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Galaxy Database Schema Migrations

Galaxy’s database schema migration system is built on top of Alembic - a lightweight database migration tool for usage with SQLAlchemy. (This documentation applies to release 22.05 and up. Prior to 22.05, Galaxy used SQLAlchemy Migrate.)

Administering Galaxy: upgrading and downgrading the database

To initialize an empty database (or create a new SQLite database) start Galaxy. However, this approach is safe only if booting to a single process. A better approach is to use the init command: manage_db.sh init.

To upgrade or downgrade an existing database, you’ll need to use the manage_db.sh script, which is the recommended way to interact with Galaxy’s database schema migration system.

manage_db.sh

usage: manage_db.sh [-h] [-c CONFIG] {upgrade,downgrade,version,v,dbversion,dv,init} ...

positional arguments:
  {upgrade,downgrade,version,v,dbversion,dv,init}
    upgrade             Upgrade to a later version
    downgrade           Revert to a previous version
    version (v)         Show the head revision in the migrations script directory
    dbversion (dv)      Show the current revision for Galaxy's database
    init                Initialize empty database(s)

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -c CONFIG, --galaxy-config CONFIG
                        Alternate Galaxy configuration file

Subcommands

upgrade

Upgrade to a later version. The revision argument is optional.

usage: manage_db.sh upgrade [-h] [--sql] [revision]

positional arguments:
  revision    Revision identifier or release tag

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit
  --sql       Don't emit SQL to database - dump to standard output/file instead.

If you are upgrading a database that has not been version-controlled by Alembic, you should run this command for the first time without the revision argument: ./manage_db.sh upgrade - this will ensure proper initialization of the migration system for your database(s).

If you are upgrading to a specific release, you may use a release tag as the revision argument:

./manage_db.sh upgrade release_22.05
./manage_db.sh upgrade 22.05

You can upgrade to releases 22.05 and up.

For the --sql option, see Alembic documentation on offline mode.

downgrade

Revert to a previous version.

usage: manage_db.sh downgrade [-h] [--sql] revision

positional arguments:
  revision    Revision identifier or release tag

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit
  --sql       Don't emit SQL to database - dump to standard output/file instead.

If you are downgrading to a specific release, you may use a release tag as the revision argument:

./manage_db.sh downgrade release_22.01
./manage_db.sh downgrade 22.01

The oldest release you can downgrade to is 22.01.

Note that when you downgrade to 22.01, your database should be under version control by SQLAlchemy Migrate (the migrations tool used prior to release 22.05). Your database should have a table migrate_version that contains version 180.

For the --sql option, see Alembic documentation on offline mode. Note that in this mode, instead of specifying a revision identifier, you have to specify a range of revisions using the following format: <from-rev>:<to-ref>.

version

Show the latest (i.e., head) revisions in the codebase.

Activating virtualenv at .venv
\usage: manage_db.sh version [-h] [-v]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help     show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose  Display more detailed output
dbversion

Show the current revision for Galaxy’s database. If the database revision corresponds to the head revision in the codebase, it will be marked as (head).

usage: manage_db.sh dbversion [-h] [-v]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help     show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose  Display more detailed output
init

Initialize an empty database (or create a new SQLite database).

usage: manage_db.sh init [-h]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit

Advanced usage

The following sections provide more details on the migration system and describe commands that are relevant for development scenarios.

Overview

The purpose of the database schema migration system is to support automated, incremental, reversible changes to Galaxy’s database schema. Central to this is the concept of a database version (more specifically, database schema version). A version is represented by a revision script (the terms version and revision may be used interchangeably). Executing a revision script will upgrade, or downgrade, the database schema by applying the changes specified in the script.

Galaxy keeps track of the database schema version in two places: one is a directory we refer to as “the migration environment” (located at lib/galaxy/model/migrations/alembic), the other is the alembic_version table in the database. For Galaxy to run, these versions must be the same, which, essentially, means that the version of the database matches the version expected by the codebase.

On startup, the system checks if the version in the database matches the version in the codebase. If they do not match, and the database_auto_migrate configuration option is not set, Galaxy will fail with an error message explaining how to proceed. In most cases, you’ll need to upgrade the database schema to the current version, which is represented by the latest revision script in the migration environment.

A note on models and branch labels

Galaxy’s data model includes the galaxy model and the install model. These two models may be persisted in one combined database (which is the default) or two separate databases (which is enabled by setting the install_database_connection configuration option).

These models are represented by migration branches (versioning lineages with a common base) labeled as gxy for the galaxy model and tsi for the install model. If both models are hosted in the same databases, the branches will share the same Alembic version table; otherwise, each database has its own version table.

Each branch has its own version history, represented by revision scripts located in the branch version directory (migrations/alembic/versions_gxy for gxy and migrations/alembic/versions_tsi for tsi).

For a more detailed description of the system’s internals, see pull request #13108.

Migration management scripts

The manage_db.sh script is the recommended way to interact with Galaxy’s database schema migration system. It provides access to a subset of commands offered by Alembic’s CLI, while hiding some of the implementation complexity of Galaxy’s model. The provided commands and options should be sufficient for most use cases involving Galaxy development or system and database administration.

Additionally, Galaxy provides two scripts for advanced usage: db_dev.sh and run_alembic.sh. Both are located in the scripts directory.

The db_dev.sh script is similar to manage_db.sh, but provides additional commands and options.

The run_alembic.sh script is a thin wrapper around the Alembic CLI runner. It offers more flexibility and the full scope of Alembic’s CLI commands and options; however, it requires more detailed command arguments, as well as basic familiarity with Alembic branches.

Revision identifiers

Some of the commands accept revision identifiers as arguments. A revision is usually identified by a 12-digit hexadecimal number (i.e., 6a67bf27e6a6). Anytime you need to refer to a specific revision, you have the option to use a partial number.

For example, you may use ./db_dev.sh upgrade 6a instead of ./db_dev.sh upgrade 6a67bf27e6a6 if 6a is sufficient to uniquely identify that revision.

(Ref: Alembic documentation)

Relative migration identifiers

You may also use Alembic’s syntax for relative migration identifiers for the upgrade/downgrade commands:

To move 2 versions from the current version, a decimal value +N can be supplied:

./db_dev.sh upgrade +2

Negative values are accepted for downgrades:

./db_dev.sh downgrade -2

Relative identifiers may also be in terms of a specific revision. For example, to upgrade to revision 6a67bf27e6a6 plus two additional steps:

./db_dev.sh upgrade 6a67bf27e6a6+2.

You may also combine relative migration identifiers with partial revision identifiers:

./db_dev.sh upgrade 6a+2.

(Ref: Alembic documentation)

Revision identifiers and relative migration identifiers can be used with all the provided scripts.

db_dev.sh

This script offers a set of common database schema migration operations that are executed on the gxy branch, which, in the vast majority of cases, is all you need to develop and administer Galaxy. To run operations on the tsi branch, you need to use run_alembic.sh.

usage: db_dev.sh [-h] [-c CONFIG] [--raiseerr] {upgrade,downgrade,version,v,
       dbversion,dv,history,h,show,s,revision,init} ...

positional arguments:
  {upgrade,downgrade,version,v,dbversion,dv,history,h,show,s,revision,init}
    upgrade             Upgrade to a later version
    downgrade           Revert to a previous version
    version (v)         Show the head revision in the migrations script directory
    dbversion (dv)      Show the current revision for Galaxy's database
    history (h)         List revision scripts in chronological order
    show (s)            Show the revision(s) denoted by the given symbol
    revision            Create a new revision file
    init                Initialize empty database(s)

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -c CONFIG, --galaxy-config CONFIG
                        Alternate Galaxy configuration file
  --raiseerr            Raise a full stack trace on error

Subcommands

upgrade

This command is identical to the upgrade command in the manage_db.sh script.

Upgrade to a later version. The revision argument is optional.

usage: db_dev.sh upgrade [-h] [--sql] [revision]

positional arguments:
  revision    Revision identifier or release tag

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit
  --sql       Don't emit SQL to database - dump to standard output/file instead.

Omitting the revision argument is equivalent to specifying heads as the revision identifier; in that case, the database(s) will be upgraded to the latest revisions in both branches, gxy and tsi.

If you are upgrading a database that has not been version-controlled by Alembic, you should run this command for the first time without the revision argument: ./db_dev.sh upgrade - this will ensure proper initialization of the migration system for your database(s).

If you are upgrading to a specific release, you may use a release tag as the revision argument:

./manage_db.sh upgrade release_22.05
./manage_db.sh upgrade 22.05

You can upgrade to releases 22.05 and up.

For the --sql option, see Alembic documentation on offline mode.

downgrade

This command is identical to the upgrade command in the manage_db.sh script.

Revert to a previous version.

usage: db_dev.sh downgrade [-h] [--sql] revision

positional arguments:
  revision    Revision identifier or release tag

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit
  --sql       Don't emit SQL to database - dump to standard output/file instead.

Specifying base as the revision identifier will downgrade both branches, gxy and tsi, to their initial state prior to any revisions; the alembic_version table will be empty.

If you are downgrading to a specific release, you may use a release tag as the revision argument:

./manage_db.sh downgrade release_22.01
./manage_db.sh downgrade 22.01

The oldest release you can downgrade to is 22.01. Downgrading to 22.01 is the same as specifying base as the revision identifier.

Note that when you downgrade to 22.01, your database should be under version control by SQLAlchemy Migrate (the migrations tool used prior to release 22.05). Your database should have a table migrate_version that contains version 180.

For the --sql option, see Alembic documentation on offline mode. Note that in this mode, instead of specifying a revision identifier, you have to specify a range of revisions using the following format: <from-rev>:<to-ref>*.

*You cannot use this script to downgrade past the initial Alembic revisions that created the gxy and tsi branches.

version

This command is identical to the upgrade command in the manage_db.sh script.

Show the latest (i.e., head) revisions in the codebase.

Activating virtualenv at .venv
\usage: db_dev.sh version [-h] [-v]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help     show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose  Display more detailed output

The output of this command will include the head revisions for both branches:

$ .db_dev.sh version
186d4835587b (gxy) (head)
d4a650f47a3c (tsi) (head)
dbversion

This command is identical to the upgrade command in the manage_db.sh script.

Show the current revision for Galaxy’s database.

usage: db_dev.sh dbversion [-h] [-v]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help     show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose  Display more detailed output

If the database revision corresponds to the head revision in the codebase, it will be marked as (head). The output will be slightly more verbose and will vary depending on the database.

$ ./db_dev.sh dbversion
INFO:alembic.runtime.migration:Context impl PostgresqlImpl.
INFO:alembic.runtime.migration:Will assume transactional DDL.
d4a650f47a3c (head)
6a67bf27e6a6
history

List revision scripts in chronological order.

usage: db_dev.sh history [-h] [-v] [-i]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose         Display more detailed output
  -i, --indicate-current
                        Indicate current revision

Depending on your setup, the list may include revision histories for both branches. The oldest revisions are the ones that created the gxy and tsi branches (introduced in 22.05). The --indicate-current option is particularly useful when you need to determine how far behind (or ahead) your database version is compared to the version expected by your codebase:

$ ./db_dev.sh history --indicate-current
6a67bf27e6a6 -> 186d4835587b (gxy) (head), drop job_state_history.update_time column
b182f655505f -> 6a67bf27e6a6 (gxy) (current), deferred data tables
e7b6dcb09efd -> b182f655505f (gxy), add workflow.source_metadata column
<base> -> e7b6dcb09efd (gxy), create gxy branch
<base> -> d4a650f47a3c (tsi) (head), create tsi branch
show

Show the revision(s) denoted by the given revision identifier.

usage: db_dev.sh show [-h] revision

positional arguments:
  revision    Revision identifier

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit
revision

Create a new revision file.

usage: db_dev.sh revision [-h] -m MESSAGE [--rev-id REV_ID]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -m MESSAGE, --message MESSAGE
                        Message string to use with 'revision'
  --rev-id REV_ID       Specify a revision id instead of generating one
                        (This option is for testing purposes only)

The --message argument is required: this ensures a readable revision history. The message is appended to the new revision identifier to form the filename for the new revision script, so it should be a succinct description of the change:

$ ./db_dev.sh revision --message "add column foo to table bar"
[output omitted]

$ ls lib/galaxy/model/migrations/alembic/versions_gxy/
a2e418ad6a15_add_column_foo_to_table_bar.py
init

Initialize an empty database (or create a new SQLite database) for both branches, gxy and tsi.

usage: db_dev.sh init [-h]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit

run_alembic.sh

If you need to run operations on the tsi branch, or you need access to the full scope of command line options provided by Alembic, you should use the run_alembic.sh script, which is a thin wrapper around Alembic’s CLI runner. The script modifies the path, initializes the Python virtual environment, retrieves any necessary configuration values, and invokes the Alembic CLI runner with appropriate arguments.

Keep in mind that since Galaxy uses branch labels to distinguish between the galaxy and the install models, in most cases, you’ll need to identify the target branch to which your command should be applied.

Examples of usage

Remember to first backup your database(s).

Upgrading

Upgrade to the head revision (both, gxy and tsi branches):

./run_alembic.sh upgrade heads

Upgrade to the head revision (gxy branch):

./run_alembic.sh upgrade gxy@head

Upgrade to 1 revision above the current (tsi branch):

./run_alembic.sh upgrade tsi@+1

Upgrade to a specific revision:

./run_alembic.sh upgrade [revision identifier]

Upgrade to 1 revision above a specific revision:

./run_alembic.sh upgrade [revision identifier]+1

Downgrading

Downgrade to base revision (gxy branch):

./run_alembic.sh downgrade gxy@base

Downgrade to 1 revision below current (tsi branch):

./run_alembic.sh downgrade tsi@-1

Downgrade to a specific revision:

./run_alembic.sh downgrade [revision identifier]

Downgrade to 1 revision below specific revision:

./run_alembic.sh downgrade [revision identifier]-1

Creating new revisions

To create a revision for the galaxy model:

./run_alembic.sh revision --head=gxy@head --message "your description"

To create a revision for the install model:

./run_alembic.sh revision --head=tsi@head --message "your description"

Check Alembic’s documentation for more examples.

Note: the run_alembic.sh script does not support relative upgrades and downgrades without a revision identifier: you cannot upgrade +1 or downgrade -1 without providing a revision identifier.

Upgrading from SQLAlchemy Migrate

Galaxy no longer supports SQLAlchemy Migrate. To upgrade to Alembic, follow these steps:

  1. Backup your database(s).

  2. Make sure your codebase is in pre-22.05 state: you will need to use the old manage_db.sh script which invokes the SQLAlchemy Migrate tool, which is not available in 22.05 and up. Checking out the 22.01 release branch is the simplest step.

  3. Verify that your database is at the latest SQLAlchemy Migrate version. If you have a combined database, it should be version 180 (check the migrate_version table). If you have separate galaxy model and install model databases, your galaxy version should be 180, and your install model version should be 17.

    If your database is not current, run manage_db.sh upgrade to upgrade your database.

    Once your database has the latest SQLAlchemy Migrate version, switch back to your current branch (22.05 or more recent).

  4. Run manage_db.sh upgrade.

Developing Galaxy: creating new revisions

Make sure you have updated the model and have added appropriate tests before creating a new revision.

You create a new revision file by running the revision subcommand of the manage_db.sh or the run_alembic.sh script (see sections above for usage information). Alembic generates a revision script in the appropriate version directory (migrations/alembic/versions_gxy for gxy and migrations/alembic/versions_tsi for tsi). You’ll need to fill out the upgrade and downgrade functions. Use Alembic documentation for examples:

We encourage you to use Galaxy-specific utility functions (galaxy/model/migrations/util.py) when appropriate. Don’t forget to provide tests for any modifications you make to the model (most likely, you will need to add them to the appropriate test/unit/data/model/mapping/test_*model_mapping.py module.

After that, run the upgrade script: ./manage_db.sh upgrade. And you’re done!

Troubleshooting

How to handle migrations.IncorrectVersionError

If you see this error, you’ll need to upgrade or downgrade your database before upgrading to Alembic. Whether you need to upgrade or downgrade depends on what version number is stored in the migrate_version table in your database. Alembic expects version 180, so you will need to upgrade if your version is less than that or, in very rare circumstances, downgrade if your version is 181. Please see this issue for more details.

Please help us improve this page:

If you encounter any migration-related errors or issues, please open an issue, and we will add the solution with any relevant context to this page.