convex-migration-helper
Plans and executes safe Convex schema and data migrations using the widen-migrate-narrow workflow and the @convex-dev/migrations component. Use this skill when a deployment fails schema validation, existing documents need backfilling, fields need adding or removing or changing type, tables need splitting or merging, or a zero-downtime migration strategy is needed. Also use when the user mentions breaking schema changes, multi-deploy rollouts, or data transformations on existing Convex tables.
Best use case
convex-migration-helper is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Plans and executes safe Convex schema and data migrations using the widen-migrate-narrow workflow and the @convex-dev/migrations component. Use this skill when a deployment fails schema validation, existing documents need backfilling, fields need adding or removing or changing type, tables need splitting or merging, or a zero-downtime migration strategy is needed. Also use when the user mentions breaking schema changes, multi-deploy rollouts, or data transformations on existing Convex tables.
Teams using convex-migration-helper should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/convex-migration-helper/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How convex-migration-helper Compares
| Feature / Agent | convex-migration-helper | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Plans and executes safe Convex schema and data migrations using the widen-migrate-narrow workflow and the @convex-dev/migrations component. Use this skill when a deployment fails schema validation, existing documents need backfilling, fields need adding or removing or changing type, tables need splitting or merging, or a zero-downtime migration strategy is needed. Also use when the user mentions breaking schema changes, multi-deploy rollouts, or data transformations on existing Convex tables.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Convex Migration Helper
Safely migrate Convex schemas and data when making breaking changes.
## When to Use
- Adding new required fields to existing tables
- Changing field types or structure
- Splitting or merging tables
- Renaming or deleting fields
- Migrating from nested to relational data
## When Not to Use
- Greenfield schema with no existing data in production or dev
- Adding optional fields that do not need backfilling
- Adding new tables with no existing data to migrate
- Adding or removing indexes with no correctness concern
- Questions about Convex schema design without a migration need
## Key Concepts
### Schema Validation Drives the Workflow
Convex will not let you deploy a schema that does not match the data at rest. This is the fundamental constraint that shapes every migration:
- You cannot add a required field if existing documents don't have it
- You cannot change a field's type if existing documents have the old type
- You cannot remove a field from the schema if existing documents still have it
This means migrations follow a predictable pattern: **widen the schema, migrate the data, narrow the schema**.
### Online Migrations
Convex migrations run online, meaning the app continues serving requests while data is updated asynchronously in batches. During the migration window, your code must handle both old and new data formats.
### Prefer New Fields Over Changing Types
When changing the shape of data, create a new field rather than modifying an existing one. This makes the transition safer and easier to roll back.
### Don't Delete Data
Unless you are certain, prefer deprecating fields over deleting them. Mark the field as `v.optional` and add a code comment explaining it is deprecated and why it existed.
## Safe Changes (No Migration Needed)
### Adding Optional Field
```typescript
// Before
users: defineTable({
name: v.string(),
});
// After - safe, new field is optional
users: defineTable({
name: v.string(),
bio: v.optional(v.string()),
});
```
### Adding New Table
```typescript
posts: defineTable({
userId: v.id("users"),
title: v.string(),
}).index("by_user", ["userId"]);
```
### Adding Index
```typescript
users: defineTable({
name: v.string(),
email: v.string(),
}).index("by_email", ["email"]);
```
## Breaking Changes: The Deployment Workflow
Every breaking migration follows the same multi-deploy pattern:
**Deploy 1 - Widen the schema:**
1. Update schema to allow both old and new formats (e.g., add optional new field)
2. Update code to handle both formats when reading
3. Update code to write the new format for new documents
4. Deploy
**Between deploys - Migrate data:**
5. Run migration to backfill existing documents
6. Verify all documents are migrated
**Deploy 2 - Narrow the schema:**
7. Update schema to require the new format only
8. Remove code that handles the old format
9. Deploy
## Using the Migrations Component
For any non-trivial migration, use the [`@convex-dev/migrations`](https://www.convex.dev/components/migrations) component. It handles batching, cursor-based pagination, state tracking, resume from failure, dry runs, and progress monitoring.
See `references/migrations-component.md` for installation, setup, defining and running migrations, dry runs, status monitoring, and configuration options.
## Common Migration Patterns
See `references/migration-patterns.md` for complete patterns with code examples covering:
- Adding a required field
- Deleting a field
- Changing a field type
- Splitting nested data into a separate table
- Cleaning up orphaned documents
- Zero-downtime strategies (dual write, dual read)
- Small table shortcut (single internalMutation without the component)
- Verifying a migration is complete
## Common Pitfalls
1. **Making a field required before migrating data**: Convex rejects the deploy because existing documents lack the field. Always widen the schema first.
2. **Using `.collect()` on large tables**: Hits transaction limits or causes timeouts. Use the migrations component for proper batched pagination. `.collect()` is only safe for tables you know are small.
3. **Not writing the new format before migrating**: Documents created during the migration window will be missed, leaving unmigrated data after the migration "completes."
4. **Skipping the dry run**: Use `dryRun: true` to validate migration logic before committing changes to production data. Catches bugs before they touch real documents.
5. **Deleting fields prematurely**: Prefer deprecating with `v.optional` and a comment. Only delete after you are confident the data is no longer needed and no code references it.
6. **Using crons for migration batches**: The migrations component handles batching via recursive scheduling internally. Crons require manual cleanup and an extra deploy to remove.
## Migration Checklist
- [ ] Identify the breaking change and plan the multi-deploy workflow
- [ ] Update schema to allow both old and new formats
- [ ] Update code to handle both formats when reading
- [ ] Update code to write the new format for new documents
- [ ] Deploy widened schema and updated code
- [ ] Define migration using the `@convex-dev/migrations` component
- [ ] Test with `dryRun: true`
- [ ] Run migration and monitor status
- [ ] Verify all documents are migrated
- [ ] Update schema to require new format only
- [ ] Clean up code that handled old format
- [ ] Deploy final schema and code
- [ ] Remove migration code once confirmed stableRelated Skills
convex
Routing skill for Convex work in this repo. Use when the user explicitly invokes the `convex` skill, asks which Convex workflow or skill to use, or says they are working on a Convex app without naming a specific task yet. Do not prefer this skill when the request is clearly about setting up Convex, authentication, components, migrations, or performance.
convex-setup-auth
Sets up Convex authentication with user management, identity mapping, and access control. Use this skill when adding login or signup to a Convex app, configuring Convex Auth, Clerk, WorkOS AuthKit, Auth0, or custom JWT providers, wiring auth.config.ts, protecting queries and mutations with ctx.auth.getUserIdentity(), creating a users table with identity mapping, or setting up role-based access control, even if the user just says "add auth" or "make it require login."
convex-security-check
Quick security audit checklist covering authentication, function exposure, argument validation, row-level access control, and environment variable handling
convex-security-audit
Deep security review patterns for authorization logic, data access boundaries, action isolation, rate limiting, and protecting sensitive operations
convex-schema-validator
Defining and validating database schemas with proper typing, index configuration, optional fields, unions, and migration strategies for schema changes
convex-realtime
Patterns for building reactive apps including subscription management, optimistic updates, cache behavior, and paginated queries with cursor-based loading
convex-quickstart
Initializes a new Convex project from scratch or adds Convex to an existing app. Use this skill when starting a new project with Convex, scaffolding with npm create convex@latest, adding Convex to an existing React, Next.js, Vue, Svelte, or other frontend, wiring up ConvexProvider, configuring environment variables for the deployment URL, or running npx convex dev for the first time, even if the user just says "set up Convex" or "add a backend."
convex-performance-patterns
Guide for Convex performance optimization including denormalization, index design, avoiding N+1 queries, OCC (Optimistic Concurrency Control), and handling hot spots. Use when optimizing query performance, designing data models, handling high-contention writes, or troubleshooting OCC errors. Activates for performance issues, index optimization, denormalization patterns, or concurrency control tasks.
convex-performance-audit
Audits and optimizes Convex application performance across hot-path reads, write contention, subscription cost, and function limits. Use this skill when a Convex feature is slow or expensive, npx convex insights shows high bytes or documents read, OCC conflict errors or mutation retries appear, subscriptions or UI updates are costly, functions hit execution or transaction limits, or the user mentions performance, latency, read amplification, or invalidation problems in a Convex app.
convex-migrations
Schema migration strategies for evolving applications including adding new fields, backfilling data, removing deprecated fields, index migrations, and zero-downtime migration patterns
convex-http-actions
External API integration and webhook handling including HTTP endpoint routing, request/response handling, authentication, CORS configuration, and webhook signature validation
convex-helpers-patterns
Guide for convex-helpers library patterns including Triggers, Row-Level Security (RLS), Relationship helpers, Custom Functions, Rate Limiting, and Workpool. Use when implementing automatic side effects, access control, relationship traversal, auth wrappers, or concurrency management. Activates for triggers setup, RLS implementation, custom function wrappers, or convex-helpers integration tasks.