Commit d43161f8 authored by João Alexandre Cunha's avatar João Alexandre Cunha Committed by João Cunha

Extend documentation about db:check-migrations

We briefly mentioned the existence of this job, but gave no details
as where to find it or what it does. This commit adds some explanation
as well as some troubleshooting tips.
parent 7976ea9c
---
stage: Enablement
group: Database
info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
---
# db:check-migrations job
This job runs on the test stage of a merge request pipeline. It does 3 checks:
- a schema dump comparison between the author's working branch and the target branch,
after executing a rollback of your new migrations, to validate that the
schema properly resets to what it was before executing this new migration.
- a schema dump comparison between the author's working branch and the `db/structure.sql`
file that the author committed, to guarantee that it contains all the expected changes
in the migration.
- a Git diff between the `db/schema_migrations` that the author committed and the
one that the script generated after running migrations, to guarantee that everything
was properly committed.
## Troubleshooting
### False positives
This jobs is allowed to fail, because it can throw some false positives.
For example, when we drop a column and then we rollback, this column is always
re-added at the end of the list of columns. Meaning that, if this column was previously in
the middle of the list, the rollback won't bring the schema back exactly to what it was.
This will cause the job to fail, but it's an acceptable situation.
See [this failed job](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/jobs/2006544972#L138) for a
real life example. In this case, the author dropped the `position` column.
### Schema dump comparison fails after rollback
This often happens if your working branch is behind the target branch. Here is a real life
scenario:
```mermaid
graph LR
Main((main<br>commit A)) ===> |remove constraint<br>fk_rails_dbebdaa8fe| MainB((main<br>commit B))
Main((main<br>commit A)) --> |checkout<br>dev| DevA((dev<br>commit A)):::dev
DevA((dev<br>commit A)) --> |add column<br>dependency_proxy_size| DevC((dev<br>commit C)):::dev
DevC -.-> |CI pipeline<br>executes| JOB-FAILED((JOB FAILED!)):::error
classDef main fill:#f4f0ff,stroke:#7b58cf
classDef dev fill:#e9f3fc,stroke:#1f75cb
classDef error fill:#f15146,stroke:#d4121a
```
1. You checkout the `dev` working branch from the `main` target branch. At this point
each have their `HEAD` at commit A.
1. Someone works on the `main` branch and drops the `dependency_proxy_size` constraint, thus creating
commit B on `main`.
1. You add column `dependency_proxy_size` to your `dev` branch.
1. The `db:check-migrations` job fails for your `dev` branch's CI pipeline complaining that
the `structure.sql` file did not rollback to its expected state.
This happened because `dev` had only commits A and C, not B. Thus, its database schema
did not know about the removal of the `dependency_proxy_size` constraint. So, when comparing the two
schemas, the `dev` branch will have this constraint while the `main` branch won't.
This example really happened. See the [job failure logs](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/jobs/1992050890).
To fix these kind of issues, rebase the working branch onto the target branch to get the latest changes.
...@@ -19,6 +19,7 @@ info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated w ...@@ -19,6 +19,7 @@ info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated w
- [Understanding EXPLAIN plans](../understanding_explain_plans.md) - [Understanding EXPLAIN plans](../understanding_explain_plans.md)
- [explain.depesz.com](https://explain.depesz.com/) or [explain.dalibo.com](https://explain.dalibo.com/) for visualizing the output of `EXPLAIN` - [explain.depesz.com](https://explain.depesz.com/) or [explain.dalibo.com](https://explain.dalibo.com/) for visualizing the output of `EXPLAIN`
- [pgFormatter](https://sqlformat.darold.net/) a PostgreSQL SQL syntax beautifier - [pgFormatter](https://sqlformat.darold.net/) a PostgreSQL SQL syntax beautifier
- [db:check-migrations job](dbcheck-migrations-job.md)
## Migrations ## Migrations
......
...@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ If new migrations are introduced, in the MR **you are required to provide**: ...@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ If new migrations are introduced, in the MR **you are required to provide**:
Note that we have automated tooling for Note that we have automated tooling for
[GitLab](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab) (provided by the [GitLab](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab) (provided by the
`db:check-migrations` pipeline job) that provides this output for migrations on [`db:check-migrations`](database/dbcheck-migrations-job.md) pipeline job) that provides this output for migrations on
~database merge requests. You do not need to provide this information manually ~database merge requests. You do not need to provide this information manually
if the bot can do it for you. The bot also checks that migrations are correctly if the bot can do it for you. The bot also checks that migrations are correctly
reversible. reversible.
......
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