8.1 KiB
| stage | group | info |
|---|---|---|
| Enablement | Database | 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 |
NOT NULL constraints
Introduced in GitLab 13.0.
All attributes that should not have NULL as a value, should be defined as NOT NULL
columns in the database.
Depending on the application logic, NOT NULL columns should either have a presence: true
validation defined in their Model or have a default value as part of their database definition.
As an example, the latter can be true for boolean attributes that should always have a non-NULL
value, but have a well defined default value that the application does not need to enforce each
time (for example, active=true).
Create a new table with NOT NULL columns
When adding a new table, all NOT NULL columns should be defined as such directly inside create_table.
For example, consider a migration that creates a table with two NOT NULL columns,
db/migrate/20200401000001_create_db_guides.rb:
class CreateDbGuides < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.0]
DOWNTIME = false
def change
create_table :db_guides do |t|
t.bigint :stars, default: 0, null: false
t.bigint :guide, null: false
end
end
end
Add a NOT NULL column to an existing table
With PostgreSQL 11 being the minimum version in GitLab 13.0 and later, adding columns with NULL and/or
default values has become much easier and the standard add_column helper should be used in all cases.
For example, consider a migration that adds a new NOT NULL column active to table db_guides,
db/migrate/20200501000001_add_active_to_db_guides.rb:
class AddExtendedTitleToSprints < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.0]
DOWNTIME = false
def change
add_column :db_guides, :active, :boolean, default: true, null: false
end
end
Add a NOT NULL constraint to an existing column
Adding NOT NULL to existing database columns requires multiple steps split into at least two
different releases:
-
Release
N.M(current release)-
Ensure the constraint is enforced at the application level (i.e. add a model validation).
-
Add a post-deployment migration to add the
NOT NULLconstraint withvalidate: false. -
Add a post-deployment migration to fix the existing records.
NOTE: Depending on the size of the table, a background migration for cleanup could be required in the next release. See the
NOT NULLconstraints on large tables section for more information. -
Create an issue for the next milestone to validate the
NOT NULLconstraint.
-
-
Release
N.M+1(next release)- Validate the
NOT NULLconstraint using a post-deployment migration.
- Validate the
Example
Considering a given release milestone, such as 13.0, a model validation has been added into epic.rb
to require a description:
class Epic < ApplicationRecord
validates :description, presence: true
end
The same constraint should be added at the database level for consistency purposes.
We only want to enforce the NOT NULL constraint without setting a default, as we have decided
that all epics should have a user-generated description.
After checking our production database, we know that there are epics with NULL descriptions,
so we can not add and validate the constraint in one step.
NOTE:
Even if we did not have any epic with a NULL description, another instance of GitLab could have
such records, so we would follow the same process either way.
Prevent new invalid records (current release)
We first add the NOT NULL constraint with a NOT VALID parameter, which enforces consistency
when new records are inserted or current records are updated.
In the example above, the existing epics with a NULL description will not be affected and you'll
still be able to update records in the epics table. However, when you try to update or insert
an epic without providing a description, the constraint causes a database error.
Adding or removing a NOT NULL clause requires that any application changes are deployed first.
Thus, adding a NOT NULL constraint to an existing column should happen in a post-deployment migration.
Still in our example, for the 13.0 milestone example (current), we add the NOT NULL constraint
with validate: false in a post-deployment migration,
db/post_migrate/20200501000001_add_not_null_constraint_to_epics_description.rb:
class AddNotNullConstraintToEpicsDescription < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.0]
include Gitlab::Database::MigrationHelpers
DOWNTIME = false
disable_ddl_transaction!
def up
# This will add the `NOT NULL` constraint WITHOUT validating it
add_not_null_constraint :epics, :description, validate: false
end
def down
# Down is required as `add_not_null_constraint` is not reversible
remove_not_null_constraint :epics, :description
end
end
Data migration to fix existing records (current release)
The approach here depends on the data volume and the cleanup strategy. The number of records that must be fixed on GitLab.com is a nice indicator that will help us decide whether to use a post-deployment migration or a background data migration:
- If the data volume is less than
1000records, then the data migration can be executed within the post-migration. - If the data volume is higher than
1000records, it's advised to create a background migration.
When unsure about which option to use, please contact the Database team for advice.
Back to our example, the epics table is not considerably large nor frequently accessed,
so we are going to add a post-deployment migration for the 13.0 milestone (current),
db/post_migrate/20200501000002_cleanup_epics_with_null_description.rb:
class CleanupEpicsWithNullDescription < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.0]
include Gitlab::Database::MigrationHelpers
# With BATCH_SIZE=1000 and epics.count=29500 on GitLab.com
# - 30 iterations will be run
# - each requires on average ~150ms
# Expected total run time: ~5 seconds
BATCH_SIZE = 1000
disable_ddl_transaction!
class Epic < ActiveRecord::Base
include EachBatch
self.table_name = 'epics'
end
def up
Epic.each_batch(of: BATCH_SIZE) do |relation|
relation.
where('description IS NULL').
update_all(description: 'No description')
end
end
def down
# no-op : can't go back to `NULL` without first dropping the `NOT NULL` constraint
end
end
Validate the text limit (next release)
Validating the NOT NULL constraint will scan the whole table and make sure that each record is correct.
Still in our example, for the 13.1 milestone (next), we run the validate_not_null_constraint
migration helper in a final post-deployment migration,
db/post_migrate/20200601000001_validate_not_null_constraint_on_epics_description.rb:
class ValidateNotNullConstraintOnEpicsDescription < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.0]
include Gitlab::Database::MigrationHelpers
DOWNTIME = false
disable_ddl_transaction!
def up
validate_not_null_constraint :epics, :description
end
def down
# no-op
end
end
NOT NULL constraints on large tables
If you have to clean up a text column for a really large table
(for example, the artifacts in ci_builds), your background migration will go on for a while and
it will need an additional background migration cleaning up
in the release after adding the data migration.
In that rare case you will need 3 releases end-to-end:
- Release
N.M- Add theNOT NULLconstraint and the background-migration to fix the existing records. - Release
N.M+1- Cleanup the background migration. - Release
N.M+2- Validate theNOT NULLconstraint.
For these cases, please consult the database team early in the update cycle. The NOT NULL
constraint may not be required or other options could exist that do not affect really large
or frequently accessed tables.