Database Migration Patterns
Safe, reversible database schema changes for production systems.
When to Activate
- •Creating or altering database tables
- •Adding/removing columns or indexes
- •Running data migrations (backfill, transform)
- •Planning zero-downtime schema changes
- •Setting up migration tooling for a new project
Core Principles
- •Every change is a migration — never alter production databases manually
- •Migrations are forward-only in production — rollbacks use new forward migrations
- •Schema and data migrations are separate — never mix DDL and DML in one migration
- •Test migrations against production-sized data — a migration that works on 100 rows may lock on 10M
- •Migrations are immutable once deployed — never edit a migration that has run in production
Migration Safety Checklist
Before applying any migration:
- • Migration has both UP and DOWN (or is explicitly marked irreversible)
- • No full table locks on large tables (use concurrent operations)
- • New columns have defaults or are nullable (never add NOT NULL without default)
- • Indexes created concurrently (not inline with CREATE TABLE for existing tables)
- • Data backfill is a separate migration from schema change
- • Tested against a copy of production data
- • Rollback plan documented
PostgreSQL Patterns
Adding a Column Safely
sql
-- GOOD: Nullable column, no lock ALTER TABLE users ADD COLUMN avatar_url TEXT; -- GOOD: Column with default (Postgres 11+ is instant, no rewrite) ALTER TABLE users ADD COLUMN is_active BOOLEAN NOT NULL DEFAULT true; -- BAD: NOT NULL without default on existing table (requires full rewrite) ALTER TABLE users ADD COLUMN role TEXT NOT NULL; -- This locks the table and rewrites every row
Adding an Index Without Downtime
sql
-- BAD: Blocks writes on large tables CREATE INDEX idx_users_email ON users (email); -- GOOD: Non-blocking, allows concurrent writes CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY idx_users_email ON users (email); -- Note: CONCURRENTLY cannot run inside a transaction block -- Most migration tools need special handling for this
Renaming a Column (Zero-Downtime)
Never rename directly in production. Use the expand-contract pattern:
sql
-- Step 1: Add new column (migration 001) ALTER TABLE users ADD COLUMN display_name TEXT; -- Step 2: Backfill data (migration 002, data migration) UPDATE users SET display_name = username WHERE display_name IS NULL; -- Step 3: Update application code to read/write both columns -- Deploy application changes -- Step 4: Stop writing to old column, drop it (migration 003) ALTER TABLE users DROP COLUMN username;
Removing a Column Safely
sql
-- Step 1: Remove all application references to the column -- Step 2: Deploy application without the column reference -- Step 3: Drop column in next migration ALTER TABLE orders DROP COLUMN legacy_status; -- For Django: use SeparateDatabaseAndState to remove from model -- without generating DROP COLUMN (then drop in next migration)
Large Data Migrations
sql
-- BAD: Updates all rows in one transaction (locks table)
UPDATE users SET normalized_email = LOWER(email);
-- GOOD: Batch update with progress
DO $$
DECLARE
batch_size INT := 10000;
rows_updated INT;
BEGIN
LOOP
UPDATE users
SET normalized_email = LOWER(email)
WHERE id IN (
SELECT id FROM users
WHERE normalized_email IS NULL
LIMIT batch_size
FOR UPDATE SKIP LOCKED
);
GET DIAGNOSTICS rows_updated = ROW_COUNT;
RAISE NOTICE 'Updated % rows', rows_updated;
EXIT WHEN rows_updated = 0;
COMMIT;
END LOOP;
END $$;
Prisma (TypeScript/Node.js)
Workflow
bash
# Create migration from schema changes npx prisma migrate dev --name add_user_avatar # Apply pending migrations in production npx prisma migrate deploy # Reset database (dev only) npx prisma migrate reset # Generate client after schema changes npx prisma generate
Schema Example
prisma
model User {
id String @id @default(cuid())
email String @unique
name String?
avatarUrl String? @map("avatar_url")
createdAt DateTime @default(now()) @map("created_at")
updatedAt DateTime @updatedAt @map("updated_at")
orders Order[]
@@map("users")
@@index([email])
}
Custom SQL Migration
For operations Prisma cannot express (concurrent indexes, data backfills):
bash
# Create empty migration, then edit the SQL manually npx prisma migrate dev --create-only --name add_email_index
sql
-- migrations/20240115_add_email_index/migration.sql -- Prisma cannot generate CONCURRENTLY, so we write it manually CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY IF NOT EXISTS idx_users_email ON users (email);
Drizzle (TypeScript/Node.js)
Workflow
bash
# Generate migration from schema changes npx drizzle-kit generate # Apply migrations npx drizzle-kit migrate # Push schema directly (dev only, no migration file) npx drizzle-kit push
Schema Example
typescript
import { pgTable, text, timestamp, uuid, boolean } from "drizzle-orm/pg-core";
export const users = pgTable("users", {
id: uuid("id").primaryKey().defaultRandom(),
email: text("email").notNull().unique(),
name: text("name"),
isActive: boolean("is_active").notNull().default(true),
createdAt: timestamp("created_at").notNull().defaultNow(),
updatedAt: timestamp("updated_at").notNull().defaultNow(),
});
Django (Python)
Workflow
bash
# Generate migration from model changes python manage.py makemigrations # Apply migrations python manage.py migrate # Show migration status python manage.py showmigrations # Generate empty migration for custom SQL python manage.py makemigrations --empty app_name -n description
Data Migration
python
from django.db import migrations
def backfill_display_names(apps, schema_editor):
User = apps.get_model("accounts", "User")
batch_size = 5000
users = User.objects.filter(display_name="")
while users.exists():
batch = list(users[:batch_size])
for user in batch:
user.display_name = user.username
User.objects.bulk_update(batch, ["display_name"], batch_size=batch_size)
def reverse_backfill(apps, schema_editor):
pass # Data migration, no reverse needed
class Migration(migrations.Migration):
dependencies = [("accounts", "0015_add_display_name")]
operations = [
migrations.RunPython(backfill_display_names, reverse_backfill),
]
SeparateDatabaseAndState
Remove a column from the Django model without dropping it from the database immediately:
python
class Migration(migrations.Migration):
operations = [
migrations.SeparateDatabaseAndState(
state_operations=[
migrations.RemoveField(model_name="user", name="legacy_field"),
],
database_operations=[], # Don't touch the DB yet
),
]
golang-migrate (Go)
Workflow
bash
# Create migration pair migrate create -ext sql -dir migrations -seq add_user_avatar # Apply all pending migrations migrate -path migrations -database "$DATABASE_URL" up # Rollback last migration migrate -path migrations -database "$DATABASE_URL" down 1 # Force version (fix dirty state) migrate -path migrations -database "$DATABASE_URL" force VERSION
Migration Files
sql
-- migrations/000003_add_user_avatar.up.sql ALTER TABLE users ADD COLUMN avatar_url TEXT; CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY idx_users_avatar ON users (avatar_url) WHERE avatar_url IS NOT NULL; -- migrations/000003_add_user_avatar.down.sql DROP INDEX IF EXISTS idx_users_avatar; ALTER TABLE users DROP COLUMN IF EXISTS avatar_url;
Zero-Downtime Migration Strategy
For critical production changes, follow the expand-contract pattern:
code
Phase 1: EXPAND - Add new column/table (nullable or with default) - Deploy: app writes to BOTH old and new - Backfill existing data Phase 2: MIGRATE - Deploy: app reads from NEW, writes to BOTH - Verify data consistency Phase 3: CONTRACT - Deploy: app only uses NEW - Drop old column/table in separate migration
Timeline Example
code
Day 1: Migration adds new_status column (nullable) Day 1: Deploy app v2 — writes to both status and new_status Day 2: Run backfill migration for existing rows Day 3: Deploy app v3 — reads from new_status only Day 7: Migration drops old status column
Anti-Patterns
| Anti-Pattern | Why It Fails | Better Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Manual SQL in production | No audit trail, unrepeatable | Always use migration files |
| Editing deployed migrations | Causes drift between environments | Create new migration instead |
| NOT NULL without default | Locks table, rewrites all rows | Add nullable, backfill, then add constraint |
| Inline index on large table | Blocks writes during build | CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY |
| Schema + data in one migration | Hard to rollback, long transactions | Separate migrations |
| Dropping column before removing code | Application errors on missing column | Remove code first, drop column next deploy |