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Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase

Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase

By : David Lorenz
4.5 (11)
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Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase

Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase

4.5 (11)
By: David Lorenz

Overview of this book

Discover the powerful capabilities of Supabase, the cutting-edge, open-source platform flipping the script on backend architecture. Guided by David Lorenz, a battle-tested software architect with over two decades of development experience, this book will transform the way you approach your projects and make you a Supabase expert. In this comprehensive guide, you'll build a secure, production-grade multi-tenant ticket system, seamlessly integrated with Next.js. You’ll build essential skills for effective data manipulation, authentication, and file storage, as well as master Supabase's advanced capabilities including automating tasks with cron scheduling, performing similarity searches with artificial intelligence, testing your database, and leveraging real-time updates. By the end of the book, you'll have a deeper understanding of the platform and be able to confidently utilize Supabase in your own web applications, all thanks to David's excellent expertise.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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1
Part 1:Creating the Foundations of the Ticket System App
5
Part 2: Adding Multi-Tenancy and Learning RLS
10
Part 3: Managing Tickets and Interactions
15
Part 4: Diving Deeper into Security and Advanced Features

Understanding migrations

You’ve already used migrations with supabase db diff and stored database data in seed.sql with supabase db dump. In fact, throughout this book, with every new chapter, I created an iteratively growing schema with supabase db diff. Whenever I changed something in the structure of the database, for example, when I added functions in the rls_helpers schema (or even the schema itself), I ran the following:

npx supabase db diff --local \
--schema rls_helpers
-f added_XYZ_in_rls_helpers

If you work like this when you develop your Supabase projects, you’ve already got iterative migration files.

Note

I wouldn’t have to explicitly use --schema rls_helpers, but when I know which schema changed, I usually only pinpoint to that specific schema. It makes the process of creating the migration slightly more efficient.

Now, when I want to push only new changes to a production database (so not doing a full reset but only adding the new/changed...

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