mariadb/debian/mariadb-server-10.2.preinst
Otto Kekäläinen 73f1c655ad MDEV-6284: Import most of downstream Debian packaging
These changes update the contents and behaviour of current packages
to match the current packaging in Debian official repos.

Keep mtr test scope small.

Updating maintainer scripts also required regenerating the translations.

Rules based on modern dh_* buildtools.

Update control file with new Debian conventions:
- Provide virtual-mysql-* virtual packages
- Recommends perl modules instead of Depends
2016-10-27 18:42:16 +03:00

208 lines
6.2 KiB
Bash

#!/bin/bash -e
#
# summary of how this script can be called:
# * <new-preinst> install
# * <new-preinst> install <old-version>
# * <new-preinst> upgrade <old-version>
# * <old-preinst> abort-upgrade <new-version>
#
. /usr/share/debconf/confmodule
if [ -n "$DEBIAN_SCRIPT_DEBUG" ]; then set -v -x; DEBIAN_SCRIPT_TRACE=1; fi
${DEBIAN_SCRIPT_TRACE:+ echo "#42#DEBUG# RUNNING $0 $*" 1>&2 }
export PATH=$PATH:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin
MYADMIN="/usr/bin/mysqladmin --defaults-file=/etc/mysql/debian.cnf"
mysql_datadir=/var/lib/mysql
mysql_upgradedir=/var/lib/mysql-upgrade
# Try to stop the server in a sane way. If it does not success let the admin
# do it himself. No database directories should be removed while the server
# is running! Another mysqld in e.g. a different chroot is fine for us.
stop_server() {
if [ ! -x /etc/init.d/mysql ]; then return; fi
set +e
if [ -x /usr/sbin/invoke-rc.d ]; then
cmd="invoke-rc.d mysql stop"
else
cmd="/etc/init.d/mysql stop"
fi
$cmd
errno=$?
set -e
# 0=ok, 100=no init script (fresh install)
if [ "$errno" != 0 -a "$errno" != 100 ]; then
echo "${cmd/ */} returned $errno" 1>&2
echo "There is a MySQL server running, but we failed in our attempts to stop it." 1>&2
echo "Stop it yourself and try again!" 1>&2
db_stop
exit 1
fi
}
################################ main() ##########################
this_version=10.2
max_upgradeable_version=5.6
# Check if a flag file is found that indicates a previous MariaDB or MySQL
# version was installed. If multiple flags are found, check which one was
# the biggest version number.
for flag in $mysql_datadir/debian-*.flag
do
# The for loop leaves $flag as the query string if there are no results,
# so the check below is needed to stop further processing when there are
# no real results.
if [ $flag = "$mysql_datadir/debian-*.flag" ]
then
break
fi
flag_version=`echo $flag | sed 's/.*debian-\([0-9\.]\+\).flag/\1/'`
# Initialize value if empty
if [ -z "$found_version" ]
then
found_version=$flag_version
fi
# Update value if now bigger then before
if dpkg --compare-versions "$flag_version" '>>' "$found_version"
then
found_version=$flag_version
fi
done
# If an upgrade is detected, proceed with it automatically without
# requiring any user interaction.
#
# However, if the user attempts to downgrade, warn about the incompatibility.
# Downgrade is detected if the flag version is bigger than $this_version
# (e.g. 10.1 > 10.0) or the flag version is smaller than 10.0 but bigger
# than $max_upgradeable_version.
if [ ! -z "$found_version" ]
then
echo "$mysql_datadir: found previous version $found_version"
if dpkg --compare-versions "$found_version" '>>' "$this_version"
then
downgrade_detected=true
fi
if dpkg --compare-versions "$found_version" '>>' "$max_upgradeable_version" \
&& dpkg --compare-versions "$found_version" '<<' "10.0"
then
downgrade_detected=true
fi
fi
# Don't abort dpkg if downgrade is detected (as was done previously).
# Instead simply move the old datadir and create a new for this_version.
if [ ! -z "$downgrade_detected" ]
then
db_input critical mariadb-server-10.2/old_data_directory_saved || true
db_go
echo "The file $mysql_datadir/debian-$found_version.flag indicates a" 1>&2
echo "version that cannot automatically be upgraded. Therefore the" 1>&2
echo "previous data directory will be renamed to $mysql_datadir-$found_version and" 1>&2
echo "a new data directory will be initialized at $mysql_datadir." 1>&2
echo "Please manually export/import your data (e.g. with mysqldump) if needed." 1>&2
mv -f $mysql_datadir $mysql_datadir-$found_version
# Also move away the old debian.cnf file that included credentials that are
# no longer valid
mv -f /etc/mysql/debian.cnf /etc/mysql/debian.cnf-$found_version
fi
# to be sure
stop_server
# If we use NIS then errors should be tolerated. It's up to the
# user to ensure that the mysql user is correctly setup.
# Beware that there are two ypwhich one of them needs the 2>/dev/null!
if test -n "`which ypwhich 2>/dev/null`" && ypwhich >/dev/null 2>&1; then
set +e
fi
#
# Now we have to ensure the following state:
# /etc/passwd: mysql:x:100:101:MySQL Server:/nonexistent:/bin/false
# /etc/group: mysql:x:101:
#
# Sadly there could any state be present on the system so we have to
# modify everything carefully i.e. not doing a chown before creating
# the user etc...
#
# creating mysql group if he isn't already there
if ! getent group mysql >/dev/null; then
# Adding system group: mysql.
addgroup --system mysql >/dev/null
fi
# creating mysql user if he isn't already there
if ! getent passwd mysql >/dev/null; then
# Adding system user: mysql.
adduser \
--system \
--disabled-login \
--ingroup mysql \
--no-create-home \
--home /nonexistent \
--gecos "MySQL Server" \
--shell /bin/false \
mysql >/dev/null
fi
# end of NIS tolerance zone
set -e
# if there's a symlink, let's store where it's pointing, because otherwise
# it's going to be lost in some situations
for dir in DATADIR LOGDIR; do
checkdir=`eval echo "$"$dir`
if [ -L "$checkdir" ]; then
mkdir -p "$mysql_upgradedir"
cp -dT "$checkdir" "$mysql_upgradedir/$dir.link"
fi
done
# creating mysql home directory
if [ ! -d $mysql_datadir -a ! -L $mysql_datadir ]; then
mkdir $mysql_datadir
fi
# checking disc space
if LC_ALL=C BLOCKSIZE= df --portability $mysql_datadir/. | tail -n 1 | awk '{ exit ($4>1000) }'; then
echo "ERROR: There's not enough space in $mysql_datadir/" 1>&2
db_stop
exit 1
fi
# Since the home directory was created before putting the user into
# the mysql group and moreover we cannot guarantee that the
# permissions were correctly *before* calling this script, we fix them now.
# In case we use NIS and no mysql user is present then this script should
# better fail now than later..
# The "set +e" is necessary as e.g. a ".journal" of a ext3 partition is
# not chgrp'able (#318435).
set +e
chown mysql:mysql $mysql_datadir
find $mysql_datadir -follow -not -group mysql -print0 2>/dev/null \
| xargs -0 --no-run-if-empty chgrp mysql
set -e
db_stop
#DEBHELPER#
exit 0