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gchapim

Ecto Migrator

by gchapim · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install ecto-migrator
Description
Generate Ecto migrations from natural language or schema descriptions. Handles tables, columns, indexes, constraints, references, enums, and partitioning. Supports reversible migrations, data migrations, and multi-tenant patterns. Use when creating or modifying database schemas, adding indexes, altering tables, creating enums, or performing data migrations in an Elixir project.
README (SKILL.md)

Ecto Migrator

Generating Migrations

From Natural Language

Parse the user's description and generate a migration file. Common patterns:

User Says Migration Action
"Create users table with email and name" create table(:users) with columns
"Add phone to users" alter table(:users), add :phone
"Make email unique on users" create unique_index(:users, [:email])
"Add tenant_id to all tables" Multiple alter table with index
"Rename status to state on orders" rename table(:orders), :status, to: :state
"Remove the legacy_id column from users" alter table(:users), remove :legacy_id
"Add a check constraint on orders amount > 0" create constraint(:orders, ...)

File Naming

mix ecto.gen.migration \x3Cname>
# Generates: priv/repo/migrations/YYYYMMDDHHMMSS_\x3Cname>.exs

Name conventions: create_\x3Ctable>, add_\x3Ccolumn>_to_\x3Ctable>, create_\x3Ctable>_\x3Ccolumn>_index, alter_\x3Ctable>_add_\x3Ccolumns>.

Migration Template

defmodule MyApp.Repo.Migrations.CreateUsers do
  use Ecto.Migration

  def change do
    create table(:users, primary_key: false) do
      add :id, :binary_id, primary_key: true
      add :email, :string, null: false
      add :name, :string, null: false
      add :role, :string, null: false, default: "member"
      add :metadata, :map, default: %{}
      add :tenant_id, :binary_id, null: false

      add :team_id, references(:teams, type: :binary_id, on_delete: :delete_all)

      timestamps(type: :utc_datetime_usec)
    end

    create unique_index(:users, [:tenant_id, :email])
    create index(:users, [:tenant_id])
    create index(:users, [:team_id])
  end
end

Column Types

See references/column-types.md for complete type mapping and guidance.

Key decisions:

  • IDs: Use :binary_id (UUID) — set primary_key: false on table, add :id manually.
  • Money: Use :integer (cents) or :decimal — never :float.
  • Timestamps: Always timestamps(type: :utc_datetime_usec).
  • Enums: Use :string with app-level Ecto.Enum — avoid Postgres enums (hard to migrate).
  • JSON: Use :map (maps to jsonb).
  • Arrays: Use {:array, :string} etc.

Index Strategies

See references/index-patterns.md for detailed index guidance.

When to Add Indexes

Always index:

  • Foreign keys (_id columns)
  • tenant_id (first column in composite indexes)
  • Columns used in WHERE clauses
  • Columns used in ORDER BY
  • Unique constraints

Index Types

# Standard B-tree
create index(:users, [:tenant_id])

# Unique
create unique_index(:users, [:tenant_id, :email])

# Partial (conditional)
create index(:orders, [:status], where: "status != 'completed'", name: :orders_active_status_idx)

# GIN for JSONB
create index(:events, [:metadata], using: :gin)

# GIN for array columns
create index(:posts, [:tags], using: :gin)

# Composite
create index(:orders, [:tenant_id, :status, :inserted_at])

# Concurrent (no table lock — use in separate migration)
@disable_ddl_transaction true
@disable_migration_lock true

def change do
  create index(:users, [:email], concurrently: true)
end

Constraints

# Check constraint
create constraint(:orders, :amount_must_be_positive, check: "amount > 0")

# Exclusion constraint (requires btree_gist extension)
execute "CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS btree_gist", ""
create constraint(:reservations, :no_overlapping_bookings,
  exclude: ~s|gist (room_id WITH =, tstzrange(starts_at, ends_at) WITH &&)|
)

# Unique constraint (same as unique_index for most purposes)
create unique_index(:accounts, [:slug])

References (Foreign Keys)

add :user_id, references(:users, type: :binary_id, on_delete: :delete_all), null: false
add :team_id, references(:teams, type: :binary_id, on_delete: :nilify_all)
add :parent_id, references(:categories, type: :binary_id, on_delete: :nothing)
on_delete Use When
:delete_all Child can't exist without parent (memberships, line items)
:nilify_all Child should survive parent deletion (optional association)
:nothing Handle in application code (default)
:restrict Prevent parent deletion if children exist

Multi-Tenant Patterns

Every Table Gets tenant_id

def change do
  create table(:items, primary_key: false) do
    add :id, :binary_id, primary_key: true
    add :name, :string, null: false
    add :tenant_id, :binary_id, null: false
    timestamps(type: :utc_datetime_usec)
  end

  # Always composite index with tenant_id first
  create index(:items, [:tenant_id])
  create unique_index(:items, [:tenant_id, :name])
end

Adding tenant_id to Existing Tables

def change do
  alter table(:items) do
    add :tenant_id, :binary_id
  end

  # Backfill in a separate data migration, then:
  # alter table(:items) do
  #   modify :tenant_id, :binary_id, null: false
  # end
end

Data Migrations

Rule: Never mix schema changes and data changes in the same migration.

Safe Data Migration Pattern

defmodule MyApp.Repo.Migrations.BackfillUserRoles do
  use Ecto.Migration

  # Don't use schema modules — they may change after this migration runs
  def up do
    execute """
    UPDATE users SET role = 'member' WHERE role IS NULL
    """
  end

  def down do
    # Data migrations may not be reversible
    :ok
  end
end

Batched Data Migration (large tables)

def up do
  execute """
  UPDATE users SET role = 'member'
  WHERE id IN (
    SELECT id FROM users WHERE role IS NULL LIMIT 10000
  )
  """

  # For very large tables, use a Task or Oban job instead
end

Reversible vs Irreversible

Reversible (use change)

These are auto-reversible:

  • create tabledrop table
  • add columnremove column
  • create indexdrop index
  • renamerename

Irreversible (use up/down)

Must define both directions:

  • modify column type — Ecto can't infer the old type
  • execute raw SQL
  • Data backfills
  • Dropping columns with data
def up do
  alter table(:users) do
    modify :email, :citext, from: :string  # from: helps reversibility
  end
end

def down do
  alter table(:users) do
    modify :email, :string, from: :citext
  end
end

Using modify with from:

Phoenix 1.7+ supports from: for reversible modify:

def change do
  alter table(:users) do
    modify :email, :citext, null: false, from: {:string, null: true}
  end
end

PostgreSQL Extensions

def change do
  execute "CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS citext", "DROP EXTENSION IF EXISTS citext"
  execute "CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS pgcrypto", "DROP EXTENSION IF EXISTS pgcrypto"
  execute "CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS pg_trgm", "DROP EXTENSION IF EXISTS pg_trgm"
end

Enum Types (PostgreSQL native — use sparingly)

Prefer Ecto.Enum with :string columns. If you must use Postgres enums:

def up do
  execute "CREATE TYPE order_status AS ENUM ('pending', 'confirmed', 'shipped', 'delivered')"

  alter table(:orders) do
    add :status, :order_status, null: false, default: "pending"
  end
end

def down do
  alter table(:orders) do
    remove :status
  end

  execute "DROP TYPE order_status"
end

Warning: Adding values to Postgres enums requires ALTER TYPE ... ADD VALUE which cannot run inside a transaction. Prefer :string + Ecto.Enum.

Checklist

  • Primary key: primary_key: false + add :id, :binary_id, primary_key: true
  • null: false on required columns
  • timestamps(type: :utc_datetime_usec)
  • Foreign keys with appropriate on_delete
  • Index on every foreign key column
  • tenant_id indexed (composite with lookup fields)
  • Unique constraints where needed
  • Concurrent indexes in separate migration with @disable_ddl_transaction true
  • Data migrations in separate files from schema migrations
Usage Guidance
This skill is coherent and appears safe as an authoring helper, but remember: generated migrations change your database schema. Always review generated migration code before running it, run migrations in a development/staging environment first, take backups, and ensure patterns (primary key type, tenant_id decisions, concurrent index flags, data-migration strategies) match your application's conventions. Because the skill is instruction-only, installing it does not add code to your system, but do not apply generated SQL/migrations without standard code review and testing.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: ecto-migrator Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle is designed to generate Ecto database migrations based on natural language or schema descriptions. The `SKILL.md` and associated reference files provide extensive documentation and examples for constructing various types of migrations (tables, columns, indexes, constraints, data migrations, etc.). While the generated migrations can include powerful operations like raw SQL execution (`execute`), the files themselves do not contain any instructions for the OpenClaw agent to perform malicious actions, exfiltrate data, establish persistence, or engage in prompt injection against itself. All content is aligned with the stated purpose of generating database migration files.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description (Ecto migrations) match the content of SKILL.md and the provided references. The skill does not request unrelated binaries, credentials, or config paths — everything is appropriate for a migration-generation helper.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md contains templates, patterns, and concrete migration snippets (indexes, constraints, multi-tenant patterns, data-migration guidance). It does not instruct the agent to read arbitrary local files, access environment variables, or send data to external endpoints. It also does not instruct the agent to execute migrations against a database (only shows mix/execute examples), so runtime scope is limited to generating code/text.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files that run on the host. As an instruction-only skill, it does not download or write executables to disk — lowest-risk install profile.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, credentials, or config paths. That is proportionate: generating migration text does not require secrets or external service access.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill does not request persistent presence or modify other skills. Autonomous invocation is allowed (platform default) but the skill's content does not raise additional privilege concerns.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install ecto-migrator
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /ecto-migrator
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release of ecto-migrator. - Generate Ecto migrations from natural language or schema descriptions. - Supports creation and modification of tables, columns, indexes, constraints, references, enums, and partitioning. - Handles reversible migrations, data migrations, and multi-tenant schema patterns. - Provides naming conventions, migration templates, index and constraint strategies, and PostgreSQL extension guidance. - Includes best practices for data migrations and enum types in Elixir projects.
Metadata
Slug ecto-migrator
Version 1.0.0
License
All-time Installs 2
Active Installs 2
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Ecto Migrator?

Generate Ecto migrations from natural language or schema descriptions. Handles tables, columns, indexes, constraints, references, enums, and partitioning. Supports reversible migrations, data migrations, and multi-tenant patterns. Use when creating or modifying database schemas, adding indexes, altering tables, creating enums, or performing data migrations in an Elixir project. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 1750 downloads so far.

How do I install Ecto Migrator?

Run "/install ecto-migrator" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Ecto Migrator free?

Yes, Ecto Migrator is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Ecto Migrator support?

Ecto Migrator is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Ecto Migrator?

It is built and maintained by gchapim (@gchapim); the current version is v1.0.0.

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