with one click
add-migration
Add new database migration for the bbgo trading bot framework
Install with Codex or Claude Copy this prompt, paste it into Codex, Claude, or another assistant, and let it review the skill page and install it for you.
Menu
Add new database migration for the bbgo trading bot framework
Install with Codex or Claude Copy this prompt, paste it into Codex, Claude, or another assistant, and let it review the skill page and install it for you.
Based on SOC occupation classification
Apply pending database migrations (rockhopper up)
Compile SQL migration files into Go source code for embedding in binaries
Create new SQL migration files for multiple database dialects (sqlite, mysql, etc.)
Show the current migration status for all configured databases
Rollback the last applied database migration (rockhopper down)
| name | add-migration |
| description | Add new database migration for the bbgo trading bot framework |
| user-invocable | true |
Create a new database migration for the bbgo project covering both MySQL and SQLite3.
You will be given a [migration_name] from the user. If not provided, ask the user for it.
Before writing the migration SQL, ask the user what the migration should do (e.g., "Add a new table for storing user preferences" or "Alter the orders table to add a new column for order source").
Run both commands from the repository root (/Users/dboy/Work/bbgo):
rockhopper --config ./rockhopper_sqlite.yaml create --type sql [migration_name]
rockhopper --config ./rockhopper_mysql.yaml create --type sql [migration_name]
This creates timestamped .sql files under migrations/mysql/ and migrations/sqlite3/.
Each migration file uses this format:
-- +up
-- +begin
<UP migration SQL here>
-- +end
-- +down
-- +begin
<DOWN migration SQL here>
-- +end
Write the MySQL migration first, then translate it to SQLite3-compatible SQL.
Key differences when translating MySQL → SQLite3:
gid column is presented: BIGINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT → INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENTVARCHAR(N) → TEXTDECIMAL(M, N) → REALKEY or named index definitions inline in CREATE TABLE; use separate CREATE INDEX statements if neededUNIQUE KEY inline; use CREATE UNIQUE INDEX instead or a UNIQUE constraintDATETIME(3) works in both but SQLite ignores the precisionALTER TABLE ... ADD KEY/INDEX; use CREATE INDEX separatelyALTER TABLE support (no DROP COLUMN before 3.35, no MODIFY COLUMN)Ask the user what the migration should do if not obvious from the name, then write the SQL for both files.
rockhopper --config ./rockhopper_sqlite.yaml compile --output ./pkg/migrations/sqlite3
rockhopper --config ./rockhopper_mysql.yaml compile --output ./pkg/migrations/mysql
This generates Go files in pkg/migrations/mysql/ and pkg/migrations/sqlite3/.
Run a build to ensure the generated Go code compiles:
go build ./pkg/migrations/...
If the user has a local database configured, test the migration:
rockhopper --config ./rockhopper_mysql.yaml up
rockhopper --config ./rockhopper_sqlite.yaml up
Only do this if the user explicitly requests it or has a local database available, since it requires a running database connection.
rockhopper create-- +up and -- +down sectionsDROP TABLE IF EXISTS for a CREATE TABLE)ALTER TABLE migrations, the down should reverse the alteration.sql files in migrations/ and the generated .go files in pkg/migrations/