# Migration Style Guide

When writing migrations for GitLab, you have to take into account that
these will be ran by hundreds of thousands of organizations of all sizes, some with
many years of data in their database.

In addition, having to take a server offline for a an upgrade small or big is
a big burden for most organizations. For this reason it is important that your
migrations are written carefully, can be applied online and adhere to the style guide below.

When writing your migrations, also consider that databases might have stale data
or inconsistencies and guard for that. Try to make as little assumptions as possible
about the state of the database.

Please don't depend on GitLab specific code since it can change in future versions.
If needed copy-paste GitLab code into the migration to make make it forward compatible.

## Comments in the migration

Each migration you write needs to have the two following pieces of information
as comments.

### Online, Offline, errors?

First, you need to provide information on whether the migration can be applied:

1. online without errors (works on previous version and new one)
2. online with errors on old instances after migrating
3. online with errors on new instances while migrating
4. offline (needs to happen without app servers to prevent db corruption)

It is always preferable to have a migration run online. If you expect the migration
to take particularly long (for instance, if it loops through all notes),
this is valuable information to add.

### Reversibility

Your migration should be reversible. This is very important, as it should
be possible to downgrade in case of a vulnerability or bugs.

In your migration, add a comment describing how the reversibility of the
migration was tested.


## Removing indices

If you need to remove index, please add a condition like in following example:

```
remove_index :namespaces, column: :name if index_exists?(:namespaces, :name)
```

## Adding indices

If you need to add an unique index please keep in mind there is possibility of existing duplicates. If it is possible write a separate migration for handling this situation. It can be just removing or removing with overwriting all references to these duplicates depend on situation.

## Testing

Make sure that your migration works with MySQL and PostgreSQL with data. An empty database does not guarantee that your migration is correct.

Make sure your migration can be reversed.

## Data migration

Please prefer Arel and plain SQL over usual ActiveRecord syntax. In case of using plain SQL you need to quote all input manually with `quote_string` helper.

Example with Arel:

```
users = Arel::Table.new(:users)
users.group(users[:user_id]).having(users[:id].count.gt(5))

#updtae other tables with this results
```

Example with plain SQL and `quote_string` helper:

```
select_all("SELECT name, COUNT(id) as cnt FROM tags GROUP BY name HAVING COUNT(id) > 1").each do |tag|
  tag_name = quote_string(tag["name"])
  duplicate_ids = select_all("SELECT id FROM tags WHERE name = '#{tag_name}'").map{|tag| tag["id"]}
  origin_tag_id = duplicate_ids.first
  duplicate_ids.delete origin_tag_id

  execute("UPDATE taggings SET tag_id = #{origin_tag_id} WHERE tag_id IN(#{duplicate_ids.join(",")})")
  execute("DELETE FROM tags WHERE id IN(#{duplicate_ids.join(",")})")
end
```