Connect Liquibase with IBM DB2 LUW

Last updated: September 2, 2025

IBM DB2 LUW (DB2 for Linux, Unix, and Windows) is a cross-platform database management system created by IBM. For more information, see IBM DB2 Documentation.

Verified database versions

11.5.7+

Before you begin

  • Install Liquibase.

  • Ensure you have Java installed. Liquibase requires Java to run. If you used the Liquibase Installer, Java is included automatically. Otherwise, you must install Java manually.

Procedure

1

(Maven users only) Configure Maven

If you're running Liquibase using the Maven plugin using mvn liquibase:update installing the extension with Maven ensures the right files are available and everything works together automatically. You can manage these extensions by adding them as dependencies in your project’s pom.xml file. When configured this way, Maven automatically downloads the specified JAR files from Maven Central during the build process.

2

Configure your connection

1. Ensure your IBM DB2 LUW database is configured. See Verifying the Installation for more information.

2. Specify the database URL in the liquibase.properties file (defaults file) and other properties you want to set a default value for. Liquibase does not parse the URL. You can either specify the whole database connection string or specify the URL using your database's standard connection format: url: jdbc:db2://<server_name>:<port>/<db_name>

3

Test your connection

1. Create a text file called changelog (.sql, .yaml, .json, or .xml) in your project directory and add a changeset.

If you already created a changelog using the init project command, you can use that instead of creating a new file. When adding onto an existing changelog, be sure to only add the changeset and to not duplicate the changelog header.

loading

2. Navigate to your project folder in the CLI and run the Liquibase status command to see whether the connection is successful:

liquibase status --username=test --password=test --changelog-file=<changelog.xml>

Note: You can specify arguments in the CLI or keep them in the Liquibase properties file.

If your connection is successful, you'll see a message like this:

4 changesets have not been applied to <your_connection_url> Liquibase command 'status' was executed successfully.

3. Inspect the deployment SQL with the update-sql command

liquibase update-sql --changelog-file=<changelog.xml>

If the SQL that Liquibase generates isn't what you expect, you should review your changelog file and make any necessary adjustments.

4. Then execute these changes to your database with the update command:

liquibase update --changelog-file=<changelog.xml>

If your update is successful, Liquibase runs each changeset and displays a summary message ending with:

Liquibase: Update has been successful. Liquibase command 'update' was executed successfully.

5. From a database UI tool, ensure that your database contains the test_table object you added along with the DATABASECHANGELOG table and DATABASECHANGELOGLOCK table.