If your project has more than a single developer, we suggest running sqlc
as
part of your CI/CD pipeline. The three subcommands you'll want to run are diff
, vet
and upload
sqlc diff
ensures that your generated code is up to date. New developers to a
project may forget to run sqlc generate
after adding a query or updating a
schema. They also might edit generated code. sqlc diff
will catch both errors
by comparing the expected output from sqlc generate
to what's on disk.
% sqlc diff
--- a/postgresql/query.sql.go
+++ b/postgresql/query.sql.go
@@ -55,7 +55,7 @@
const listAuthors = `-- name: ListAuthors :many
SELECT id, name, bio FROM authors
-ORDER BY name
+ORDER BY bio
`
sqlc vet
runs a set of lint rules against your SQL queries. These rules are
helpful in catching anti-patterns before they make it into production. Please
see the vet documentation for a complete guide to adding lint rules
for your project.
sqlc upload
pushes your database schema and queries to sqlc Cloud. Once
uploaded, we ensure that future releases of sqlc do not break your code. Learn
more about uploading projects here
Install sqlc
using the suggested instructions.
Create two steps in your pipeline, one for sqlc diff
and one for sqlc vet
. Run sqlc upload
after merge on your main
branch.
We provide the setup-sqlc
GitHub Action to install sqlc
. The action uses the built-in
tool-cache
to speed up the installation process.
The following GitHub Workflow configuration runs sqlc diff
on every push.
name: sqlc
on: [push]
jobs:
diff:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: sqlc-dev/setup-sqlc@v3
with:
sqlc-version: '1.23.0'
- run: sqlc diff
The following GitHub Workflow configuration runs sqlc vet on every push.
You can use sqlc vet
without a database connection, but you'll need one if your
sqlc
configuration references the built-in sqlc/db-prepare
lint rule.
name: sqlc
on: [push]
jobs:
vet:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
services:
postgres:
image: "postgres:15"
env:
POSTGRES_DB: postgres
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
POSTGRES_USER: postgres
ports:
- 5432:5432
# needed because the postgres container does not provide a healthcheck
options: --health-cmd pg_isready --health-interval 10s --health-timeout 5s --health-retries 5
env:
PG_PORT: ${{ job.services.postgres.ports['5432'] }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: sqlc-dev/setup-sqlc@v3
with:
sqlc-version: '1.23.0'
# Connect and migrate your database here. This is an example which runs
# commands from a `schema.sql` file.
- run: psql -h localhost -U postgres -p $PG_PORT -d postgres -f schema.sql
env:
PGPASSWORD: postgres
- run: sqlc vet
Managed databases are powered by [sqlc Cloud](https://dashboard.sqlc.dev). Sign up for [free](https://dashboard.sqlc.dev) today.
If you're using managed databases, the services
block
in the previous workflow isn't required.
name: sqlc
on: [push]
jobs:
vet:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: sqlc-dev/setup-sqlc@v3
with:
sqlc-version: '1.23.0'
- run: sqlc vet
Project uploads are powered by [sqlc Cloud](https://dashboard.sqlc.dev). Sign up for [free](https://dashboard.sqlc.dev) today.
The following GitHub Workflow configuration runs sqlc upload on
every push to main
. Create an auth token via the
dashboard.
name: sqlc
on: [push]
jobs:
upload:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: ${{ github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: sqlc-dev/setup-sqlc@v3
with:
sqlc-version: '1.23.0'
- run: sqlc upload
env:
SQLC_AUTH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SQLC_AUTH_TOKEN }}