portable-devtools / pgsql /pgAdmin 4 /python /Lib /site-packages /alembic-1.13.1.dist-info /METADATA
| Metadata-Version: 2.1 | |
| Name: alembic | |
| Version: 1.13.1 | |
| Summary: A database migration tool for SQLAlchemy. | |
| Home-page: https://alembic.sqlalchemy.org | |
| Author: Mike Bayer | |
| Author-email: mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com | |
| License: MIT | |
| Project-URL: Documentation, https://alembic.sqlalchemy.org/en/latest/ | |
| Project-URL: Changelog, https://alembic.sqlalchemy.org/en/latest/changelog.html | |
| Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/sqlalchemy/alembic/ | |
| Project-URL: Issue Tracker, https://github.com/sqlalchemy/alembic/issues/ | |
| Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable | |
| Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers | |
| Classifier: Environment :: Console | |
| Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License | |
| Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8 | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9 | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10 | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11 | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12 | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython | |
| Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy | |
| Classifier: Topic :: Database :: Front-Ends | |
| Requires-Python: >=3.8 | |
| Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst | |
| License-File: LICENSE | |
| Requires-Dist: SQLAlchemy >=1.3.0 | |
| Requires-Dist: Mako | |
| Requires-Dist: typing-extensions >=4 | |
| Requires-Dist: importlib-metadata ; python_version < "3.9" | |
| Requires-Dist: importlib-resources ; python_version < "3.9" | |
| Provides-Extra: tz | |
| Requires-Dist: backports.zoneinfo ; (python_version < "3.9") and extra == 'tz' | |
| Alembic is a database migrations tool written by the author | |
| of `SQLAlchemy <http://www.sqlalchemy.org>`_. A migrations tool | |
| offers the following functionality: | |
| * Can emit ALTER statements to a database in order to change | |
| the structure of tables and other constructs | |
| * Provides a system whereby "migration scripts" may be constructed; | |
| each script indicates a particular series of steps that can "upgrade" a | |
| target database to a new version, and optionally a series of steps that can | |
| "downgrade" similarly, doing the same steps in reverse. | |
| * Allows the scripts to execute in some sequential manner. | |
| The goals of Alembic are: | |
| * Very open ended and transparent configuration and operation. A new | |
| Alembic environment is generated from a set of templates which is selected | |
| among a set of options when setup first occurs. The templates then deposit a | |
| series of scripts that define fully how database connectivity is established | |
| and how migration scripts are invoked; the migration scripts themselves are | |
| generated from a template within that series of scripts. The scripts can | |
| then be further customized to define exactly how databases will be | |
| interacted with and what structure new migration files should take. | |
| * Full support for transactional DDL. The default scripts ensure that all | |
| migrations occur within a transaction - for those databases which support | |
| this (Postgresql, Microsoft SQL Server), migrations can be tested with no | |
| need to manually undo changes upon failure. | |
| * Minimalist script construction. Basic operations like renaming | |
| tables/columns, adding/removing columns, changing column attributes can be | |
| performed through one line commands like alter_column(), rename_table(), | |
| add_constraint(). There is no need to recreate full SQLAlchemy Table | |
| structures for simple operations like these - the functions themselves | |
| generate minimalist schema structures behind the scenes to achieve the given | |
| DDL sequence. | |
| * "auto generation" of migrations. While real world migrations are far more | |
| complex than what can be automatically determined, Alembic can still | |
| eliminate the initial grunt work in generating new migration directives | |
| from an altered schema. The ``--autogenerate`` feature will inspect the | |
| current status of a database using SQLAlchemy's schema inspection | |
| capabilities, compare it to the current state of the database model as | |
| specified in Python, and generate a series of "candidate" migrations, | |
| rendering them into a new migration script as Python directives. The | |
| developer then edits the new file, adding additional directives and data | |
| migrations as needed, to produce a finished migration. Table and column | |
| level changes can be detected, with constraints and indexes to follow as | |
| well. | |
| * Full support for migrations generated as SQL scripts. Those of us who | |
| work in corporate environments know that direct access to DDL commands on a | |
| production database is a rare privilege, and DBAs want textual SQL scripts. | |
| Alembic's usage model and commands are oriented towards being able to run a | |
| series of migrations into a textual output file as easily as it runs them | |
| directly to a database. Care must be taken in this mode to not invoke other | |
| operations that rely upon in-memory SELECTs of rows - Alembic tries to | |
| provide helper constructs like bulk_insert() to help with data-oriented | |
| operations that are compatible with script-based DDL. | |
| * Non-linear, dependency-graph versioning. Scripts are given UUID | |
| identifiers similarly to a DVCS, and the linkage of one script to the next | |
| is achieved via human-editable markers within the scripts themselves. | |
| The structure of a set of migration files is considered as a | |
| directed-acyclic graph, meaning any migration file can be dependent | |
| on any other arbitrary set of migration files, or none at | |
| all. Through this open-ended system, migration files can be organized | |
| into branches, multiple roots, and mergepoints, without restriction. | |
| Commands are provided to produce new branches, roots, and merges of | |
| branches automatically. | |
| * Provide a library of ALTER constructs that can be used by any SQLAlchemy | |
| application. The DDL constructs build upon SQLAlchemy's own DDLElement base | |
| and can be used standalone by any application or script. | |
| * At long last, bring SQLite and its inability to ALTER things into the fold, | |
| but in such a way that SQLite's very special workflow needs are accommodated | |
| in an explicit way that makes the most of a bad situation, through the | |
| concept of a "batch" migration, where multiple changes to a table can | |
| be batched together to form a series of instructions for a single, subsequent | |
| "move-and-copy" workflow. You can even use "move-and-copy" workflow for | |
| other databases, if you want to recreate a table in the background | |
| on a busy system. | |
| Documentation and status of Alembic is at https://alembic.sqlalchemy.org/ | |
| The SQLAlchemy Project | |
| ====================== | |
| Alembic is part of the `SQLAlchemy Project <https://www.sqlalchemy.org>`_ and | |
| adheres to the same standards and conventions as the core project. | |
| Development / Bug reporting / Pull requests | |
| ___________________________________________ | |
| Please refer to the | |
| `SQLAlchemy Community Guide <https://www.sqlalchemy.org/develop.html>`_ for | |
| guidelines on coding and participating in this project. | |
| Code of Conduct | |
| _______________ | |
| Above all, SQLAlchemy places great emphasis on polite, thoughtful, and | |
| constructive communication between users and developers. | |
| Please see our current Code of Conduct at | |
| `Code of Conduct <https://www.sqlalchemy.org/codeofconduct.html>`_. | |
| License | |
| ======= | |
| Alembic is distributed under the `MIT license | |
| <https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>`_. | |