AppSuite:CustomDBMigration
Summary: With release 7.6.1 it is possible to change the database schema based on the open source tool Liquibase. Currently only updating the configdb is supported. This article gives a short introduction (based on an existing sample bundle) how to write custom database migration bundles and how to attach your custom statements to those statements given by Open-Xchange.
Please have a look at liquibase, its features and documentation before writing custom bundles: http://www.liquibase.org/documentation/ .
Additional information about liquibase within the Open-Xchange server, important hints for development and tools around it are available on http://oxpedia.org/wiki/index.php?title=AppSuite:DBMigration
Prerequisite
This article is based on an existing sample bundle located in the public git repository backend-samples. Clone the repository by executing
git clone https://git.open-xchange.com/git/examples/backend-samples
The required bundle is named 'com.openexchange.sample.database.migration'.
Current restrictions
- Database migrations can only be applied to the configdb!
- Open-Xchange server currently uses liquibase version 3.0.7. All features provided with later versions cannot be used.
Bundle dependencies
To execute custom database migration for the configdb you have to track the service com.openexchange.database.migration.DBMigrationExecutorService (default provided within bundle com.openexchange.database.migration).
If you would like to have the Open-Xchange database migrations executed before your custom statements are used you even have to track the service com.openexchange.database.migration.ox.DBMigrationOXExcecutorService which is provided within the bundle com.openexchange.database.migration.ox
Usage of both is shown within the sample bundle.
Liquibase
The following chapter describes in short the liquibase features and how they are used by Open-Xchange. For further information have a look at the official liquibase documentation: http://www.liquibase.org/documentation/
ChangeLog file / changeSets
A ChangeLog file is the heart of this database migration and contains all information required to change database structure and/or contents. It consists of ChangeSets that are used to define a migration. Normally ChangeSets are executed transactionally.
You have to provide a ChangeLog file that contains some ChangeSets that reflect your desired database migration. Within the sample bundle the file 'custom.changelog.xml' is referenced.
Tags
A ChangeSet can be used to tag the database at a current state. Open-Xchange uses this mechanism to tag the database to be ready for a new release.
Tags are not used in the sample custom bundle.
Preconditions
You are even able to define dependencies between ChangeSets. With that you can attach your custom ChangeSet to whatever ChangeSet you would like to. Open-Xchange uses this for ChangeSets that should be executed after the database has been tagged for a new release. All ChangeSets after tagging checks if the precondition is true. You can create complex conditions by using nested conditions. For further information have a look at the following documentation: http://www.liquibase.org/documentation/preconditions.html
Within the custom bundle the precondition is defined as follows: the changeSet with id="7.6.1:login2context:login_info", author="martin.schneider" and changeLogFile="release-7.6.1/1.login_info.changelog.xml" have to be executed (defined in ox.changelog.xml) so that all changeSets within custom.changelog.xml will become executed.
Database
Database tables
Liquibase creates two tables to handle its current state:
- LIQUIBASECHANGELOG: Contains information about the execution status of ChangeSets. Each executed ChangeSet will be added to this table. If there is no entry available for a ChangeSet liquibase will try to execute the statement.
- LIQUIBASECHANGELOGLOCK: Handles access to the database to not execute database migration statements twice.
Database lock
Liquibase uses a lock to only grant one liquibase instace access to the database to change. For this purpose a table named 'DATABASECHANGELOGLOCK' is created. In cluster environments the first node that successfully aquired the lock will execute the database migration statements. During this time all other nodes are blocked. After the lock was released the second node will get access to the database and read already executed ChangeSets. If all ChangeSets have been executed nothing will be done and the lock will be released. This happens with each node within the cluster.
Custom Java Classes
Within your custom ChangeLog xml file you are not only able to define changes descriptive but even execute database statements defined within a class that implements CustomSqlChange.
Have a look at the sample bundle which references and executes com.openexchange.sample.database.migration.custom.ExampleCustomSqlChange.