This is an internal fork of kaliop migration bundle for use in our demos. It is not supported and will be completely replaced in the future.
This bundle makes it easy to programmatically deploy changes to eZPlatform / eZPublish 5 database structure and contents.
It is inspired by the DoctrineMigrationsBundle
You can think of it as the grandson of the legacy ezxmlinstaller extension.
-
PHP 5.6 or later.
-
eZPlatform or eZPublish Enterprise 5.4 or eZPublish Community 2014.11 or later.
In either require
or require-dev
at the end of the bundle list in the composer.json file add:
"kaliop/ezmigrationbundle": "^5.0"
Save it and run
composer update --dev kaliop/ezmigrationbundle
This will install the bundle and all its dependencies.
Please make sure that you have the bundle registered in the kernel as well. Check app/appKernel.php
(for eZPublish ezpublish/EzPublishKernel.php
)
The registerBundles
method should look similar to:
public function registerBundles()
{
$bundles = array(
... more stuff here ...
new \Kaliop\eZMigrationBundle\eZMigrationBundle()
);
}
If you run php bin/console
(for eZPublish php ezpublish/console
) you should see the following new commands in the list:
kaliop
kaliop:migration:generate
kaliop:migration:status
kaliop:migration:migrate
kaliop:migration:migration
This indicates that the bundle has been installed and registered correctly.
Note: the command kaliop:migration:update
is kept around for compatibility, and will be removed in future versions.
To get the latest version, you can update the bundle to the latest available version by using composer
composer update kaliop/ezmigrationbundle
-
Make sure you read carefully all the BC notes in the release notes
-
Nothing else is required, unless you have one of the following:
- code which extends the migration bundle code/apis
- old migrations, that you want to play again with the updated bundle, which have text values which include the string '[reference:xxx]' where 'xxx' stands for any sequence of characters
For both cases, the fix is to apply manual changes to your code / migrations.
-
Make sure you read carefully all the BC notes in the release notes
-
Nothing else is required, unless you have one of the following:
- code which extends the migration bundle code/apis
- code which depends on parsing the output of the
migrate
command and relies on its exact format
For both cases, the fix is to apply manual changes to your code.
-
Make sure you read carefully all the BC notes in the release notes
-
Nothing else is required, unless you have one of the following:
- migrations definitions generated using extension versions 1.x or 2.x, yet to be applied
- code which extends the migration bundle code/apis
For both cases, the fix is to apply manual changes to your code/migrations.
Please read the dedicated documentation page
All commands accept the standard Symfony/eZPublish 5 options, although some of them might not have any effect on the command's execution.
The bundle provides a command to easily generate a new blank migration definition file, stored in a specific bundle.
For example:
php ezpublish/console kaliop:migration:generate --format=yml MyProjectBundle
The above command will place a new yml skeleton file in the MigrationVersions
directory of the MyProjectBundle bundle.
If the directory does not exists then the command will create it for you, as long as the bundle does exist and is registered.
If the command is successful it will create a new yml file named with the following pattern: YYYYMMDDHHMMSS_placeholder.yml
.
You are encouraged to rename the file and change the placeholder
part to something more meaningful, but please keep
the timestamp part and underscore, as well as the extension.
(the contents of the skeleton Yaml file are stored as twig template)
To see all the migrations definitions available in the system and whether they have been applied or not simply run the status command in your eZPublish 5 root directory:
php ezpublish/console kaliop:migration:status
The list of migrations which have been already applied is stored in the database, in a table named kaliop_migrations
.
The bundle will automatically create the table if needed.
In case you need to use a different name for that table, you can change the Symfony parameter ez_migration_bundle.table_name
.
To apply all available migrations run the migrate command in your eZPublish 5 root directory:
php ezpublish/console kaliop:migration:migrate
NB: if you just executed the above command and got an error message because the migration definition file that you had just generated is invalid, do not worry - that is by design. Head on to the next paragraph...
NB: migrations execute by the default as the admin user with ID 14. Without this user account in the database, you must
specify the use of another admin accoungt by passing the -a
flag.
To apply a single migration run the migrate command passing it the path to its definition, as follows:
php ezpublish/console kaliop:migration:migrate --path=src/MyNamespace/MyBundle/MigrationVersions/20160803193400_a_migration.yml
NB: you can specify as well a folder with the --path
flag, in which case all the migration definitions contained in that
folder will be executed.
So far so good, but what kind of actions can be actually done using a migration?
Each migration definition consists of a series of steps, where each step defines an action.
A simple example of a migration to create a 'folder' content is:
-
mode: create
type: content
content_type: folder
parent_location: 2
attributes:
name: hello world
In a Yaml migration, you can define the following types of actions:
- creation, update and deletion of Contents
- creation, update and deletion of ContentTypes
- creation, update and deletion of ContentTypeGroups
- deletion of Content Versions
- creation and deletion of Languages
- creation, update and deletion of Locations
- creation, update and deletion of ObjectStates
- creation, update and deletion of ObjectStateGroups
- creation, update and deletion of Roles
- creation, update and deletion of Sections
- creation and deletion of of Tags (from the Netgen Tags Bundle)
- creation, update and deletion of Users
- creation, update and deletion of UserGroups
- purging and recovering Contents from the Trash
- creation, appending, copy, renaming and deletion of files
- execution of SQL queries
- execution of command-line scripts
- execution of methods of symfony services
- execution of http calls
- sending of email
- canceling, snoozing or suspending the migration itself
The docs describing all supported parameters are in the DSL Language description
For more specific needs, you can also use 2 other types of migrations:
- SQL migrations
- PHP migrations
Example command to generate an SQL migration definition:
php ezpublish/console kaliop:migration:generate MyBundle create-new-table --format=sql
This will create the following file, which you are free to edit:
.../MyBundle/Migrations/2016XXYYHHMMSS_mysql_create-new-table.sql
NB if you rename the sql file, keep in mind that the type of database to which it is supposed to apply is the part of the filename between the first and second underscore characters. If you later try to execute that migration on an eZPublish installation running on, say, PostgreSQL, the migration will fail. You are of course free to create a specific SQL migration for a different database type.
The Migration bundle itself imposes no limitations on the type of databases supported, but as it is based on the Doctrine DBAL, it will only work on the databases that Doctrine supports.
NB if the SQL command (or commands) in your migration is too long, the migration might fail or be only partially applied, in some cases (such as when using MySQL) without even reporting an error. If you need to execute multiple, long queries, you are better off splitting them, either in many .sql migrations, or in a single .yml migration with sql steps.
If the type of manipulation that you need to do is too complex for either YML or SQL, you can use a php class as migration definition. To generate a PHP migration definition, execute:
php ezpublish/console kaliop:migration:generate MyBundle AMigrationClass --format=php
This will create the following file, which you are free to edit:
.../MyBundle/Migrations/2016XXYYHHMMSS_AMigrationClass.php
As you can see in the generated definition, the php class to be used for a migration needs to implement a specific interface. The Symfony DIC container is passed to the migration class so that it can access from it all the services, parameters and other thing that it needs.
For a more detailed example of a migration definition done in PHP, look in the MigrationVersions folder of this very bundle.
NB if you rename the php file, keep in mind that the filename and the name of the class it contains are tied - the standard autoloading mechanism of the application does not apply when loading the migration definition. This is also the reason why the php classes used as migrations should not use namespaces.
NB since version 4.5, it is also possible to run any method of any existing Symfony service just by declaring it as migration step in a yaml migration. See the relevant DSL for details.
The easiest way to re-execute a migration in 'failed' status, is to remove it from the migrations table:
php ezpublish/console kaliop:migration:migration migration_name --delete
After removing the information about the migration form the migrations table, running the migrate
command will execute it again.
By default the bundle runs each migration in a database transaction. This means that if a step fails, all of the previous steps get rolled back, and the database is left in its original state. This is a safety feature built in by design;
- if you prefer the migration steps to be executed in separate transactions the easiest way is to create a separate migration file for each step
- you can use the command-line flag
-u
to disable usage of transactions by the migrate command
Note also that by default the migrate
command stops on the 1st failed migration, but it can be executed with a flag
to allow it to continue and execute all available migrations even in case of failures.
As for rolling back changes: given the nature of the eZPublish API, rolling back changes to Content is not an easy feat. As such, the bundle does not provide built-in support for rolling back the database to the version it had before applying a given migration. We recommend always taking a database snapshot before applying migrations, and use it in case you need to roll back your changes. Another approach consists in writing a separate migration to undo the changes.
An easy way to hook up custom logic to the execution of migrations - without having to implement your own customized action executors - is to use Event Listeners.
Two events are fired for each step during execution of migrations:
* ez_migration.before_execution => listeners receive a BeforeStepExecutionEvent event instance
* ez_migration.step_executed => listeners receive a StepExecutedEvent event instance
An event is fired only in case a migration fails because a step throws a specific migration abort exception:
* ez_migration.migration_aborted => listeners receive a MigrationAbortedEvent event instance
An event is fired when a migration is being generated using the kaliop:migration:generate
command, allowing to alter
the data that will be serialized as migration steps:
* ez_migration.migration_generated => listeners receive a MigrationGeneratedEvent event instance
In order to act on those events, you will need to declare tagged services, such as for ex:
my.step_executed_listener:
class: my\helper\StepExecutedListener
tags:
- { name: kernel.event_listener, event: ez_migration.step_executed, method: onStepExecuted }
and the corresponding php class:
use Kaliop\eZMigrationBundle\API\Event\StepExecutedEvent;
class StepExecutedListener
{
public function onStepExecuted(StepExecutedEvent $event)
{
// do something...
}
}
-
unlike the Doctrine Migrations Bundle, this bundle does not support rollback of changes. Read above for the reason.
-
if you are using the Doctrine Migrations Bundle to manage your schema, you will get spurious sql created to handle the database tables belonging to Kaliop Migrations Bundle. For the moment, the best work around is to use the
filter-expression
parameter on the command-line when runningdoctrine:migrations:diff
and friends, with a value ofkaliop_migrations_*
-
if you get fatal errors when running a migration stating that a node or object has not been found, it is most likely related to how the dual-kernel works in eZPublish, and the fact that the legacy and Symfony kernels use a separate connection to the database. Since the migration bundle by default wraps all database changes for a migration in a database transaction, when the Slots are fired which allow the legacy kernel to clear its caches, the legacy kernel can not see the database changes applied by the Symfony kernel, and, depending on the specific Slot in use, might fail with a fatal error. The simplest workaround is to disable usage of transactions by passing the
-u
flag to themigrate
command. -
similar symptoms can manifest themselves when you are using the Solr Search Engine Bundle. In this case the problem is compounded the fact that, even if an node or object is sent to Solr from within a database transaction, the Solr search index might be configured to only commit received data within a short time delay. A known workaround involve:
- separate your migration steps into separate migrations
- running the migrations each in its own transaction (and process) by using the
-p
flag to themigrate
command - adding
sleep
migration steps to migrations 2 .. N - and/or configuring Solr to always commit changes to the index immediately (eg. disable
commitwithin
)
-
when using SOLR in multi-core configurations and getting a
java.lang.NegativeArraySizeException
error, you will have to set a lower value than the default 2147483647 for parameterez_migration_bundle.query_limit
-
if you get fatal errors without any error message when running a migration which involves a lot of content changes, such as f.e. altering a contentType with many contents, it might be that you are running out of memory for your php process. Known workarounds involve:
- increase the maximum amount of memory allowed for the php script by running it with option '-d memory_limit=-1'
- execute the migration command using a Symfony environment which has reduced logging and kernel debug disabled:
the default configuration for the
dev
environment is known to leak memory
-
if you get fatal errors with he message 'You cannot create a service ("request") of an inactive scope ("request")', take a look at the following issue for a possible explanation and ideas for workarounds: https://jira.ez.no/browse/EZP-24691
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if you are using eZPublish versions prior to 2015.9, you will not be able to create/update Role definitions that contain policies with limitations for custom modules/functions. The known workaround is to take over the RoleService and alter its constructor to inject into it the desired limitations
-
when updating a Role, you have to specify in the migration all the policies for it. Any existing policies that are not in the yml file will be removed. To make it easy to create a migration for updating a role, please use the
migration:generate
command using the--type=role
flag -
take care when creating content types: the eZPublish API, used internally by the migration bundle, will let you use dash characters in the content type identifiers, even if the resulting content types will then be unusable, eg.
Example of an invalid definition:
type: ezstring name: Topbar-hover-color identifier: topbar-hover-color
A: use the 'reference/set' migration step to define a reference for the desired content Id, and use a Symfony parameter to store a different value for each Symfony environment. For example:
-
type: reference
mode: set
identifier: content_id_ref
value: '%a.parameter.name%'
-
type: content
mode: update
match:
content_id: "reference:content_id_ref"
etc: ...
When using a migration to update a Role, you must define ALL its policies. Any not defined will be removed. The safest and simplest way to make sure that you do not forget any of the existing policies is to first generate a update migration that has the complete specification of the role as it currently is defined, and then edit manually.
Example command to create such a migration:
php ezpublish/console kaliop:migration:generate --type=role --mode=update --match-type=identifier --match-value=Anonymous bundleName
When dumping a Content into a yml migration via the generate
command, the list of attributes is empty
A: this is most likely due to using a bad language configuration
The bundle has been designed to be easily extended in many ways, such as:
- adding support for custom/complex field-types
- adding support for completely new actions in the Yml definitions
- adding support for a new file format for storing migration definitions
- adding support for a new resolver for the custom references in the migration definitions
- taking over the way that the migrations definitions are loaded from the filesystem or stored in the database
- etc...
Following Symfony best practices, for the first 4 options in the list above all you need to do is to create a service and give it an appropriate tag (the class implementing service should of course implement an appropriate interface).
To find out the names of the tags that you need to implement, as well as for all the other services which you can override, take a look at the services.yml file.
The bundle uses PHPUnit to run functional tests.
To run the tests:
export KERNEL_DIR=ezpublish (or 'app' for ezplatform setups)
export SYMFONY_ENV=behat (or whatever your environment is)
bin/phpunit --stderr -c vendor/kaliop/ezmigrationbundle/phpunit.xml.dist
NB the tests do not mock interaction with the database, but create/modify/delete many types of data in it. As such, there are good chances that running tests will leave stale/broken data. It is recommended to run the tests suite using a dedicated eZPublish installation or at least dedicated database.
A safer choice to run the tests of the bundle is to set up a dedicated environment, similar to the one used when the test suite is run on Travis. The advantages are multiple: one one hand you can start with any version of eZPublish you want; on the other you will be more confident that the tests will still pass on Travis. The disadvantages are that you will need Docker and Docker-compose, and that the environment you will use will look quite unlike a standard eZPublish setup!
Steps to set up a dedicated test environment and run the tests in it:
# if you have a github auth token, it is a good idea to copy it now to Tests/docker/data/.composer/auth.json
./Tests/teststack.sh build
./Tests/teststack.sh runtests
./Tests/teststack.sh stop
In case you want to run manual commands, eg. the symfony console:
./Tests/teststack.sh exec php vendor/ezsystems/ezplatform/bin/console cache:clear
Note: this will take some time the 1st time your run it, but it will be quicker on subsequent runs.
Note: make sure to have enough disk space available.
Note: the tests in the Docker container run against the version of eZPlatform kernel specified in the file containers.env
.
If you want to test against another version, feel free to modify it and rebuild the containers.