Releases: drizzle-team/drizzle-kit-mirror
0.23.1
-
Fixed an issue with pushing SQLite tables with foreign keys defined using custom names. Previously, such tables were always recreated on each push. In this release, the foreign key name will not affect the detection of differences between the code schema and the database schema. This is because SQLite cannot have foreign key constraint names specified in a DDL create table query, so they should not be used in the diff process
-
When dropping a column from an SQLite table, there was an issue with accessing the primary key of an undefined column
v0.23.0
🎉 New flag --force
for drizzle-kit push
You can auto-accept all data-loss statements using the push command. It's only available in CLI parameters. Make sure you always use it if you are fine with running data-loss statements on your database
🎉 New migrations
flag prefix
You can now customize migration file prefixes to make the format suitable for your migration tools:
index
is the default type and will result in0001_name.sql
file names;supabase
andtimestamp
are equal and will result in20240627123900_name.sql
file names;unix
will result in unix seconds prefixes1719481298_name.sql
file names;none
will omit the prefix completely;
Example: Supabase migrations format
import { defineConfig } from "drizzle-kit";
export default defineConfig({
dialect: "postgresql",
migrations: {
prefix: 'supabase'
}
});
🎉 Migrations support for PostgreSQL Sequences
You can now specify sequences in Postgres within any schema you need and define all the available properties
Example
import { pgSchema, pgSequence } from "drizzle-orm/pg-core";
// No params specified
export const customSequence = pgSequence("name");
// Sequence with params
export const customSequence = pgSequence("name", {
startWith: 100,
maxValue: 10000,
minValue: 100,
cycle: true,
cache: 10,
increment: 2
});
// Sequence in custom schema
export const customSchema = pgSchema('custom_schema');
export const customSequence = customSchema.sequence("name");
🎉 Migrations support for PostgreSQL Identity Columns
Source: As mentioned, the serial
type in Postgres is outdated and should be deprecated. Ideally, you should not use it. Identity columns
are the recommended way to specify sequences in your schema, which is why we are introducing the identity columns
feature
Example
import { pgTable, integer, text } from 'drizzle-orm/pg-core'
export const ingredients = pgTable("ingredients", {
id: integer("id").primaryKey().generatedAlwaysAsIdentity({ startWith: 1000 }),
name: text("name").notNull(),
description: text("description"),
});
You can specify all properties available for sequences in the .generatedAlwaysAsIdentity()
function. Additionally, you can specify custom names for these sequences
PostgreSQL docs reference.
🎉 Migrations support for PostgreSQL Generated Columns
You can now specify generated columns on any column supported by PostgreSQL to use with generated columns
Example with generated column for tsvector
Note: we will add
tsVector
column type before latest release
import { SQL, sql } from "drizzle-orm";
import { customType, index, integer, pgTable, text } from "drizzle-orm/pg-core";
const tsVector = customType<{ data: string }>({
dataType() {
return "tsvector";
},
});
export const test = pgTable(
"test",
{
id: integer("id").primaryKey().generatedAlwaysAsIdentity(),
content: text("content"),
contentSearch: tsVector("content_search", {
dimensions: 3,
}).generatedAlwaysAs(
(): SQL => sql`to_tsvector('english', ${test.content})`
),
},
(t) => ({
idx: index("idx_content_search").using("gin", t.contentSearch),
})
);
In case you don't need to reference any columns from your table, you can use just sql
template or a string
export const users = pgTable("users", {
id: integer("id"),
name: text("name"),
generatedName: text("gen_name").generatedAlwaysAs(sql`hello world!`),
generatedName1: text("gen_name1").generatedAlwaysAs("hello world!"),
}),
🎉 Migrations support for MySQL Generated Columns
You can now specify generated columns on any column supported by MySQL to use with generated columns
You can specify both stored
and virtual
options, for more info you can check MySQL docs
Also MySQL has a few limitation for such columns usage, which is described here
Drizzle Kit will also have limitations for push
command:
-
You can't change the generated constraint expression and type using
push
. Drizzle-kit will ignore this change. To make it work, you would need todrop the column
,push
, and thenadd a column with a new expression
. This was done due to the complex mapping from the database side, where the schema expression will be modified on the database side and, on introspection, we will get a different string. We can't be sure if you changed this expression or if it was changed and formatted by the database. As long as these are generated columns andpush
is mostly used for prototyping on a local database, it should be fast todrop
andcreate
generated columns. Since these columns aregenerated
, all the data will be restored -
generate
should have no limitations
Example
export const users = mysqlTable("users", {
id: int("id"),
id2: int("id2"),
name: text("name"),
generatedName: text("gen_name").generatedAlwaysAs(
(): SQL => sql`${schema2.users.name} || 'hello'`,
{ mode: "stored" }
),
generatedName1: text("gen_name1").generatedAlwaysAs(
(): SQL => sql`${schema2.users.name} || 'hello'`,
{ mode: "virtual" }
),
}),
In case you don't need to reference any columns from your table, you can use just sql
template or a string
in .generatedAlwaysAs()
🎉 Migrations support for SQLite Generated Columns
You can now specify generated columns on any column supported by SQLite to use with generated columns
You can specify both stored
and virtual
options, for more info you can check SQLite docs
Also SQLite has a few limitation for such columns usage, which is described here
Drizzle Kit will also have limitations for push
and generate
command:
-
You can't change the generated constraint expression with the stored type in an existing table. You would need to delete this table and create it again. This is due to SQLite limitations for such actions. We will handle this case in future releases (it will involve the creation of a new table with data migration).
-
You can't add a
stored
generated expression to an existing column for the same reason as above. However, you can add avirtual
expression to an existing column. -
You can't change a
stored
generated expression in an existing column for the same reason as above. However, you can change avirtual
expression. -
You can't change the generated constraint type from
virtual
tostored
for the same reason as above. However, you can change fromstored
tovirtual
.
0.22.8
- 🐛 [BUG]: TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'compositePrimaryKeys') - big thanks to @LavaToaster for the fix!
0.22.6
0.22.5
- 🐛 [BUG]: Recreating pg index in version 0.31(orm) + 0.22(kit) fails - #2470
- 🐛 [BUG]: Drizzle migrator doesn't work with uppercase names when creating indexes - #2457
- 🐛 [BUG]: 'left' column name not escaped in index - #2425
- 🐛 [BUG]: drizzle-kit push TypeError Cannot use 'in' operator to search for 'default' in undefined - #2385
- 🐛 [BUG]: Breaking change in the new "PostgreSQL Indexes API" missing quotes for uppercase column letters - #2413
- 🐛 [BUG]: drizzle-kit migrate fail "applying migrations...error: column "authorid" does not exist" - #2423
0.22.4
- Removed
data loss
triggers onpush
when adding aNOT NULL
constraint to a column and when removing thedefault
value from a column. These actions will now be performed immediately, and if there are anyNULL
values in the column, you will receive an error from the database
0.22.3
- 🐛 Fix
Cannot use 'in' operator to search for 'default' in undefined
error on push and generate
0.22.2
- 🐛 Fixed index-on-expressions sql statement generation if the expression contains a
,
. This should fix problems fortsvector
indexes, such as:
titleSearchIndex: index('title_search_index').using('gin', sql`to_tsvector('english', ${table.title})`)
0.22.1
Bug fixes
- 🐛 [BUG]: postgis geometry error: type "geometry(point)" does not exist
Improvements
-
🎉 Drizzle Studio now supports raw responses from D1 HTTP. This means that Drizzle Studio now has full support for D1, and all queries should work as expected!
-
🎉 Refactor the d1-http driver to properly show the table row count
0.22.0
New Features
🎉 Full support for indexes in PostgreSQL
The previous Drizzle+PostgreSQL indexes API was incorrect and was not aligned with the PostgreSQL documentation. The good thing is that it was not used in queries, and drizzle-kit didn't support all properties for indexes. This means we can now change the API to the correct one and provide full support for it in drizzle-kit
Previous API
- No way to define SQL expressions inside
.on
. .using
and.on
in our case are the same thing, so the API is incorrect here..asc()
,.desc()
,.nullsFirst()
, and.nullsLast()
should be specified for each column or expression on indexes, but not on an index itself.
// Index declaration reference
index('name')
.on(table.column1, table.column2, ...) or .onOnly(table.column1, table.column2, ...)
.concurrently()
.using(sql``) // sql expression
.asc() or .desc()
.nullsFirst() or .nullsLast()
.where(sql``) // sql expression
Current API
// First example, with `.on()`
index('name')
.on(table.column1.asc(), table.column2.nullsFirst(), ...) or .onOnly(table.column1.desc().nullsLast(), table.column2, ...)
.concurrently()
.where(sql``)
.with({ fillfactor: '70' })
// Second Example, with `.using()`
index('name')
.using('btree', table.column1.asc(), sql`lower(${table.column2})`, table.column1.op('text_ops'))
.where(sql``) // sql expression
.with({ fillfactor: '70' })
🎉 Support for new types
Drizzle Kit can now handle:
point
andline
from PostgreSQLvector
from the PostgreSQLpg_vector
extensiongeometry
from the PostgreSQLPostGIS
extension
🎉 New param in drizzle.config - extensionsFilters
The PostGIS extension creates a few internal tables in the public
schema. This means that if you have a database with the PostGIS extension and use push
or introspect
, all those tables will be included in diff
operations. In this case, you would need to specify tablesFilter
, find all tables created by the extension, and list them in this parameter.
We have addressed this issue so that you won't need to take all these steps. Simply specify extensionsFilters
with the name of the extension used, and Drizzle will skip all the necessary tables.
Currently, we only support the postgis
option, but we plan to add more extensions if they create tables in the public
schema.
The postgis
option will skip the geography_columns
, geometry_columns
, and spatial_ref_sys
tables
import { defineConfig } from 'drizzle-kit'
export default defaultConfig({
dialect: "postgresql",
extensionsFilters: ["postgis"],
})
Improvements
👍 Update zod schemas for database credentials and write tests to all the positive/negative cases
👍 Support full set of SSL params in kit config, provide types from node:tls connection
import { defineConfig } from 'drizzle-kit'
export default defaultConfig({
dialect: "postgresql",
dbCredentials: {
ssl: true, //"require" | "allow" | "prefer" | "verify-full" | options from node:tls
}
})
import { defineConfig } from 'drizzle-kit'
export default defaultConfig({
dialect: "mysql",
dbCredentials: {
ssl: "", // string | SslOptions (ssl options from mysql2 package)
}
})
👍 Normilized SQLite urls for libsql
and better-sqlite3
drivers
Those drivers have different file path patterns, and Drizzle Kit will accept both and create a proper file path format for each
👍 Updated MySQL and SQLite index-as-expression behavior
In this release MySQL and SQLite will properly map expressions into SQL query. Expressions won't be escaped in string but columns will be
export const users = sqliteTable(
'users',
{
id: integer('id').primaryKey(),
email: text('email').notNull(),
},
(table) => ({
emailUniqueIndex: uniqueIndex('emailUniqueIndex').on(sql`lower(${table.email})`),
}),
);
-- before
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX `emailUniqueIndex` ON `users` (`lower("users"."email")`);
-- now
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX `emailUniqueIndex` ON `users` (lower("email"));
Bug Fixes
- [BUG]: multiple constraints not added (only the first one is generated) - #2341
- Drizzle Studio: Error: Connection terminated unexpectedly - #435
- Unable to run sqlite migrations local - #432
- error: unknown option '--config' - #423
How push
and generate
works for indexes
Limitations
You should specify a name for your index manually if you have an index on at least one expression
Example
index().on(table.id, table.email) // will work well and name will be autogeneretaed
index('my_name').on(table.id, table.email) // will work well
// but
index().on(sql`lower(${table.email})`) // error
index('my_name').on(sql`lower(${table.email})`) // will work well
Push won't generate statements if these fields(list below) were changed in an existing index:
- expressions inside
.on()
and.using()
.where()
statements- operator classes
.op()
on columns
If you are using push
workflows and want to change these fields in the index, you would need to:
- Comment out the index
- Push
- Uncomment the index and change those fields
- Push again
For the generate
command, drizzle-kit
will be triggered by any changes in the index for any property in the new drizzle indexes API, so there are no limitations here.