0

I want to create a schema that reflects the following relationships, and I'm trying to do this in MySQL Workbench. (I'm no DB expert)

  • I have 3 environments - sandbox, staging, and production
  • I release a product version in each environment, e.g., sb-1.0.0 for sandbox, st-1.0.0 for staging, and pr-1.0.0 for production. I can have multiple releases per environment, but there can only be ONE version that's currently released in each environment.
  • Each product version in each environment contains a set of services, same set of services in all the environments, but differing in their version numbers. So sb-1.0.0 = [svc1-2.0.0, svc2-2.0.0], st-1.0.0 = [svc1-1.0.0, svc2-2.0.0], and pr-1.0.0 = [svc1-1.0.0, svc2-1.0.0]. As you can see, I have the same 2 services in all environments, but the service versions can be different (or the same) in each environment.

I want to accomplish multiple things.

  • I want to be able to create new releases in each environment, with each release containing the set of services and corresponding versions. So I want to be able to create a pr-2.0.0 = [svc1-2.0.0, svc2-1.0.0] version.
  • I want to be able to query my DB for version pr-1.0.0 and know all the services and their respective versions in this particular release.
  • I want to have the notion of a "current version" and a "desired version" for each service in each environment.
  • I want to be be able to then run a script (Kubernetes?) to release each service and their respective version based on the query.
  • I want to be able to extend it to more environments, e.g., add a UAT environment.

So how do I model my DB?

2 Answers 2

1

Have you thought about what happen with stale/old data??

  • Each new version creates a ton of new entries.
  • Management becomes a nightmare
  • the DB becomes a SPOF(single point of failure).

Better Solution: Service discovery

The better solution would be to use a Service discovery System and annote each Service with their version and the environment as a Metadata tag. This keeps the System more manageble.

More Help

IMHO, sticking Linux Code into a Docker Image and run multiple copies of it, is the best way of getting a immutable infrastructure up and running.

3
  • Thanks for the suggestion, I'll look into that. Anything to simplify our release/versioning system will be good.
    – Chris F
    Commented Jan 28, 2021 at 17:54
  • I mean, how is the linux kernel packaged? In linux, a kernel version has a set of packages (and their versions) it needs correct? I guess I'm after something like that, or even like Gem for Ruby, or brew on a Mac.
    – Chris F
    Commented Jan 28, 2021 at 18:11
  • Kernel and User package are two different things. You could use Docker images.
    – Max N
    Commented Jan 30, 2021 at 17:42
0

I want to credit Max N for making me think about another solution.

In fact I already have the solution, right in front of me. We're a Gradle shop, and our build.gradle files contains our dependencies. So when I release a version, I know exactly what services+versions I need for this version. Since we have branches corresponding to our environments, I the services I need in each environment. So when I just need to

  • I need to Git tag every time we do a build, including the tools that did the build
  • When deploying, I then need to deploy above tag, which includes code + tools

Thanks again Max N.

1
  • I'm here to help!
    – Max N
    Commented Jan 30, 2021 at 17:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.