(12)"
m.add_index [:arbitrary_id, :created_at]
m.ddl("alter table %s add column flag tinyint(1)" % m.name)
end
To use Lhm from an ActiveRecord::Migration in a Rails project, add it to your
Gemfile, then invoke as follows:
require 'lhm'
class MigrateUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration
def self.up
Lhm.change_table :users do |m|
m.add_column :arbitrary, "INT(12)"
m.add_index [:arbitrary_id, :created_at]
m.ddl("alter table %s add column flag tinyint(1)" % m.name)
end
end
def self.down
Lhm.change_table :users do |m|
m.remove_index [:arbitrary_id, :created_at]
m.remove_column :arbitrary
end
end
end
Using dm-migrations, you'd define all your migrations as follows, and then call
migrate_up!
or migrate_down!
as normal.
require 'dm-migrations/migration_runner'
require 'lhm'
migration 1, :migrate_users do
up do
Lhm.change_table :users do |m|
m.add_column :arbitrary, "INT(12)"
m.add_index [:arbitrary_id, :created_at]
m.ddl("alter table %s add column flag tinyint(1)" % m.name)
end
end
down do
Lhm.change_table :users do |m|
m.remove_index [:arbitrary_id, :created_at]
m.remove_column :arbitrary
end
end
end
Note: Lhm won't delete the old, leftover table. This is on purpose, in order
to prevent accidental data loss.
Throttler
Lhm is using a throttle mecanism to read data in your original table.
By default, 40000 rows are read each 0.1 second.
If you want to change that behiavour, you can pass an instance of a throttler with the throttler
option.
In this example, 1000 rows will be read with a 10 seconds delay between each processing:
my_throttler = Lhm::Throttler::Time.new(stride: 1000, delay: 10)
Lhm.change_table :users, throttler: my_throttler do |m|
end
Table rename strategies
There are two different table rename strategies available: LockedSwitcher and
AtomicSwitcher.
The LockedSwitcher strategy locks the table being migrated and issues two ALTER TABLE statements.
The AtomicSwitcher uses a single atomic RENAME TABLE query and is the favored solution.
Lhm chooses AtomicSwitcher if no strategy is specified, unless your version of MySQL is
affected by binlog bug #39675. If your version is
affected, Lhm will raise an error if you don't specify a strategy. You're recommended
to use the LockedSwitcher in these cases to avoid replication issues.
To specify the strategy in your migration:
Lhm.change_table :users, :atomic_switch => true do |m|
end
Limiting the data that is migrated
For instances where you want to limit the data that is migrated to the new
table by some conditions, you may tell the migration to filter by a set of
conditions:
Lhm.change_table(:sounds) do |m|
m.filter("inner join users on users.`id` = sounds.`user_id` and sounds.`public` = 1")
end
Note that this SQL will be inserted into the copy directly after the "from"
statement - so be sure to use inner/outer join syntax and not cross joins. These
conditions will not affect the triggers, so any modifications to the table
during the run will happen on the new table as well.
Cleaning up after an interrupted Lhm run
If an Lhm migration is interrupted, it may leave behind the temporary tables
and/or triggers used in the migration. If the migration is re-started, the
unexpected presence of these tables will cause an error.
In this case, Lhm.cleanup
can be used to drop any orphaned Lhm temporary tables or triggers.
To see what Lhm tables/triggers are found:
Lhm.cleanup
To remove any Lhm tables/triggers found:
Lhm.cleanup(true)
Optionally only remove tables up to a specific Time, if you want to retain previous migrations.
Rails:
Lhm.cleanup(true, until: 1.day.ago)
Ruby:
Lhm.cleanup(true, until: Time.now - 86400)
Contributing
First, get set up for local development:
git clone git://github.com/soundcloud/lhm.git
cd lhm
To run the tests, follow the instructions on spec/README.
We'll check out your contribution if you:
- Provide a comprehensive suite of tests for your fork.
- Have a clear and documented rationale for your changes.
- Package these up in a pull request.
We'll do our best to help you out with any contribution issues you may have.
License
The license is included as LICENSE in this directory.
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