Drizzle Migration Conflict
Use this skill to help a user diagnose, repair, and prevent Drizzle Kit migration conflicts in a multi-developer repository. Drizzle migrations encode both SQL and migration snapshots, so the safe answer depends on the current migration directory shape, the Drizzle Kit version, and the git state.
When to Use This Skill
- Use when Drizzle migration files,
_journal.json, orsnapshot.jsonconflict after a pull, merge, rebase, or PR update. - Use when
drizzle-kit checkreports non-commutative migrations or migration folder conflicts. - Use when a team wants a safe repair flow for generated Drizzle migrations after schema changes converge.
- Use when designing CI or merge-queue policy to prevent repeated Drizzle migration conflicts.
Safety rules
- Start in read-only diagnosis mode unless the user explicitly asks to fix files.
- Do not run
drizzle-kit migrate,drizzle-kit push, database seed scripts, or any command that connects to a live database unless the user explicitly requests it and the target is clear. - Treat
drizzle-kit check, project typechecks, and tests as command execution that may load project config, environment variables, or scripts. Inspect scripts/config first, and require an explicit non-production or disposable target before any DB-backed validation. - Do not delete migration files, rewrite
_journal.json, or rungit checkout --ours,git checkout --theirs,git restore, orrmunless the user has confirmed the exact side and files to change. - Do not recommend
drizzle-kit pushas the production solution for migration conflicts; it skips the auditable migration history that teams need. - Treat
--ignore-conflictsas an exception for a known false positive, not as the normal fix. - Preserve schema source code changes unless the user explicitly asks to discard them. Conflict repair normally discards generated migrations and regenerates them from the merged schema.
- If
oursandtheirscould mean different branches depending on merge direction, ask the user to identify the parent branch before suggesting checkout commands.
Required references
- Read
references/sources.mdwhen the answer depends on current Drizzle behavior, official guidance, or one of the preserved external links. - Read
references/conflict-resolution.mdbefore recommending a repair flow. - Read
references/ci-policy.mdbefore proposing CI, merge queue, or team workflow changes. - Read
references/report-template.mdbefore writing a diagnostic report.
Source references
The full list of official docs, Drizzle GitHub discussions, community scripts, and merge-queue
references lives in references/sources.md with trust levels and caveats. Read that file whenever
the answer depends on current Drizzle behavior. Re-verify the official docs and the most relevant
discussion when the project's drizzle-kit major version changes, since migration internals
(snapshot format, journal shape, drizzle-kit check semantics) have shifted between releases.
Mode selection
Classify the task first:
- Diagnose - The user has a conflict or failed
drizzle-kit checkand wants to understand it. - Repair - The user explicitly asks to fix or regenerate migration files.
- CI hardening - The user wants to prevent future conflicts in PRs or merge queues.
- Explain - The user wants a conceptual answer or a team playbook.
When the mode is not explicit, choose Diagnose.
Each mode unlocks a specific set of actions. Do not cross these boundaries without an explicit upgrade:
- Diagnose - read-only only. Run
git status,git ls-files -u, the helper script, and file inspection. Do not rundrizzle-kit check, typechecks, tests, or any write command. Report findings and the proposed repair path, but do not execute it. - Repair - adds file writes and
drizzle-kit generate/checkexecution, each gated by the Safety rules and explicit confirmation of the exact files and side (ours/theirs) to change. - CI hardening - adds proposing or editing CI/workflow files. Do not run migration commands against the user's database to validate the workflow; validate the workflow syntax and logic only.
- Explain - conceptual only. No commands against the repo beyond optional read-only inspection.
Repository discovery
Collect repo facts before giving commands:
git status --short
git rev-parse --show-toplevel
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
git ls-files -u
rg --files -g 'drizzle.config.*' -g 'package.json' -g 'pnpm-lock.yaml' -g 'yarn.lock' -g 'package-lock.json'
Then inspect the relevant files:
drizzle.config.*forout,schema, dialect, and config shape.package.jsonscripts for the project-approvedgenerate,check, andmigratecommands.package.jsondependencies or lockfile snippets fordrizzle-kitanddrizzle-ormversions.- The migration output directory, either from config or common names like
drizzle/,migrations/, orsrc/db/migrations/.
If this skill's helper script is available, run it in read-only mode:
python3 <skill-dir>/scripts/check_drizzle_migrations.py --root .
Resolve <skill-dir> to the installed skill directory before running. Check these locations in order
and use the first that contains scripts/check_drizzle_migrations.py:
- The target repository's vendored copy:
<repo-root>/skills/drizzle-migration-conflict. - The Claude Code skills directory:
~/.claude/skills/drizzle-migration-conflict. - Any other install location reported by the user's environment.
If none of these resolve, fall back to the manual git/rg inspection commands above and tell the
user the helper script was not found. Use --config <file> and --migrations-dir <dir> when the
project has multiple Drizzle configs or outputs. The script never connects to a database and never
writes files; it only reads migration directories and reports structural issues.
Migration structure decision
Identify the structure before proposing a fix:
- Legacy structure:
<out>/meta/_journal.json,<out>/meta/*_snapshot.json, and root-level migration SQL files such as<out>/0003_name.sql. - Folder-based structure: each migration is a directory containing
migration.sqlandsnapshot.json. - Unknown or mixed structure: stop and report ambiguity. Do not guess a destructive repair.
Recommended repair principles
- Resolve schema source conflicts first. The regenerated migration must reflect the merged schema, not one side's stale snapshot.
- Treat the parent or target branch migration history as the source of truth when repairing a feature branch after updating from that branch.
- Prefer discarding and regenerating generated migration artifacts over hand-editing journal or snapshot files.
- After regeneration, validate in tiers: database-free structural checks first; then
drizzle-kit checkonly after confirming its config/env cannot point at production; then project tests only after inspecting the scripts and any database targets. - If the user asks to apply changes, state exactly which files will be changed before performing the write.
Output rules
- Use the user's language when practical, but keep command snippets and file paths literal.
- State the detected migration structure and selected mode.
- Separate confirmed conflicts from assumptions and missing evidence.
- Give a safe default path first, then optional automation or CI hardening.
- For destructive steps, label them as "requires confirmation" and explain what will be lost.
- Never echo secrets. When inspecting
drizzle.config.*,.env, or environment variables, do not include database URLs, passwords, tokens, or connection strings in the report. Reference them as<redacted>or describe only whether they point at a production-like target. - Use the conclusion values from
references/report-template.mdfor diagnostic reports:NO_CONFLICT_FOUND,SAFE_TO_REGENERATE,NEEDS_USER_CONFIRMATION, orBLOCKED_BY_AMBIGUITY.
Limitations
- This skill cannot guarantee that a regenerated migration is production-safe without review against the target database state and deployment process.
- It does not run DB-backed migration commands unless the user explicitly confirms the target and the command.
- It is focused on Drizzle Kit migration conflicts, not general schema design or application-query optimization.
Test prompts
Use these prompts to validate the skill behavior:
- "My Drizzle
_journal.jsonand0003_snapshot.jsonconflict during merge. Tell me what to do." - "We upgraded to the migration folder layout and
drizzle-kit checkreports a non-commutative conflict." - "Design CI so our team stops merging broken Drizzle migrations."
- "Can I solve this production Drizzle migration conflict with
drizzle-kit push?" - "Use the links in the skill to re-check the current official Drizzle migration conflict guidance."
- "We're halfway through moving from the legacy flat layout to folder-based migrations. How do we handle a conflict during the transition?"
- "Our
drizzle.config.tssetsoutfromprocess.env.MIGRATIONS_DIR, and the helper says no out directory was found. What now?" - "
drizzle-kit checkkeeps failing on a migration we know commutes. Can we just always pass--ignore-conflicts?"