#!/bin/bash #================================================= # GENERIC START #================================================= # IMPORT GENERIC HELPERS #================================================= # Keep this path for calling _common.sh inside the execution's context of backup and restore scripts source ../settings/scripts/_common.sh source /usr/share/yunohost/helpers #================================================= # RESTORE THE APP MAIN DIR #================================================= ynh_script_progression --message="Restoring the app main directory..." --weight=1 ynh_restore_file --origin_path="$install_dir" # $install_dir will automatically be initialized with some decent # permissions by default ... however, you may need to recursively reapply # ownership to all files such as after the ynh_setup_source step chown -R $app:www-data "$install_dir" #================================================= # RESTORE THE DATA DIRECTORY #================================================= ynh_script_progression --message="Restoring the data directory..." --weight=1 ynh_restore_file --origin_path="$data_dir" --not_mandatory # (Same as for install dir) chown -R $app:www-data "$data_dir" #================================================= # RESTORE SYSTEM CONFIGURATIONS #================================================= ynh_script_progression --message="Restoring system configurations related to $app..." --weight=1 # This should be a symetric version of what happens in the install script ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/etc/php/$phpversion/fpm/pool.d/$app.conf" ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/etc/nginx/conf.d/$domain.d/$app.conf" ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/etc/systemd/system/$app.service" systemctl enable $app.service --quiet yunohost service add $app --description="A short description of the app" --log="/var/log/$app/$app.log" ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/etc/logrotate.d/$app" ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/etc/fail2ban/jail.d/$app.conf" ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/etc/fail2ban/filter.d/$app.conf" ynh_systemd_action --action=restart --service_name=fail2ban #================================================= # RESTORE VARIOUS FILES #================================================= ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/etc/cron.d/$app" ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/etc/$app/" # For apps with huge logs, you might want to not backup logs every time: # The mkdir call is just here in case the log directory was not backed up. # mkdir -p "/var/log/$app" # chown $app:www-data "/var/log/$app" # ynh_restore_file --src_path="/var/log/$app/" --not_mandatory # # For other apps, the simple way is better: ynh_restore_file --origin_path="/var/log/$app/" #================================================= # RESTORE THE MYSQL DATABASE #================================================= ynh_script_progression --message="Restoring the MySQL database..." --weight=1 ynh_mysql_connect_as --user=$db_user --password=$db_pwd --database=$db_name < ./db.sql #================================================= # GENERIC FINALIZATION #================================================= # RELOAD NGINX AND PHP-FPM OR THE APP SERVICE #================================================= ynh_script_progression --message="Reloading NGINX web server and $app's service..." --weight=1 # Typically you only have either $app or php-fpm but not both at the same time... ynh_systemd_action --service_name=$app --action="start" --log_path="/var/log/$app/$app.log" ynh_systemd_action --service_name=php$phpversion-fpm --action=reload ynh_systemd_action --service_name=nginx --action=reload #================================================= # END OF SCRIPT #================================================= ynh_script_progression --message="Restoration completed for $app" --last