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The sys.config file used for the temporary release in an erts upgrade
is now a hybrid where kernel, stdlib and sasl configuration is taken
from the new release, and other configuration is taken from the old
release. I.e. similar to how the temporary boot file is created.
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In order to avoid duplication of upgrade instructions in .appup files,
we now allow regular expressions to specify the UpFrom and DownTo
versions. To be considered a regular expression, the version
identifier must be specified as a binary, e.g.
<<"2\\.1\\.[0-9]+">> will match versions 2.1.x, where x is any number.
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If the version of erts differs between two releases, the release
handler automatically adds a 'restart_new_emulator' instruction to the
upgrade script (relup). Earlier, this instruction was always added at
the end of the upgrade script, causing the following sequence of
operations during an upgrade (a bit simplified):
1. suspend processes
2. load new code
3. execute code_change functions
4. resume processes
5. restart emulator with new erts version
Obviously, this caused the new code to be loaded into the old emulator
and this would fail if the beam format had been changed in the new
version of the emulator.
To overcome this problem, this commit changes the order of the
instructions, so for upgrade with changed erts version we now have:
1. restart emulator with new erts, kernel, stdlib and sasl versions,
but old versions of all other applications.
2. suspend processes
3. load new code
4. execute code_change functions
5. resume processes
This is implemented by creating a temporary release, including new
erts, kernel, stdlib and sasl from the new release and all other
applications from the old release. A new boot file for this temporary
release is created, which includes a new 'apply' instruction to run
release_handler:new_emulator_upgrade/2. Then the emulator is restarted
using this boot file - and release_handler:new_emulator_upgrade/2
executes the rest of the upgrade script.
For downgrade, the order will be as before:
1. suspend processes
2. execute code_change functions with 'down'-indication
3. load old code
4. resume processes
5. restart emulator with old erts version
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This is an extension to which_releases that allows a user to specify the
status of the releases they wish to be returned. For instance it allows
for quickly determining which release is 'permanent' without the need of
parsing the entire release list.
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* jw/release_handler_1:
General improvements to release_handler_1:get_supervised_procs
Conflicts:
lib/sasl/src/release_handler_1.erl
lib/sasl/test/release_handler_SUITE.erl
OTP-9546
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The core issues this patch attempts to solve is two fold, 1) have
release_handler_1 act slightly differently in two corner cases and 2)
clean up the code in get_supervised_procs/0 to remove nested cases and
etc.
Regarding #1, get_supervised_procs/0 will now call functions to
test to see if the supervisor is suspended before attempting to ask it
for a list of children. It now will print an error message regarding
the suspended supervisor and produce an error that will cause the VM
to restart. Previously it would timeout attempting the call to
which_children and the VM would restart without any details regarding
the reason.
The second corner case is if in a child specification a supervisor is
incorrectly stated to be a worker and get_modules is called against it.
A timeout will occur causing a VM restart. Similar to the last corner
case in this patch an error message is printed and an error is emitted
causing a VM restart.
When first looking into the issue it was hard to discover why my
upgrades where failing. All I received during the upgrade process was
a timeout and a VM restart, no other information. This patch should
help users track down issues like these.
Regarding #2, due to the above confusion in trying to figure out what
had happened I dug into the code and started tracing it through and
found that the nested case statements and etc made it confusing. So I
started to rework and clean up, hopefully making this code path clearer
to future readers.
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If a path was given as ONLY 'ebin' and not for example './ebin', then
systools:make_tar would fail with a function_clause exception in
filename:join/1. The bug was in systools_make:appDir/1, which tried to
find the parent directory of the given path. This function now uses
library functions filename:basename and filename:dirname instead of
general list manipulations.
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Given this option, all modules that are to be purged by indicated
upgrade,and that can be soft purged, will be purged when all other
check of check_install_release have been successfully completed.
I added a note under install_release in the reference manual about how
to use check_install_release with this new option in order to speed up
the execution of install_release.
I also added three more test cases for this functionality.
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This commit utilizes the new bif erlang:check_old_code/1 to check if a
module has old code in the system or not before running
erlang:check_process_code/2. This is to optimize
release_handler:install_release (and
release_handler:check_install_release).
A new test is added which checks that after traversing all
processes/modules once and purging all old code, the second run
through this part of the code is "sufficiently" much faster.
A note is also added in the reference manual for
release_handler:install_release about how to go around the efficiency
problem of this function.
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* hw/update-chmod-without-f:
Again: Call chmod without the "-f" flag
OTP-9491
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The appup instruction 'delete_module' would cause a crash during
upgrade if the module to be deleted was not loaded. The reason was
that the release_handler tried to read the version number of the old
module after the code path had changed to point to the new version of
the application. Thus, if the module had not been loaded before the
upgrade, there would no longer be any such module in the path
(delete_module indicates that the module is deleted from the new
version of the application).
This is corrected by letting the release_handler read the old version
of the module only if the module is updated - not if it is
removed. And it is always read before the code path is changed.
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If a new version of an application did not include any erlang module
changes, the code path of the application was not updasted unless a
'load_object_code' instruction was added for the application. This
would be a problem if e.g. only some files in the priv dir were
changed, since calls to code:lib_dir or code:priv_dir would then point
to the old location of the application. This has been corrected - now
code:replace_path/2 will be called for all applications that are
changed (i.e. when the application's vsn is changed in the .rel file).
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The service will automatically use the start_erl.exe from the same
directory as erlsrv.exe, and heart will use $PATH, which will
always have the erts bin dir first. The reason is to avoid using old
executables after upgrading erts via the release_handler.
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This commit adds test cases from release_handler_SUITE on windows,
including some corrections in erlsrv and release_handler.
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Commit 7ed11a886fc8fcaf3c2b8324294e2f24e02b0f28 removed the "-f" flag
from chmod calls in Makefiles:
| "-f" is a non-standard chmod option which at least SGI IRIX and HP UX
| do not support. As the only effect of the "-f" flag is to suppress
| warning messages, it can be safely omitted.
Meanwhile, new "chmod -f" calls have been added. This commit removes the
"-f" flag from those new calls.
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