Interface Configuration

    • Method Detail

      • getClassLoader

        java.lang.ClassLoader getClassLoader()
        Retrieves the ClassLoader to use for loading migrations, resolvers, etc. from the classpath.
        Returns:
        The ClassLoader to use for loading migrations, resolvers, etc. from the classpath. (default: Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader() )
      • getUrl

        java.lang.String getUrl()
        Retrieves the url used to construct the dataSource. May be null if the dataSource was passed in directly.
        Returns:
        The url used to construct the dataSource. May be null if the dataSource was passed in directly.
      • getUser

        java.lang.String getUser()
        Retrieves the user used to construct the dataSource. May be null if the dataSource was passed in directly, or if dataSource did not need a user.
        Returns:
        The user used to construct the dataSource. May be null if the dataSource was passed in directly, or if dataSource did not need a user.
      • getPassword

        java.lang.String getPassword()
        Retrieves the password used to construct the dataSource. May be null if the dataSource was passed in directly, or if dataSource did not need a password.
        Returns:
        The password used to construct the dataSource. May be null if the dataSource was passed in directly, or if dataSource did not need a password.
      • getDataSource

        javax.sql.DataSource getDataSource()
        Retrieves the dataSource to use to access the database. Must have the necessary privileges to execute DDL.
        Returns:
        The dataSource to use to access the database. Must have the necessary privileges to execute DDL.
      • getConnectRetries

        int getConnectRetries()
        The maximum number of retries when attempting to connect to the database. After each failed attempt, Flyway will wait 1 second before attempting to connect again, up to the maximum number of times specified by connectRetries. The interval between retries doubles with each subsequent attempt.
        Returns:
        The maximum number of retries when attempting to connect to the database. (default: 0)
      • getConnectRetriesInterval

        int getConnectRetriesInterval()
        The maximum time between retries when attempting to connect to the database in seconds. This will cap the interval between connect retry to the value provided.
        Returns:
        The maximum time between retries in seconds (default: 120)
      • getInitSql

        java.lang.String getInitSql()
        The SQL statements to run to initialize a new database connection immediately after opening it.
        Returns:
        The SQL statements. (default: null)
      • getBaselineVersion

        MigrationVersion getBaselineVersion()
        Retrieves the version to tag an existing schema with when executing baseline.
        Returns:
        The version to tag an existing schema with when executing baseline. (default: 1)
      • getBaselineDescription

        java.lang.String getBaselineDescription()
        Retrieves the description to tag an existing schema with when executing baseline.
        Returns:
        The description to tag an existing schema with when executing baseline. (default: << Flyway Baseline >>)
      • getResolvers

        MigrationResolver[] getResolvers()
        Retrieves the custom MigrationResolvers to be used in addition to the built-in ones for resolving Migrations to apply.
        Returns:
        The custom MigrationResolvers to be used in addition to the built-in ones for resolving Migrations to apply. An empty array if none. (default: none)
      • isSkipDefaultResolvers

        boolean isSkipDefaultResolvers()
        Whether Flyway should skip the default resolvers. If true, only custom resolvers are used.
        Returns:
        Whether default built-in resolvers should be skipped. (default: false)
      • getCallbacks

        Callback[] getCallbacks()
        Gets the callbacks for lifecycle notifications.
        Returns:
        The callbacks for lifecycle notifications. An empty array if none. (default: none)
      • isSkipDefaultCallbacks

        boolean isSkipDefaultCallbacks()
        Whether Flyway should skip the default callbacks. If true, only custom callbacks are used.
        Returns:
        Whether default built-in callbacks should be skipped. (default: false)
      • getSqlMigrationPrefix

        java.lang.String getSqlMigrationPrefix()
        The file name prefix for versioned SQL migrations. Versioned SQL migrations have the following file name structure: prefixVERSIONseparatorDESCRIPTIONsuffix, which using the defaults translates to V1.1__My_description.sql
        Returns:
        The file name prefix for sql migrations. (default: V)
      • getBaselineMigrationPrefix

        java.lang.String getBaselineMigrationPrefix()
        The file name prefix for baseline migrations. Baseline migrations represent all migrations with version <= current baseline migration version while keeping older migrations if needed for upgrading older deployments They have the following file name structure: prefixVERSIONseparatorDESCRIPTIONsuffix, which using the defaults translates to B1.1__My_description.sql Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        The file name prefix for baseline migration. (default: B)
      • getUndoSqlMigrationPrefix

        java.lang.String getUndoSqlMigrationPrefix()
        The file name prefix for undo SQL migrations. Undo SQL migrations are responsible for undoing the effects of the versioned migration with the same version. They have the following file name structure: prefixVERSIONseparatorDESCRIPTIONsuffix, which using the defaults translates to U1.1__My_description.sql Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        The file name prefix for undo sql migrations. (default: U)
      • getRepeatableSqlMigrationPrefix

        java.lang.String getRepeatableSqlMigrationPrefix()
        Retrieves the file name prefix for repeatable SQL migrations. Repeatable SQL migrations have the following file name structure: prefixSeparatorDESCRIPTIONsuffix, which using the defaults translates to R__My_description.sql<
        Returns:
        The file name prefix for repeatable sql migrations. (default: R)
      • getSqlMigrationSeparator

        java.lang.String getSqlMigrationSeparator()
        Retrieves the file name separator for sql migrations. SQL migrations have the following file name structure: prefixVERSIONseparatorDESCRIPTIONsuffix, which using the defaults translates to V1_1__My_description.sql
        Returns:
        The file name separator for sql migrations. (default: __)
      • getSqlMigrationSuffixes

        java.lang.String[] getSqlMigrationSuffixes()
        The file name suffixes for SQL migrations. (default: .sql) SQL migrations have the following file name structure: prefixVERSIONseparatorDESCRIPTIONsuffix, which using the defaults translates to V1_1__My_description.sql Multiple suffixes (like .sql,.pkg,.pkb) can be specified for easier compatibility with other tools such as editors with specific file associations.
        Returns:
        The file name suffixes for SQL migrations.
      • getJavaMigrations

        JavaMigration[] getJavaMigrations()
        The manually added Java-based migrations. These are not Java-based migrations discovered through classpath scanning and instantiated by Flyway. Instead these are manually added instances of JavaMigration. This is particularly useful when working with a dependency injection container, where you may want the DI container to instantiate the class and wire up its dependencies for you.
        Returns:
        The manually added Java-based migrations. An empty array if none. (default: none)
      • isPlaceholderReplacement

        boolean isPlaceholderReplacement()
        Checks whether placeholders should be replaced.
        Returns:
        Whether placeholders should be replaced. (default: true)
      • getPlaceholderSuffix

        java.lang.String getPlaceholderSuffix()
        Retrieves the suffix of every placeholder.
        Returns:
        The suffix of every placeholder. (default: } )
      • getPlaceholderPrefix

        java.lang.String getPlaceholderPrefix()
        Retrieves the prefix of every placeholder.
        Returns:
        The prefix of every placeholder. (default: ${ )
      • getScriptPlaceholderSuffix

        java.lang.String getScriptPlaceholderSuffix()
        Retrieves the suffix of every script placeholder.
        Returns:
        The suffix of every script placeholder. (default: __ )
      • getScriptPlaceholderPrefix

        java.lang.String getScriptPlaceholderPrefix()
        Retrieves the prefix of every script placeholder.
        Returns:
        The prefix of every script placeholder. (default: FP__ )
      • getPlaceholders

        java.util.Map<java.lang.String,​java.lang.String> getPlaceholders()
        Retrieves the map of <placeholder, replacementValue> to apply to sql migration scripts.
        Returns:
        The map of <placeholder, replacementValue> to apply to sql migration scripts.
      • getTarget

        MigrationVersion getTarget()
        Gets the target version up to which Flyway should consider migrations. Migrations with a higher version number will be ignored. Special values:
        • current: Designates the current version of the schema
        • latest: The latest version of the schema, as defined by the migration with the highest version
        • next: The next version of the schema, as defined by the first pending migration
        • <version>? (end with a '?'): Instructs Flyway not to fail if the target version doesn't exist. In this case, Flyway will go up to but not beyond the specified target (default: fail if the target version doesn't exist) Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        The target version up to which Flyway should consider migrations. Defaults to latest
      • isFailOnMissingTarget

        boolean isFailOnMissingTarget()
        Whether to fail if no migration with the configured target version exists (default: true)
      • getCherryPick

        MigrationPattern[] getCherryPick()
        Gets the migrations that Flyway should consider when migrating or undoing. Leave empty to consider all available migrations. Migrations not in this list will be ignored. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        The migrations that Flyway should consider when migrating or undoing.
      • getTable

        java.lang.String getTable()
        Retrieves the name of the schema history table that will be used by Flyway. By default, (single-schema mode) the schema history table is placed in the default schema for the connection provided by the datasource. When the flyway.schemas property is set (multi-schema mode), the schema history table is placed in the first schema of the list, or in the schema specified to flyway.defaultSchema.
        Returns:
        The name of the schema history table that will be used by Flyway. (default: flyway_schema_history)
      • getTablespace

        java.lang.String getTablespace()
        The tablespace where to create the schema history table that will be used by Flyway. If not specified, Flyway uses the default tablespace for the database connection. This setting is only relevant for databases that do support the notion of tablespace. Its value is simply ignored for all others.
        Returns:
        The tablespace where to create the schema history table that will be used by Flyway.
      • getDefaultSchema

        java.lang.String getDefaultSchema()
        The default schema managed by Flyway. This schema name is case-sensitive. If not specified, but schemas is, Flyway uses the first schema in that list. If that is also not specified, Flyway uses the default schema for the database connection.

        Consequences:

        • This schema will be the one containing the schema history table.
        • This schema will be the default for the database connection (provided the database supports this concept).
        Returns:
        The default schema managed by Flyway, which is where the schema history table will reside. (default: The first schema specified in getSchemas(), and failing that the default schema for the database connection)
      • getSchemas

        java.lang.String[] getSchemas()
        The schemas managed by Flyway. These schema names are case-sensitive. If not specified, Flyway uses the default schema for the database connection. If defaultSchema is not specified, then the first of this list also acts as the default schema.

        Consequences:

        • Flyway will automatically attempt to create all these schemas, unless they already exist.
        • The schemas will be cleaned in the order of this list.
        • If Flyway created them, the schemas themselves will be dropped when cleaning.
        Returns:
        The schemas managed by Flyway. (default: The default schema for the database connection)
      • getEncoding

        java.nio.charset.Charset getEncoding()
        Retrieves the encoding of Sql migrations.
        Returns:
        The encoding of Sql migrations. (default: UTF-8)
      • isDetectEncoding

        boolean isDetectEncoding()
        Whether Flyway should try to automatically detect SQL migration file encoding
        Returns:
        true to enable auto detection, false otherwise Flyway Teams only
      • getLocations

        Location[] getLocations()
        Retrieves the locations to scan recursively for migrations. The location type is determined by its prefix. Unprefixed locations or locations starting with classpath: point to a package on the classpath and may contain both SQL and Java-based migrations. Locations starting with filesystem: point to a directory on the filesystem, may only contain SQL migrations and are only scanned recursively down non-hidden directories.
        Returns:
        Locations to scan recursively for migrations. (default: classpath:db/migration)
      • isBaselineOnMigrate

        boolean isBaselineOnMigrate()
        Whether to automatically call baseline when migrate is executed against a non-empty schema with no schema history table. This schema will then be initialized with the baselineVersion before executing the migrations. Only migrations above baselineVersion will then be applied. This is useful for initial Flyway production deployments on projects with an existing DB. Be careful when enabling this as it removes the safety net that ensures Flyway does not migrate the wrong database in case of a configuration mistake!
        Returns:
        true if baseline should be called on migrate for non-empty schemas, false if not. (default: false)
      • isSkipExecutingMigrations

        boolean isSkipExecutingMigrations()
        Whether Flyway should skip actually executing the contents of the migrations and only update the schema history table. This should be used when you have applied a migration manually (via executing the sql yourself, or via an ide), and just want the schema history table to reflect this. Use in conjunction with cherryPick to skip specific migrations instead of all pending ones. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        true if executing the migrations should be skipped on migrate, false if not. (default: false)
      • isOutOfOrder

        boolean isOutOfOrder()
        Allows migrations to be run "out of order". If you already have versions 1 and 3 applied, and now a version 2 is found, it will be applied too instead of being ignored.
        Returns:
        true if outOfOrder migrations should be applied, false if not. (default: false)
      • isIgnoreMissingMigrations

        @Deprecated
        boolean isIgnoreMissingMigrations()
        Deprecated.
        Will remove in Flyway V9. Use getIgnoreMigrationPatterns instead. Ignore missing migrations when reading the schema history table. These are migrations that were performed by an older deployment of the application that are no longer available in this version. For example: we have migrations available on the classpath with versions 1.0 and 3.0. The schema history table indicates that a migration with version 2.0 (unknown to us) has also been applied. Instead of bombing out (fail fast) with an exception, a warning is logged and Flyway continues normally. This is useful for situations where one must be able to deploy a newer version of the application even though it doesn't contain migrations included with an older one anymore. Note that if the most recently applied migration is removed, Flyway has no way to know it is missing and will mark it as future instead.
        Returns:
        true to continue normally and log a warning, false to fail fast with an exception. (default: false)
      • isIgnoreIgnoredMigrations

        @Deprecated
        boolean isIgnoreIgnoredMigrations()
        Deprecated.
        Will remove in Flyway V9. Use getIgnoreMigrationPatterns instead. Ignore ignored migrations when reading the schema history table. These are migrations that were added in between already migrated migrations in this version. For example: we have migrations available on the classpath with versions from 1.0 to 3.0. The schema history table indicates that version 1 was finished on 1.0.15, and the next one was 2.0.0. But with the next release a new migration was added to version 1: 1.0.16. Such scenario is ignored by migrate command, but by default is rejected by validate. When ignoreIgnoredMigrations is enabled, such case will not be reported by validate command. This is useful for situations where one must be able to deliver complete set of migrations in a delivery package for multiple versions of the product, and allows for further development of older versions.
        Returns:
        true to continue normally, false to fail fast with an exception. (default: false)
      • isIgnorePendingMigrations

        @Deprecated
        boolean isIgnorePendingMigrations()
        Deprecated.
        Will remove in Flyway V9. Use getIgnoreMigrationPatterns instead. Ignore pending migrations when reading the schema history table. These are migrations that are available but have not yet been applied. This can be useful for verifying that in-development migration changes don't contain any validation-breaking changes of migrations that have already been applied to a production environment, e.g. as part of a CI/CD process, without failing because of the existence of new migration versions.
        Returns:
        true to continue normally, false to fail fast with an exception. (default: false)
      • isIgnoreFutureMigrations

        @Deprecated
        boolean isIgnoreFutureMigrations()
        Deprecated.
        Will remove in Flyway V9. Use getIgnoreMigrationPatterns instead. Ignore future migrations when reading the schema history table. These are migrations that were performed by a newer deployment of the application that are not yet available in this version. For example: we have migrations available on the classpath up to version 3.0. The schema history table indicates that a migration to version 4.0 (unknown to us) has already been applied. Instead of bombing out (fail fast) with an exception, a warning is logged and Flyway continues normally. This is useful for situations where one must be able to redeploy an older version of the application after the database has been migrated by a newer one.
        Returns:
        true to continue normally and log a warning, false to fail fast with an exception. (default: true)
      • getIgnoreMigrationPatterns

        ValidatePattern[] getIgnoreMigrationPatterns()
        Ignore migrations that match this comma-separated list of patterns when validating migrations. Each pattern is of the form : See https://flywaydb.org/documentation/configuration/parameters/ignoreMigrationPatterns for full details Example: repeatable:missing,versioned:pending,*:failed Flyway Teams only
      • isValidateMigrationNaming

        boolean isValidateMigrationNaming()
        Whether to validate migrations and callbacks whose scripts do not obey the correct naming convention. A failure can be useful to check that errors such as case sensitivity in migration prefixes have been corrected.
        Returns:
        false to continue normally, true to fail fast with an exception. (default: false)
      • isValidateOnMigrate

        boolean isValidateOnMigrate()
        Whether to automatically call validate or not when running migrate.
        Returns:
        true if validate should be called. false if not. (default: true)
      • isCleanOnValidationError

        boolean isCleanOnValidationError()
        Whether to automatically call clean or not when a validation error occurs. This is exclusively intended as a convenience for development. even though we strongly recommend not to change migration scripts once they have been checked into SCM and run, this provides a way of dealing with this case in a smooth manner. The database will be wiped clean automatically, ensuring that the next migration will bring you back to the state checked into SCM. Warning! Do not enable in production!
        Returns:
        true if clean should be called. false if not. (default: false)
      • isCleanDisabled

        boolean isCleanDisabled()
        Whether to disable clean. This is especially useful for production environments where running clean can be quite a career limiting move.
        Returns:
        true to disable clean. false to leave it enabled. (default: false)
      • isMixed

        boolean isMixed()
        Whether to allow mixing transactional and non-transactional statements within the same migration. Enabling this automatically causes the entire affected migration to be run without a transaction. Note that this is only applicable for PostgreSQL, Aurora PostgreSQL, SQL Server and SQLite which all have statements that do not run at all within a transaction. This is not to be confused with implicit transaction, as they occur in MySQL or Oracle, where even though a DDL statement was run within a transaction, the database will issue an implicit commit before and after its execution.
        Returns:
        true if mixed migrations should be allowed. false if an error should be thrown instead. (default: false)
      • isGroup

        boolean isGroup()
        Whether to group all pending migrations together in the same transaction when applying them (only recommended for databases with support for DDL transactions).
        Returns:
        true if migrations should be grouped. false if they should be applied individually instead. (default: false)
      • getInstalledBy

        java.lang.String getInstalledBy()
        The username that will be recorded in the schema history table as having applied the migration.
        Returns:
        The username or null for the current database user of the connection. (default: null).
      • getErrorOverrides

        java.lang.String[] getErrorOverrides()
        Rules for the built-in error handler that let you override specific SQL states and errors codes in order to force specific errors or warnings to be treated as debug messages, info messages, warnings or errors.

        Each error override has the following format: STATE:12345:W. It is a 5 character SQL state (or * to match all SQL states), a colon, the SQL error code (or * to match all SQL error codes), a colon and finally the desired behavior that should override the initial one.

        The following behaviors are accepted:

        • D to force a debug message
        • D- to force a debug message, but do not show the original sql state and error code
        • I to force an info message
        • I- to force an info message, but do not show the original sql state and error code
        • W to force a warning
        • W- to force a warning, but do not show the original sql state and error code
        • E to force an error
        • E- to force an error, but do not show the original sql state and error code

        Example 1: to force Oracle stored procedure compilation issues to produce errors instead of warnings, the following errorOverride can be used: 99999:17110:E

        Example 2: to force SQL Server PRINT messages to be displayed as info messages (without SQL state and error code details) instead of warnings, the following errorOverride can be used: S0001:0:I-

        Example 3: to force all errors with SQL error code 123 to be treated as warnings instead, the following errorOverride can be used: *:123:W

        Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        The ErrorOverrides or an empty array if none are defined. (default: none)
      • getDryRunOutput

        java.io.OutputStream getDryRunOutput()
        The stream where to output the SQL statements of a migration dry run. null if the SQL statements are executed against the database directly. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        The stream or null if the SQL statements are executed against the database directly.
      • isStream

        boolean isStream()
        Whether to stream SQL migrations when executing them. Streaming doesn't load the entire migration in memory at once. Instead each statement is loaded individually. This is particularly useful for very large SQL migrations composed of multiple MB or even GB of reference data, as this dramatically reduces Flyway's memory consumption. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        true to stream SQL migrations. false to fully loaded them in memory instead. (default: false)
      • isBatch

        boolean isBatch()
        Whether to batch SQL statements when executing them. Batching can save up to 99 percent of network roundtrips by sending up to 100 statements at once over the network to the database, instead of sending each statement individually. This is particularly useful for very large SQL migrations composed of multiple MB or even GB of reference data, as this can dramatically reduce the network overhead. This is supported for INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, MERGE and UPSERT statements. All other statements are automatically executed without batching. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        true to batch SQL statements. false to execute them individually instead. (default: false)
      • isOracleSqlplus

        boolean isOracleSqlplus()
        Whether to Flyway's support for Oracle SQL*Plus commands should be activated. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        true to active SQL*Plus support. false to fail fast instead. (default: false)
      • isOracleSqlplusWarn

        boolean isOracleSqlplusWarn()
        Whether Flyway should issue a warning instead of an error whenever it encounters an Oracle SQL*Plus statement it doesn't yet support. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        true to issue a warning. false to fail fast instead. (default: false)
      • getKerberosConfigFile

        java.lang.String getKerberosConfigFile()
        The path to the Kerberos config file. Flyway Teams only
      • getOracleKerberosConfigFile

        java.lang.String getOracleKerberosConfigFile()
      • getOracleKerberosCacheFile

        java.lang.String getOracleKerberosCacheFile()
      • getLicenseKey

        java.lang.String getLicenseKey()
        Your Flyway license key (FL01...). Not yet a Flyway Teams Edition customer? Request your Flyway trial license key to try out Flyway Teams Edition features free for 30 days. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        Your Flyway license key.
      • isOutputQueryResults

        boolean isOutputQueryResults()
        Whether Flyway should output a table with the results of queries when executing migrations. Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        true to output the results table (default: true)
      • getResourceProvider

        ResourceProvider getResourceProvider()
        Retrieves the custom ResourceProvider to be used to look up resources. If not set, the default strategy will be used.
        Returns:
        The custom ResourceProvider to be used to look up resources (default: null)
      • getJavaMigrationClassProvider

        ClassProvider<JavaMigration> getJavaMigrationClassProvider()
        Retrieves the custom ClassProvider to be used to look up JavaMigration classes. If not set, the default strategy will be used.
        Returns:
        The custom ClassProvider to be used to look up JavaMigration classes (default: null)
      • isCreateSchemas

        boolean isCreateSchemas()
        Whether Flyway should attempt to create the schemas specified in the schemas property.
        Returns:
      • getLockRetryCount

        int getLockRetryCount()
        The maximum number of retries when trying to obtain a lock. -1 indicates attempting to repeat indefinitely.
      • getJdbcProperties

        java.util.Map<java.lang.String,​java.lang.String> getJdbcProperties()
        Properties to pass to the JDBC driver object Flyway Teams only
        Returns:
        Properties that will be passed to the JDBC driver object
      • isFailOnMissingLocations

        boolean isFailOnMissingLocations()
        Whether to fail if a location specified in the flyway.locations option doesn't exist
        Returns:
      • getOracleWalletLocation

        java.lang.String getOracleWalletLocation()
        The location of your Oracle wallet, used to automatically sign in to your databases. Flyway Teams only
      • getLoggers

        java.lang.String[] getLoggers()
        The loggers Flyway should use. Valid options are:
        • auto: Auto detect the logger (default behavior)
        • console: Use stdout/stderr (only available when using the CLI)
        • slf4j2: Use the slf4j2 logger
        • log4j2: Use the log4j2 logger
        • apache-commons: Use the Apache Commons logger
        Alternatively you can provide the fully qualified class name for any other logger to use that.