Blog post

Supabase CLI v1 and Management API Beta

2022-08-15

5 minute read

Supabase CLI v1 and Management API Beta

Today we are moving the Supabase CLI v1 out of beta. The Supabase CLI is capable of managing database migrations and generating TypeScript types. Follow these install instructions to get started.

In addition, we are releasing a Management API (in beta). The Management API is a REST API that allows you to manage organizations, projects, Edge Functions, and more. You can read the API docs or interact with the Management API from the Supabase CLI v1.

(Note: The Management API was previously called the Admin API.)

Watch the CLI team announcing the new features.

Manage organizations, projects, Edge Functions, and more

If you've used Supabase Edge Functions, you've used the Supabase CLI. We're extending it to let you manage organizations and projects.


_10
supabase login
_10
supabase orgs list
_10
supabase projects create my-project --org-id cool-green-pqdr0qc --db-password ******** --region us-east-1

Once your new Supabase project is created, use the CLI to link it locally to begin development.


_10
supabase link --project-ref <project-id>

View the Supabase CLI docs for the full list of available commands.

Schema migrations

You asked for more database migration support, and we listened. We've made improvements to manually-written migrations and auto generated schema diffs.

Schema diff-ing

Previously we supported schema diff-ing using PgAdmin. We found that the tool did not account for default privileges when generating role grants. This leads to verbose statements when diff-ing complex schema changes.

To improve the usability of db diff command, we are introducing another tool, migra, via the --use-migra experimental flag. We found that migra runs faster and produces more concise DDL statements. While the generated scripts are not perfect, we hope this tool helps you iterate quicker on your migration scripts. Over time (and with your feedback) we hope to improve schema-diffing to cover all edge-cases.


_10
$ supabase db diff --use-migra --file file_name
_10
# Creates a DDL script: supabase/migrations/<datetime_string>_file_name.sql

Running the above command diffs the public schema of your local development database against a fresh shadow database. You may specify other schema by passing in the --schema flag multiple times or as a comma separate list. More details in our migration guide.

In the long-term we hope to consolidate on a single diff-ing tool which is perfect, but diff-ing is hard so we would need your help and feedback to improve tooling.

Manual migrations

You can test manual migrations locally without data loss using local branching. Run the following commands to clone your local database to a new branch.


_10
supabase db branch new my_branch
_10
supabase db branch switch my_branch

Now you can run any DDL statements from Studio UI's SQL Editor. To undo the changes, simply switch back and delete the new branch.


_10
supabase db branch switch main
_10
supabase db branch delete my_branch

CI / CD

Automating migrations and tests on your CI / CD pipeline gives developers more confidence that each PR contains a working migration script. CLI v1 focuses on both local and GitHub Actions support for the following workflows.

Test all migrations on a fresh local database:


_10
supabase init
_10
supabase start

Release schema changes to staging and production:


_10
$ supabase link --project-ref $PROJECT_ID
_10
$ supabase db push

We created an example project showing how to set up GitHub Actions to test and migrate with Supabase CLI v1.

Type generation

You can now generate TypeScript types using the CLI:


_10
# in a project set up with the CLI:
_10
supabase gen types typescript --local
_10
supabase gen types typescript --db-url $SUPABASE_DB_URL

Of course, the types aren't very useful on its own, you need some way to consume it. For that, stay tuned for tomorrow! 😉

Management API

The CLI is the first consumer of our new Management API. Over the next few weeks, we'll be adding the endpoints needed to programmatically manage your Supabase projects and organizations. This is ideal for CI/CD workflows and spinning up test environments.

Here's an example of deploying a new project from the command line (generate your access token from the Supabase Dashboard).


_10
curl 'https://api.supabase.com/v1/projects' \
_10
-H 'Authorization: Bearer <[your-access-token](https://supabase.com/dashboard/account/tokens)>' \
_10
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
_10
-d '{"name": "my-project", "organization_id": "cool-green-pqdr0qc", "region": "us-east-1", "plan": "free", "db_pass": "********"}'

The response JSON will match the example below:


_10
{
_10
"id": "abcdefghijklmnopqrst",
_10
"organization_id": "cool-green-pqdr0qc",
_10
"name": "hello",
_10
"region": "us-east-1",
_10
"created_at": "2022-08-12T17:37:11.88819Z"
_10
}

Check out the API docs to browse all the functionality added so far.

The new API also opens the door to a whole new suite of integrations, including Zapier, Terraform, Pulumi etc. We're looking forward to seeing how the dev community interacts with these new public endpoints. Try it out and let us know which functionality you'd like to see next.

More Launch Week 5

Share this article

Last post

supabase-js v2

16 August 2022

Next post

Supabase Series B

12 August 2022

Related articles

Offline-first React Native Apps with Expo, WatermelonDB, and Supabase

Supabase Beta September 2023

Dynamic Table Partitioning in Postgres

Supabase Beta August 2023

pgvector v0.5.0: Faster semantic search with HNSW indexes

Build in a weekend, scale to millions