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a21f6cd648
Changes compared to `/v1alpha1/graphql` * Changed all graphql responses in **/v1/graphql** endpoint to be 200. All graphql clients expect responses to be HTTP 200. Non-200 responses are considered transport layer errors. * Errors in http and websocket layer are now consistent and have similar structure.
135 lines
4.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
135 lines
4.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
Migrations for a new database and Hasura instance
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=================================================
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.. contents:: Table of contents
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:backlinks: none
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:depth: 1
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:local:
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This guide will help you if you are about to start setting up your schema from
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scratch. You can use migrations to help track the database and GraphQL schema
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changes.
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Step 0: Disable console on Server
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---------------------------------
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To use migrations effectively, console on the Server (which is served at
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``/console``) should be disabled and all changes must go through the console
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served by CLI. Otherwise, changes could be made through the server-console and
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they will not be tracked by migrations.
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So, the first step is to disable console served by the GraphQL Engine server. In
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order to do that remove ``--enable-console`` flag from the command that starts
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the server or set the following environment variable to false:
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.. code-block:: bash
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HASURA_GRAPHQL_ENABLE_CONSOLE=false
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.. note::
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If this is set in YAML, make sure you quote the word false, i.e.
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``HASURA_GRAPHQL_ENABLE_CONSOLE: "false"``.
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Step 1: Install the Hasura CLI
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------------------------------
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Follow the instructions in :ref:`install_hasura_cli`.
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Step 2: Set up a project directory
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----------------------------------
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Execute the following command. For the endpoint referred here, let's say you've
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deployed the GraphQL engine on Heroku, then this endpoint is:
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``https://my-graphql.herokuapp.com``. In case you've deployed this using Docker,
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the URL might be ``http://xx.xx.xx.xx:8080``. This endpoint should not contain
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the ``v1/graphql`` API path. It should just be the hostname and any
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sub-path if it is configured that way.
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.. code-block:: bash
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hasura init --directory my-project --endpoint http://my-graphql.herokuapp.com
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cd my-project
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This will create a new directory called ``my-project`` with a ``config.yaml``
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file and ``migrations`` directory. This directory structure is mandatory to use
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Hasura migrations. You can commit this directory to version control.
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.. note::
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In case there is an admin secret set, you can set it as an environment
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variable ``HASURA_GRAPHQL_ADMIN_SECRET=<your-admin-secret`` on the local
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machine and the the CLI will use it. You can also use it as a flag to CLI:
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``--admin-secret "<your-admin-secret>"``.
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Step 3: Open console from CLI
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-----------------------------
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Instead of using the console at ``http://my-graphql.herokuapp.com/console`` you
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should now use the console by running:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# in project dir
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hasura console
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Step 4: Add a new table and see how a migration is added
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--------------------------------------------------------
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As you use the Hasura console UI to make changes to your schema, migration files
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are automatically generated in the ``migrations/`` directory in your project.
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Step 5: Apply the migrations on another instance of GraphQL engine
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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Apply all migrations present in the ``migrations/`` directory on a new
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instance at ``http://another-graphql-instance.herokuapp.com``:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# in project dir
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hasura migrate apply --endpoint http://another-graphql-instance.herokuapp.com
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In case you need an automated way of applying the migrations, take a look at the
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:doc:`CLI-Migrations <auto-apply-migrations>` docker image, which can start
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GraphQL Engine after automatically applying the migrations which are
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mounted into a directory.
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Step 6: Check status of migrations
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----------------------------------
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.. code-block:: bash
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# in project dir
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hasura migrate status
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This command will print out each migration version present in the ``migrations``
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directory and the ones applied on the database, along with a status text.
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For example,
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ hasura migrate status
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VERSION SOURCE STATUS DATABASE STATUS
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1550925483858 Present Present
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1550931962927 Present Present
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1550931970826 Present Present
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Such a migration status indicate that there are 3 migration versions in the
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local directory and all of them are applied on the database.
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If ``SOURCE STATUS`` indicates ``Not Present``, it means that the migration
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version is present on the server, but not on the current user's local directory.
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This typically happens if multiple people are collaborating on a project and one
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of the collaborator forgot to pull the latest changes which included the latest
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migration files or another collaborator forgot to push the latest migration
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files that were applied on the database. Syncing of the files would fix the
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issue.
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If ``DATABASE STATUS`` indicates ``Not Present``, it denotes that there are new
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migration versions in the local directory which are not applied on the database
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yet. Executing a ``migrate apply`` would take care of such scenarios.
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