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- @puya/pdcsc
- @puya/pdcsc/bin/index.js
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Readme
PDCSC - Puya Data Changeset Creator
License
This tool is licensed under MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
Introduction
@puya/pdcsc is a cli tool developed in nodejs for managing .sql database repositories. It creates/updates changesets based on changes detected in feature branches in their .sql files in a ./Scripts folder.
It can be integrated in cicd pipelines like gitlab pipeline and azurdevops pipeline and is able to apply changeset(s) on custom databases upon merging feature branches.
It can also be used to apply changesets on a custom database manually, making the database up-to-date with the lastest changes which can be a handy tool for support teams.
Features
- Generate Changeset: generates changeset based on committed changes detected in a branch.
- Test Changeset: creates a database backup and executes the changeset against that to see whether the changeset is ok or not.
- Pipeline Mode: Using
pipelineargument, it can be used inci/cd pipelines(likegitlaborazuredevops) to provide a safe merge, preventing the merge if the changeset has errors. - Update database: Using
applyargument, it can apply changesets(s) on a database and making the database up-to-date.
By default (withought specifying pipeline or apply arguments), @puya/pdcsc manages current branch's changeset.
Disclaimer
@puya/pdcsc IS AN IMPORTANT AND CRITICAL TOOL THAT TARGETS SQL SERVER DATABASES.
THE TOOL NEVER CHANGES ANY DATA IN TARGET DATABASES EXCEPT THE TABLE IT CREATES ITSELF TO TRACK CHANGESETS JOURNALING.
THE TOOL NEVER MANIPULATES ANY SCHEMA IN TARGET DATABASES. ALL SCHEMA CHANGES ARE PERFORMED BY DEVELOPERS WHO USE THE COMMAND AND PUT THEIR CUSTOM SCRIPTS IN THE CHANGESETS.
IT IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED TO HAVE A DBA IN YOUR TEAM WHO PERFORMS CODE REVIEW UPON FEATURE BRANCH MERGING AND IS COMPLETELY SURE ABOUT THE CHANGES APPLYING TO YOUR DATABASES.
THIS TOOL IS DEVELOPED AS IS AND THE COMPANY AND DEVELOPERS WHO CREATED IT HAVE NO RESPONSIBILITY OVER ANY PROBLEMS HAPPEN OR CONSEQUENCES INCUR TO YOUR DATABASES.
YOU USE IT SOLELY BASED ON YOUR OWN DECISION.
PLEASE DO READ THE Best Practices and Guidelines SECTION OF THIS DOCUMENT TO FOLLOW BEST PRACTICES AND GUIDELINES.
Installation
Global
npm i @puya/pdcsc -gLocal
npm install @puya/pdcscCurrent Version
2.1.38Usage
Once installed, you can use the pdcsc command in your terminal. You should run this tool only in the root of your database's scripts repository.
pdcsc [cmd] [arguments] [options]Main commands
init: Initializes a new database repository in current path, creates a git repo in it (if no git repo found), creates default scripts folders and creates apdcsc-config.jsonconfig file and gitlab ci/cd yaml file.roll: Creates/Updates a changeset based on.sqlchanges in current branch in./Scriptsfolder. This is the default command.apply: Applies all changesets in./Changesfolder on a database (updates the database).pipeline: Used in CICD pipelines, tests changeset of current branch that its merge is requested and if it succeeds, executes changeset over the database specified (making it up-to-date). If changeset execution was successful as well, it is journaled in the database (journaling is explained later inChangeset execution historysection).render: Renders a changeset and creates a.sqlfile for that (overwrites existing.sqlfile, but does not commit it)check-update: checks whether a new version forpdcscis available or not.
CLI arguments
-vor--version: Shows pdcsc version.-?or--help: Shows pdcsc help.-cor--config: specifying custom config file-sor--server: database server address.-uor--user: database user.-por--password: database password.-dor--database: target database.-eor--encrypt: encrypt database connection or not (default isfalse).-dbmor--debug-mode: debug mode-dblor--debug-level: debug level
Note: -s, -u, -p, -d and -e cli args have more priority over same database settings in pdcsc-config.json config.
Debug Levels
1: log app execution flow (default)2: show local variables3: show loop variables and more detailed variables4: show db queries5: show large db queries6: show used pdcsc-config7: show deepest variables (rarely used)8: resered9: show detailed exceptions and errors (expanded stack trace)
Examples
- Initializing a new database repository:
pdcsc -initInitializing a new database repository with full config:
pdcsc -init -f- Creating/Updating current feature branch's changeset:
pdcsc rollor simply ...
pdcsc- Updating master database upon merge requests in CI/CD:
pdcsc pipeline- Manually updating an existing database
pdcsc apply -d MyDb- Specifying database setting through cli:
pdcsc -s "192.168.10.120" -u "myUser" -p "myPassword" -d "MyDb"As it was stated, database settings specified through cli have more priority over config file.
Configuration
The behavior of pdcsc can be customized through its config file.
The config file is named pdcsc-config.json file. It is automatically created upon initializing a new pdcsc repository using -init command. The file is placed at the root of the repo.
Here's an example of a simple pdcsc configuration file:
{
"database": {
"server": "localhost",
"user": "db_user",
"password": "db_password",
"database": "my_database",
"encrypt": false
},
"pipeline": "gitlabs",
"masterBranchName": "origin/main"
}Properties
The full pdcsc config file with all its options is as follows:
{
"database": {
"server": "...", // database server address (default = 'localhost')
"user": "...", // database userid
"password": "...", // database password
"database": "...", // master database name
"encrypt": "..." // encrypt connection or not
},
"pipeline": "...", // pipeline type (gitlabs = default, azuredevops)
"masterBranchName": "...", // master branch name (default = 'origin/main')
"appVersionSprocName": "..." // appVersion sp name (default = 'dbo.getAppVersion')
"appVersionFormat": "...", // app version timestamp (default = 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss')
"timestampLocale": "...", // timestamp locale (default = 'en')
"changesetsTableName": "...", // database changeset history table (default = 'dbo.Changesets')
"backupDbName": "...", // name of temp database when testing changesets (default = 'TempBackupDB')
"defaultCodePage": "", // default .sql files codepage (default = 'utf-8')
"paths": {
"backupDir": "...", // default backup dir on database server (default = 'C:\\temp\\')
"changesetFolderName": "...", // changesets folder name (default = 'Changes')
"scriptsFolderName": "...", // .sql scripts folder name (default = 'Scripts')
},
"folders": {
"procedures": "...", // name of procedures folder (default = 'Procedures')
"functions": "...", // name of user-defined functions folder (default = 'Functions')
"tables": "...", // name of tables folder (default = 'Tables')
"relations": "...", // name of relations folder (default = 'Relations')
"types": "...", // name of user-defined types folder (default = 'Types')
"views": "...", // name of views folder (default = 'Views')
"indexes": "...", // name of indexes folder (default = 'Indexes')
"triggers": "...", // name of triggers folder (default = 'Triggers')
"schemas": "..." // name of schemas folder (default = 'Schemas')
}
}Customization
We can customize pdcsc configuration using an environment variable named PDCSC_CONFIG_MODE.
If pdcsc detects such envionment variable, it checks whether a pdcsc-config.{env.PDCSC_CONFIG_MODE}.config file exists or not.
If so, it merges that file with pdcsc-config.json file.
This, enables us to customize master branch name or database name based on env or store sensitive data such as database password in a customized pdcsc config file.
In the second usage, we can add pdcsc-config.{env.PDCSC_CONFIG_MODE}.json in the .gitignore, so that the database password is not stored in the repository.
Using pdcsc in gitlab CI/CD pipeline
In GitLab, we can create a custom CI/CD pipeline, and use pdcsc in it with pipeline argument to ensure our database is updated automatically whenever a feature branche is merged.
Here is a sample gitlab pipeline:
stages:
- build
variables:
GIT_DEPTH: 0
before_merge_build:
stage: build
image: node:alpine
script:
- echo "Installing dependencies..."
- apk update && apk add git
- npm i @puya/pdcsc -g
- |
if [ "$CI_MERGE_REQUEST_SOURCE_BRANCH_NAME" = "dev" ]; then
echo "updating database ..."
pdcsc apply -c "pdcsc-config-${CI_MERGE_REQUEST_TARGET_BRANCH_NAME}.json" -dbm -f
else
echo "checking branch changeset before merge ..."
pdcsc pipeline -c "pdcsc-config-${CI_MERGE_REQUEST_TARGET_BRANCH_NAME}.json" -dbm
fi
rules:
- when: manual`Notes:
- Here, we assumed we have one stage branch, named
dev. - We merge our feature branches to
dev, notmain. - The
devbranch is ourdevelopmentstage where incomplete features are pushed and tested. - This way, we do not push incomplete/not-tested features directly to main branch.
- Whenever we are ok with our
dev, we merge it tomainbranch (bringing features to production). - Upon merging
devtomain, previous features are already merged intodev, there is no need to usepipelineswitch. - We use
applyswitch instead and update master database (apply changeset files fromdevupon master database). - In our pipeline, we explicitly specify config file for
pdcscthrough-cswitch. - Name of the config file depends on the source branch that is going to be merged.
- If it is
dev, we are mergingdevintomain. - So, target branch (
CI_MERGE_REQUEST_TARGET_BRANCH_NAME) should bemain. We specify a config file namedpdcsc-config-{CI_MERGE_REQUEST_TARGET_BRANCH_NAME}.jsonwhich would bepdcsc-config-main.json. So, the master database will be updated. - If the source branch is not
dev, we are mereging a feature branch. - So, we know that our target branch is
dev. - This time, the config file
pdcsc-config-{CI_MERGE_REQUEST_TARGET_BRANCH_NAME}.jsonwould bepdcsc-config-dev.json. - So, the development database will be updated.
Note that, we should have pdcsc-config-dev.json and pdcsc-config-main.json files in our repo.
pdcsc-config-dev.json
{
"database": {
"database": "MyDb_dev"
},
"masterBranchName": "origin/dev"
}pdcsc-config-main.json
{
"database": {
"database": "MyDb_main"
},
"masterBranchName": "origin/main"
}Speed-up pipeline
We can create a Docker container, install Node.js and Git in it, so that these steps are not executed over and over again.
This can speed up pipeline execution.
stages:
- build
variables:
GIT_DEPTH: 0
DOCKER_REGISTRY: "our-node-and-git-docker-address:port"
before_merge_build:
stage: build
image: "${DOCKER_REGISTRY}/our-docker-registry/node-git"
script:
...Updating a database
Using apply argument we can execute all changesets against a database and update it with the latest changes we have.
pdcsc apply -d MyDbChangesets Journal
pdcsc uses a table named dbo.Changesets in databases in order to save history of executed changesets.
After a changeset executes successfully, pdcsc inserts its name into dbo.Changesets table. This is called journaling.
Before pdcsc executes a changeset on a database, it checks dbo.Changesets table to see whether the changeset is already executed or not.
If such table does not exist, it shows and error and exits.
Using -f or --force cli argument, we can ask pdcsc to create such table if it does not exits.
pdcsc apply -d MyDbOutput:
Journal table dbo.Changesets not found. Use -f or --force to create journal table.pdcsc apply -d MyDb -fThis behavior (manually use -f or force mode) is intentional in order to avoid updating an old database that is far behind our changesets and other updates should be applied on that before hand.
The name of journal table can be customized in pdcsc config file through changesetsTableName prop.
Update mode
The apply command has 3 modes which can be customized through -m argument:
Test: test changesets against a backup of the database. This is useful when we want to make sure whether changesets will work correctly on the database or not.TestAndUpdate(default): test changesets first and if they were ok, update database.Update: execute changesets directly against the database.
Ideally, we should use a TestAndUpdate mode as it is the default mode. However, if we are completely sure about our changesets or the test phase takes a long time (database is very large or under heavy load and backup/restore will take a long time), we can directly execute them on the database.
Example 1: only test changesets on a backup of database, not directly on database.
pdcsc apply -d MyDb -m TestExample 2: apply changesets directly on database, do not test them beforehand.
pdcsc apply -d MyDb -m UpdateTest changesets one by one
By default, pdcsc apply creates a bundle out of changesets and executes the bundle against a database backup.
Using -11 or --one-by-one cli argument we can ask pdcsc to test changesets one by one.
This can better highlight faulting changesets in case of errors.
pdcsc apply -d MyDb -11Manually render a changeset
By default pdcsc renders or generates .sql file of a changeset when using roll command (default).
Using render cli argument we can manually render a changeset.
Attention
MANUALLY RENDERING A CHANGESET IS NOT RECOMMENDED AND SHOULD BE AVOIDED AT ALL COSTS. RENDERING A CHANGESET SHOULD ONLY AND ONLY BE DONE EXACTLY IN THE BRANCH IT WAS CREATED AT.
If you render a changeset in another branch, the generated .sql may not be correct, may not be even generated and may not work or may lead to unwanted errors, bugs and disasters at worst case.
Discussion
Suppose we are in branch feature/fix-product-update and we fix a sproc named usp_Product_update.
We generate a changeset, make a PR and the Team Lead in who performs code reviews merges the branch.
Now, if we switch to branch feature/create-reports and we have not pulled our main branch to receive the changes, if we intend to render the changeset of feature/fix-product-update branch, the .sql file being generated definitely is not correct, since we are creating usp_Product_update sproc using the copy in our own branch which is not up-to-date.
That is why, it is never recommended to manually render a changeset and this should be done in scarse cases and performed only by DBAs who know what they are doing.
How to
We can specify the changeset for which we intend to create .sql file using -cs cli argument.
pdcsc render -cs 20250412082457_b6775a321_feature-add-otpThe -cs argument is optional. If it is not specified, pdcsc shows list of all changesets found in ./Changes folder and asks to choose which one to render.
Best Practices and Guidelines
- Do not store database password directly in
pdcsc-config.jsonso that it is not stored in your source-control. Instead, use customized configs in the way described inConfig customizationsection. - Use a
devand/orteststage in your development workflow and do not directly push/merge onmaster/mainbranch. - Employ a Sql Server DBA and Team Lead in your team who performs code review on feature branch merging and accepts merge only when he feels everything is all right.
- Use a separate database for
dev/testandmain/masterbranches. - If possible, use a separate server for
main/masterdatabase, other thandev/testserver. - In your pipelines, use
pdcsc pipelinefor merging feature PRs andpdcsc applyfor mergingdev/testbranches withmain/masterbranch. - Do not change/alter
main/masterdatabase directly. Let cicd pipelines andpdcscupdate your database automatically. - Merge
dev/testbranch withmain/masterbranch only when you really intend to bring changesets to production. - Do not use
saand/orsysadminusers indev/teststages. - Use a less privilaged user in
dev/teststages who can access only to development and test databases, notmaster/maindatabase. - Use
saand/orsysadminusers inmain/masterbranch who only DBAs have access to. - Never change/manipulate old changesets that fall behind other branches.
- Never render existing changesets in a branch other than the branch they were created in. This can produce incorrect script, resulting in bugs, errors, data loss or any other bad consequence.
- Do not remove feature branches immediately upon merge in your pipelines.
- Keep feature branches for a period of time (like two or three weeks), so that you can refer to them and render their changes later if needed.
- Dispose of feature branches only when you are sure the branches are ok and have no error and you will not return back to them in the future.