115 lines
4.6 KiB
Bash
Executable file
115 lines
4.6 KiB
Bash
Executable file
#!/bin/bash
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#=================================================
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# IMPORT GENERIC HELPERS
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#=================================================
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source _common.sh
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source /usr/share/yunohost/helpers
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### Settings are automatically loaded as bash variables
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### in every app script context, therefore typically these will exist:
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### - $domain
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### - $path
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### - $language
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### - $install_dir
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### - $port
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### ...
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### In the context of upgrade,
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### - resources are automatically provisioned / updated / deleted (depending on existing resources)
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### - a safety backup is automatically created by the core and will be restored if the upgrade fails
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#=================================================
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# STOP SYSTEMD SERVICE
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#=================================================
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ynh_script_progression "Stopping $app's systemd service..."
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ynh_systemctl --service="$app" --action="stop"
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#=================================================
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# ENSURE DOWNWARD COMPATIBILITY
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#=================================================
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#ynh_script_progression "Ensuring downward compatibility..."
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### N.B. : the following setting migration snippets are provided as *EXAMPLES*
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### of what you may want to do in some cases (e.g. a setting was not defined on
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### some legacy installs and you therefore want to initiaze stuff during upgrade)
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# If db_name doesn't exist, create it
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# ynh_app_setting_set_default --key=db_name --value="$(ynh_sanitize_dbid --db_name=$app)"
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# If install_dir doesn't exist, create it
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# ynh_app_setting_set_default --key=install_dir --value="/var/www/$app"
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#=================================================
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# DOWNLOAD, CHECK AND UNPACK SOURCE
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#=================================================
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ynh_script_progression "Upgrading source files..."
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### ynh_setup_source can wipe the destination dir if called with --full_replace.
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### On upgrade, that is certainly what you want, to remove any old source file that
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### does not exist in the new version of the software.
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### You can list with --keep every file/directory to *not* wipe or overwrite,
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### useful for configuration files, data directories, or plugins.
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# Download, check integrity, uncompress and patch the source from manifest.toml
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ynh_setup_source --dest_dir="$install_dir" --full_replace --keep=".env data"
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### $install_dir will automatically be initialized with some decent
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### permissions by default... however, you may need to recursively reapply
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### ownership to all files such as after the ynh_setup_source step
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chown -R "$app:www-data" "$install_dir"
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#=================================================
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# UPDATE A CONFIG FILE
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#=================================================
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ynh_script_progression "Updating $app's configuration files..."
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### Same as during install
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###
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### The file will automatically be backed-up if it's found to be manually modified (because
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### ynh_config_add keeps track of the file's checksum)
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ynh_config_add --template="run.sh" --destination="$install_dir/run.sh"
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# FIXME: this should be handled by the core in the future
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### You may need to use chmod 600 instead of 400,
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### for example if the app is expected to be able to modify its own config
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chmod +x "$install_dir/run.sh"
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chmod 400 "$install_dir/run.sh"
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chown "$app:$app" "$install_dir/run.sh"
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### For more complex cases where you want to replace stuff using regexes,
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### you shoud rely on ynh_replace (which is basically a wrapper for sed)
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### When doing so, you also need to manually call ynh_store_file_checksum
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###
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### ynh_replace --match="match_string" --replace="replace_string" --file="$install_dir/some_config_file"
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### ynh_store_file_checksum "$install_dir/some_config_file"
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#=================================================
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# REAPPLY SYSTEM CONFIGURATIONS
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#=================================================
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ynh_script_progression "Upgrading system configurations related to $app..."
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### This should be a literal copypaste of what happened in the install's "System configuration" section
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ynh_config_add_nginx
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ynh_config_add_systemd
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yunohost service add "$app" --description="A modern and self-hosted take on file uploading services that can handle anything you throw at it thanks to it's robust and fast API, chunked uploads support and more." --log="/var/log/$app/$app.log"
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ynh_config_add_logrotate
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#=================================================
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# START SYSTEMD SERVICE
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#=================================================
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ynh_script_progression "Starting $app's systemd service..."
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ynh_systemctl --service="$app" --action="start"
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#=================================================
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# END OF SCRIPT
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#=================================================
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ynh_script_progression "Upgrade of $app completed"
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