Azure SQL
Installation
To have access to the following features, you have to import the module:
PS> Install-Module -Name Arcus.Scripting.SQL
Invoke a database migration
With this script, you can perform database upgrades by providing/adding specific SQL scripts with the right version number. Once a new version number is detected it will incrementally execute this.
While doing so it will create a table "DatabaseVersion". If the DatabaseVersion table doesn't exist it will automatically create it.
This function allows you to trigger a database migration, which will only execute the newly provided SQL scripts, based on the provided version number in each of the scripts. The current version is stored in a table "DatabaseVersion", which will be created if it doesn't exist yet.
Parameter | Mandatory | Description |
---|---|---|
ServerName | yes | The full name of the SQL Server that hosts the SQL Database. |
DatabaseName | yes | The name of the SQL Database |
UserName | yes | The UserName of the SQL Database |
Password | yes | The Password of the SQL Database |
ScriptsFolder | no (default: $PSScriptRoot/sqlScripts | The directory folder where the SQL migration scripts are located on the file system |
ScriptsFileFilter | no (default: *.sql ) | The file filter to limit the SQL script files to use during the migrations |
DatabaseSchema | no (default: dbo ) | The database schema to use when running SQL commands on the target database |
Make sure that the credentials that you provide can write tables to the database + any action that you specify in the SQL scripts. (If the user is a member of the db_ddlamin
role, then that user should have the necessary rights)
Example with defaults
PS> Invoke-AzSqlDatabaseMigration `
-ServerName "my-server-name.database.windows.net" `
-DatabaseName "my-database-name" `
-Username "my-sql-username" `
-Password "my-sql-password"
# DB migration 1.0.0 applied!
# Done migrating database. Current Database version is 1.0.0
Example with custom values
PS> Invoke-AzSqlDatabaseMigration `
-ServerName "my-server-name.database.windows.net" `
-DatabaseName "my-database-name" `
-Username "my-sql-username" `
-Password "my-sql-password" `
-ScriptsFolder "$PSScriptRoot/sql-scripts" `
-ScriptsFileFilter "*.MyScript.sql" `
-DatabaseSchema "custom"
# DB migration 1.0.0 applied!
# Done migrating database. Current Database version is 1.0.0
Adding SQL scripts so they can be picked up by the script
-
In the location where you want to run the script add a folder where the migration scripts will be placed. By default, we're looking in a folder called
SqlScripts
, but this can be any folder as it is configurable via theScriptsFolder
argument. -
Add your database migration scripts in the folder that was created in the previous step. To be recognized by the module, the files must match with the following naming convention:
[MajorVersionNumber].[MinorVersionNumber].[PatchVersionNumber]_[DescriptionOfMigration].sql
In practice this can look like this:
1.0.0_Baseline.sql
1.1.0_AddIndexes.sql
1.1.1_PopulateCodetables.sql
When a new migration comes along, just create the new SQL script with a version number one number higher than the previous one.
Compatibility
Semantic versioning of database-migrations is supported since version v0.5. Existing migration scripts that follow the old naming convention will be recognized and will be given this version-number: [VersionNumber].0.0
.