Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: schemachange
Version: 2.9.1
Summary: A Database Change Management tool for Snowflake
Home-page: https://github.com/Snowflake-Labs/schemachange
Author: jamesweakley/jeremiahhansen
License: UNKNOWN
Description: # schemachange
        <img src="images/schemachange-logo-title.png" alt="schemachange" title="schemachange logo" width="600" />
        
        *Looking for snowchange? You've found the right spot. snowchange has been renamed to schemachange.*
        
        ## Overview
        
        schemachange is a simple python based tool to manage all of your [Snowflake](https://www.snowflake.com/) objects. It follows an Imperative-style approach to Database Change Management (DCM) and was inspired by the [Flyway database migration tool](https://flywaydb.org). When combined with a version control system and a CI/CD tool, database changes can be approved and deployed through a pipeline using modern software delivery practices. As such schemachange plays a critical role in enabling Database (or Data) DevOps.
        
        DCM tools (also known as Database Migration, Schema Change Management, or Schema Migration tools) follow one of two approaches: Declarative or Imperative. For a background on Database DevOps, including a discussion on the differences between the Declarative and Imperative approaches, please read the [Embracing Agile Software Delivery and DevOps with Snowflake](https://www.snowflake.com/blog/embracing-agile-software-delivery-and-devops-with-snowflake/) blog post.
        
        For the complete list of changes made to schemachange check out the [CHANGELOG](CHANGELOG.md).
        
        **Please note** that schemachange is a community-developed tool, not an official Snowflake offering. It comes with no support or warranty.
        
        ## Table of Contents
        
        1. [Overview](#overview)
        1. [Project Structure](#project-structure)
           1. [Folder Structure](#folder-structure)
        1. [Change Scripts](#change-scripts)
           1. [Versioned Script Naming](#versioned-script-naming)
           1. [Repeatable Script Naming](#repeatable-script-naming)
           1. [Script Requirements](#script-requirements)
           1. [Using Variables in Scripts](#using-variables-in-scripts)
        1. [Change History Table](#change-history-table)
        1. [Running schemachange](#running-schemachange)
           1. [Prerequisites](#prerequisites)
           1. [Running The Script](#running-the-script)
           1. [Authentication](#authentication)
              1. [Password Authentication](#password-authentication)
              1. [Private Key Authentication](#private-key-authentication)
           1. [Script Parameters](#script-parameters)
        1. [Getting Started with schemachange](#getting-started-with-schemachange)
        1. [Integrating With DevOps](#integrating-with-devops)
           1. [Sample DevOps Process Flow](#sample-devops-process-flow)
           1. [Using in a CI/CD Pipeline](#using-in-a-cicd-pipeline)
        1. [Maintainers](#maintainers)
        1. [Legal](#legal)
        
        
        
        ## Project Structure
        
        ### Folder Structure
        
        schemachange expects a directory structure like the following to exist:
        ```
        (project_root)
        |
        |-- folder_1
            |-- V1.1.1__first_change.sql
            |-- V1.1.2__second_change.sql
            |-- R__sp_add_sales.sql
            |-- R__fn_get_timezone.sql
        |-- folder_2
            |-- folder_3
                |-- V1.1.3__third_change.sql
                |-- R__fn_sort_ascii.sql
        ```
        
        The schemachange folder structure is very flexible. The `project_root` folder is specified with the `-f` or `--root-folder` argument. Under the `project_root` folder you are free to arrange the change scripts any way you see fit. You can have as many subfolders (and nested subfolders) as you would like.
        
        ## Change Scripts
        
        ### Versioned Script Naming
        
        Versioned change scripts follow a similar naming convention to that used by [Flyway Versioned Migrations](https://flywaydb.org/documentation/migrations#versioned-migrations). The script name must follow this pattern (image taken from [Flyway docs](https://flywaydb.org/documentation/migrations#versioned-migrations)):
        
        <img src="images/flyway-naming-convention.png" alt="Flyway naming conventions" title="Flyway naming conventions" width="300" />
        
        With the following rules for each part of the filename:
        
        * **Prefix**: The letter 'V' for versioned change
        * **Version**: A unique version number with dots or underscores separating as many number parts as you like
        * **Separator**: __ (two underscores)
        * **Description**: An arbitrary description with words separated by underscores or spaces (can not include two underscores)
        * **Suffix**: .sql
        
        For example, a script name that follows this convention is: `V1.1.1__first_change.sql`. As with Flyway, the unique version string is very flexible. You just need to be consistent and always use the same convention, like 3 sets of numbers separated by periods. Here are a few valid version strings:
        
        * 1
        * 5.2
        * 5_2
        * 1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9
        * 205_68
        * 20200115113556
        * 2020.1.15.11.35.56
        
        Every script within a database folder must have a unique version number. schemachange will check for duplicate version numbers and throw an error if it finds any. This helps to ensure that developers who are working in parallel don't accidently (re-)use the same version number.
        
        ### Repeatable Script Naming
        
        Repeatable change scripts follow a similar naming convention to that used by [Flyway Versioned Migrations](https://flywaydb.org/documentation/concepts/migrations.html#repeatable-migrations). The script name must follow this pattern (image taken from [Flyway docs](https://flywaydb.org/documentation/concepts/migrations.html#repeatable-migrations):
        
        <img src="images/flyway-repeatable-naming-convention.png" alt="Flyway naming conventions" title="Flyway naming conventions" width="300" />
        
        e.g: 
        
        * R__sp_add_sales.sql
        * R__fn_get_timezone.sql
        * R__fn_sort_ascii.sql
        
        All repeatable change scripts are applied each time the utility is run, irrespective of the most recent change in the database.
        Repeatable scripts could be used for maintaining code that always needs to be applied in its entirety. e.g. stores procedures, functions and view definitions etc.
        
        Just like Flyway, within a single migration run, repeatable scripts are always applied last, after all pending versioned scripts have been executed. Repeatable scripts are applied in the order of their description.
        
        ### Script Requirements
        
        schemachange is designed to be very lightweight and not impose to many limitations. Each change script can have any number of SQL statements within it and must supply the necessary context, like database and schema names. The context can be supplied by using an explicit `USE <DATABASE>` command or by naming all objects with a three-part name (`<database name>.<schema name>.<object name>`). schemachange will simply run the contents of each script against the target Snowflake account, in the correct order.
        
        ### Using Variables in Scripts
        
        schemachange supports a light weight variable replacement strategy. One important use of variables is to support multiple environments (dev, test, prod) in a single Snowflake account by dynamically changing the database name during deployment.
        
        To use a variable in a change script, use this syntax anywhere in the script: `{{ variable1 }}`. So the pattern is two left curly braces, followed by a space, followed by the variable name, followed by a space, and finally followed by two right curly braces. And the spaces are important. The format for including variables in change scripts mimics [Jinja expressions](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/#expressions). Please note that at this point schemachange hasn't been integrated with Jinja, but by using the same syntax for variables and expressions a future migration will be seamless.
        
        To pass variables to schemachange, use the `--vars` command line parameter like this: `--vars '{"variable1": "value", "variable2": "value2"}'`. This parameter accepts a flat JSON object formatted as a string. Nested objects and arrays don't make sense at this point and aren't supported.
        
        schemachange will replace any variable placeholders before running your change script code and will throw an error if it finds any variable placeholders that haven't been replaced.
        
        
        ## Change History Table
        
        schemachange records all applied changes scripts to the change history table. By default schemachange will attempt to log all activities to the `METADATA.SCHEMACHANGE.CHANGE_HISTORY` table. The name and location of the change history table can be overriden by using the `-c` (or `--change-history-table`) parameter. The value passed to the parameter can have a one, two, or three part name (e.g. "TABLE_NAME", or "SCHEMA_NAME.TABLE_NAME", or "DATABASE_NAME.SCHEMA_NAME.TABLE_NAME"). This can be used to support multiple environments (dev, test, prod) or multiple subject areas within the same Snowflake account. By default schemachange will not try to create the change history table, and will fail if the table does not exist.
        
        Additionally, if the `--create-change-history-table` parameter is given, then schemachange will attempt to create the schema and table associated with the change history table. schemachange will not attempt to create the database for the change history table, so that must be created ahead of time, even when using the `--create-change-history-table` parameter.
        
        The structure of the `CHANGE_HISTORY` table is as follows:
        
        Column Name | Type |  Example
        --- | --- | ---
        VERSION | VARCHAR | 1.1.1
        DESCRIPTION | VARCHAR | First change
        SCRIPT | VARCHAR | V1.1.1__first_change.sql
        SCRIPT_TYPE | VARCHAR | V
        CHECKSUM | VARCHAR | 38e5ba03b1a6d2...
        EXECUTION_TIME | NUMBER | 4
        STATUS | VARCHAR | Success
        INSTALLED_BY | VARCHAR | SNOWFLAKE_USER
        INSTALLED_ON | TIMESTAMP_LTZ | 2020-03-17 12:54:33.056 -0700
        
        A new row will be added to this table every time a change script has been applied to the database. schemachange will use this table to identify which changes have been applied to the database and will not apply the same version more than once.
        
        Here is the current schema DDL for the change history table (found in the [schemachange/cli.py](schemachange/cli.py) script), in case you choose to create it manually and not use the `--create-change-history-table` parameter:
        
        ```sql
        CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS SCHEMACHANGE.CHANGE_HISTORY
        (
            VERSION VARCHAR
           ,DESCRIPTION VARCHAR
           ,SCRIPT VARCHAR
           ,SCRIPT_TYPE VARCHAR
           ,CHECKSUM VARCHAR
           ,EXECUTION_TIME NUMBER
           ,STATUS VARCHAR
           ,INSTALLED_BY VARCHAR
           ,INSTALLED_ON TIMESTAMP_LTZ
        )
        ```
        
        ## Running schemachange
        
        ### Prerequisites
        
        In order to run schemachange you must have the following:
        
        * You will need to have a recent version of python 3 installed
        * You will need to have the latest [Snowflake Python driver installed](https://docs.snowflake.com/en/user-guide/python-connector-install.html)
        * You will need to create the change history table used by schemachange in Snowflake (see [Change History Table](#change-history-table) above for more details)
            * First, you will need to create a database to store your change history table (schemachange will not help you with this)
            * Second, you will need to create the change history schema and table. You can do this manually (see [Change History Table](#change-history-table) above for the DDL) or have schemachange create them by running it with the `--create-change-history-table` parameter (just make sure the Snowflake user you're running schemachange with has privileges to create a schema and table in that database)
        * You will need to create (or choose) a user account that has privileges to apply the changes in your change script
            * Don't forget that this user also needs the SELECT and INSERT privileges on the change history table
        
        ### Running the Script
        
        schemachange is a single python script located at [schemachange/cli.py](schemachange/cli.py). It can be executed as follows:
        
        ```
        python schemachange/cli.py [-h] [-f ROOT_FOLDER] -a SNOWFLAKE_ACCOUNT -u SNOWFLAKE_USER -r SNOWFLAKE_ROLE -w SNOWFLAKE_WAREHOUSE [-d SNOWFLAKE_DATABASE] [-c CHANGE_HISTORY_TABLE] [--vars VARS] [--create-change-history-table] [-ac] [-v]
        ```
        
        Or if installed via `pip`, it can be executed as follows:
        
        ```
        schemachange [-h] [-f ROOT_FOLDER] -a SNOWFLAKE_ACCOUNT -u SNOWFLAKE_USER -r SNOWFLAKE_ROLE -w SNOWFLAKE_WAREHOUSE [-d SNOWFLAKE_DATABASE] [-c CHANGE_HISTORY_TABLE] [--vars VARS] [--create-change-history-table] [-ac] [-v]
        ```
        
        ### Authentication
        schemachange supports both [password authentication](https://docs.snowflake.com/en/user-guide/python-connector-example.html#connecting-using-the-default-authenticator) and [private key authentication](https://docs.snowflake.com/en/user-guide/python-connector-example.html#using-key-pair-authentication). 
        
        In the event both authentication criteria are provided, schemachange will prioritize password authentication.
        
        #### Password Authentication
        The Snowflake user password for `SNOWFLAKE_USER` is required to be set in the environment variable `SNOWFLAKE_PASSWORD` prior to calling the script. schemachange will fail if the `SNOWFLAKE_PASSWORD` environment variable is not set.
        
        _**DEPRECATION NOTICE**: The `SNOWSQL_PWD` environment variable is deprecated but currently still supported. Support for it will be removed in a later version of schemachange. Please use `SNOWFLAKE_PASSWORD` instead._
        
        #### Private Key Authentication
        The Snowflake user encrypted private key for `SNOWFLAKE_USER` is required to be in a file with the file path set in the environment variable `SNOWFLAKE_PRIVATE_KEY_PATH`. Additionally, the password for the encrypted private key file is required to be set in the environment variable `SNOWFLAKE_PRIVATE_KEY_PASSPHRASE`. These two environment variables must be set prior to calling the script. schemachange will fail if the `SNOWFLAKE_PRIVATE_KEY_PATH` and `SNOWFLAKE_PRIVATE_KEY_PASSPHRASE` environment variables are not set.
        
        ### Script Parameters
        
        Here is the list of supported parameters to the script:
        
        Parameter | Description
        --- | ---
        -h, --help | Show the help message and exit
        -f ROOT_FOLDER, --root-folder ROOT_FOLDER| *(Optional)* The root folder for the database change scripts. The default is the current directory.
        -a SNOWFLAKE_ACCOUNT, --snowflake-account SNOWFLAKE_ACCOUNT | The name of the snowflake account (e.g. xy12345.east-us-2.azure). See [Usage Notes for the account Parameter (for the connect Method)](https://docs.snowflake.com/en/user-guide/python-connector-api.html#label-account-format-info) for more details on how to structure the account name.
        -u SNOWFLAKE_USER, --snowflake-user SNOWFLAKE_USER | The name of the snowflake user
        -r SNOWFLAKE_ROLE, --snowflake-role SNOWFLAKE_ROLE | The name of the role to use
        -w SNOWFLAKE_WAREHOUSE, --snowflake-warehouse SNOWFLAKE_WAREHOUSE | The name of the default warehouse to use. Can be overridden in the change scripts.
        -d SNOWFLAKE_DATABASE, --snowflake-database SNOWFLAKE_DATABASE | The name of the default database to use. Can be overridden in the change scripts.
        -c CHANGE_HISTORY_TABLE, --change-history-table CHANGE_HISTORY_TABLE | *(Optional)* Used to override the default name of the change history table (which is METADATA.SCHEMACHANGE.CHANGE_HISTORY)
        --vars VARS | *(Optional)* Define values for the variables to replaced in change scripts, given in JSON format (e.g. '{"variable1": "value1", "variable2": "value2"}')
        --create-change-history-table | *(Optional)* Create the change history table if it does not exist. The default is 'False'.
        -ac, --autocommit | *(Optional)* Enable autocommit feature for DML commands. The default is 'False'.
        -v, --verbose | *(Optional)* Display verbose debugging details during execution. The default is 'False'.
        --dry-run | *(Optional)* Run schemachange in dry run mode. the default is 'False'.
        
        ## Getting Started with schemachange
        
        The [demo](demo) folder in this project repository contains a schemachange demo project for you to try out. This demo is based on the standard Snowflake Citibike demo which can be found in [the Snowflake Hands-on Lab](https://docs.snowflake.net/manuals/other-resources.html#hands-on-lab). It contains the following database change scripts:
        
        Change Script | Description
        --- | ---
        v1.1__initial_database_objects.sql | Create the initial Citibike demo objects including file formats, stages, and tables.
        v1.2__load_tables_from_s3.sql | Load the Citibike and weather data from the Snowlake lab S3 bucket.
        
        The [Citibike data](https://www.citibikenyc.com/system-data) for this demo comes from the NYC Citi Bike bike share program.
        
        To get started with schemachange and these demo Citibike scripts follow these steps:
        1. Make sure you've completed the [Prerequisites](#prerequisites) steps above
        1. Get a copy of this schemachange repository (either via a clone or download)
        1. Open a shell and change directory to your copy of the schemachange repository
        1. Run schemachange (see [Running the Script](#running-the-script) above) with your Snowflake account details and the `demo/citibike` folder as the root folder (make sure you use the full path)
        
        ## Integrating With DevOps
        
        ### Sample DevOps Process Flow
        
        Here is a sample DevOps development lifecycle with schemachange:
        
        <img src="images/diagram.png" alt="schemachange DevOps process" title="schemachange DevOps process" />
        
        ### Using in a CI/CD Pipeline
        
        If your build agent has a recent version of python 3 installed, the script can be ran like so:
        ```
        pip install schemachange --upgrade
        schemachange [-h] [-f ROOT_FOLDER] -a SNOWFLAKE_ACCOUNT -u SNOWFLAKE_USER -r SNOWFLAKE_ROLE -w SNOWFLAKE_WAREHOUSE [-d SNOWFLAKE_DATABASE] [-c CHANGE_HISTORY_TABLE] [--vars VARS] [--create-change-history-table] [-ac] [-v]
        ```
        
        Or if you prefer docker, set the environment variables and run like so:
        ```
        docker run -it --rm \
          --name schemachange-script \
          -v "$PWD":/usr/src/schemachange \
          -w /usr/src/schemachange \
          -e ROOT_FOLDER \
          -e SNOWFLAKE_ACCOUNT \
          -e SNOWFLAKE_USER \
          -e SNOWFLAKE_ROLE \
          -e SNOWFLAKE_WAREHOUSE \
          -e SNOWFLAKE_PASSWORD \
          python:3 /bin/bash -c "pip install schemachange --upgrade && schemachange -f $ROOT_FOLDER -a $SNOWFLAKE_ACCOUNT -u $SNOWFLAKE_USER -r $SNOWFLAKE_ROLE -w $SNOWFLAKE_WAREHOUSE"
        ```
        
        Either way, don't forget to set the `SNOWFLAKE_PASSWORD` environment variable if using password authentication!
        
        ## Maintainers
        
        - James Weakley (@jamesweakley)
        - Jeremiah Hansen (@jeremiahhansen)
        
        This is a community-developed tool, not an official Snowflake offering. It comes with no support or warranty. However, feel free to raise a github issue if you find a bug or would like a new feature.
        
        ## Legal
        
        Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this tool except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at: [http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0](http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
        
        Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Requires-Python: >=3.7
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
