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NAME

       release_handler - Unpacking and Installation of Release Packages

DESCRIPTION

       The  release  handler process belongs to the SASL application, which is responsible for release handling,
       that is, unpacking, installation, and removal of release packages.

       An introduction to release handling and an example  is  provided  in  OTP  Design  Principles  in  System
       Documentation.

       A release package is a compressed tar file containing code for a certain version of a release, created by
       calling systools:make_tar/1,2. The release package is to be located in the  $ROOT/releases  directory  of
       the  previous  version  of  the release, where $ROOT is the installation root directory, code:root_dir().
       Another releases directory can be specified using the SASL configuration parameter releases_dir or the OS
       environment  variable RELDIR. The release handler must have write access to this directory to install the
       new release. The persistent state of the release handler is stored there in a file called RELEASES.

       A release package is always to contain:

         * A release resource file, Name.rel

         * A boot script, Name.boot

       The .rel file contains information about the release: its name, version, and which ERTS  and  application
       versions it uses.

       A release package can also contain:

         * A release upgrade file, relup

         * A system configuration file, sys.config

       The  relup  file  contains  instructions  for  how  to upgrade to, or downgrade from, this version of the
       release.

       The release package can be unpacked, which extracts the files. An unpacked release can be installed.  The
       currently  used  version  of  the  release  is  then  upgraded  or downgraded to the specified version by
       evaluating the instructions in the relup file. An installed release  can  be  made  permanent.  Only  one
       permanent  release  can  exist  in  the  system,  and this release is used if the system is restarted. An
       installed release, except the permanent one, can be  removed.  When  a  release  is  removed,  all  files
       belonging to that release only are deleted.

       Each release version has a status, which can be unpacked, current, permanent, or old. There is always one
       latest release, which either has status permanent (normal case) or current (installed, but not  yet  made
       permanent). The meaning of the status values are illustrated in the following table:

               Status     Action                NextStatus
               -------------------------------------------
               -          unpack                unpacked
               unpacked   install               current
                          remove                -
               current    make_permanent        permanent
                          install other         old
                          remove                -
               permanent  make other permanent  old
                          install               permanent
               old        reboot_old            permanent
                          install               current
                          remove                -

       The  release handler process is a locally registered process on each node. When a release is installed in
       a distributed system, the release handler on each node must be called. The release  installation  can  be
       synchronized between nodes. From an operator view, it can be unsatisfactory to specify each node. The aim
       is to install one release package in the system, no matter how many nodes there are.  It  is  recommended
       that  software  management functions are written that take care of this problem. Such a function can have
       knowledge of the system architecture, so it can contact each individual release handler  to  install  the
       package.

       For  release handling to work properly, the runtime system must know which release it is running. It must
       also be able to change (in runtime) which boot script and system configuration file are to be used if the
       system is restarted. This is taken care of automatically if Erlang is started as an embedded system. Read
       about this in Embedded System in System Documentation.  In  this  case,  the  system  configuration  file
       sys.config is mandatory.

       The  installation  of a new release can restart the system. Which program to use is specified by the SASL
       configuration parameter start_prg, which defaults to $ROOT/bin/start.

       The emulator restart on Windows NT expects that the system is started using  the  erlsrv  program  (as  a
       service).  Furthermore,  the  release  handler  expects that the service is named NodeName_Release, where
       NodeName is the first part of the Erlang node name (up to, but not including the "@") and Release is  the
       current  release  version.  The  release handler furthermore expects that a program like start_erl.exe is
       specified as "machine" to erlsrv. During upgrading with restart, a new service is registered and started.
       The  new  service  is  set  to  automatic  and  the  old  service is removed when the new release is made
       permanent.

       The release handler at a node running on a diskless machine, or with a read-only  file  system,  must  be
       configured accordingly using the following SASL configuration parameters (for details, see sasl(7)):

         masters:
           This  node  uses  some  master nodes to store and fetch release information. All master nodes must be
           operational whenever release information is written by this node.

         client_directory:
           The client_directory in the directory structure of the master nodes must be specified.

         static_emulator:
           This parameter specifies if the Erlang emulator is statically installed at the client  node.  A  node
           with  a  static  emulator  cannot  dynamically  switch to a new emulator, as the executable files are
           statically written into memory.

       The release handler can also be used to unpack and install release packages when not running Erlang as an
       embedded  system.  However,  in  this  case  the  user  must somehow ensure that correct boot scripts and
       configuration files are used if the system must be restarted.

       Functions are provided for using another  file  structure  than  the  structure  defined  in  OTP.  These
       functions can be used to test a release upgrade locally.

EXPORTS

       check_install_release(Vsn) -> {ok, OtherVsn, Descr} | {error, Reason}
       check_install_release(Vsn,Opts) -> {ok, OtherVsn, Descr} | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Vsn = OtherVsn = string()
                 Opts = [Opt]
                 Opt = purge
                 Descr = term()
                 Reason = term()

              Checks  if  the  specified  version Vsn of the release can be installed. The release must not have
              status current. Issues warnings if relup file or sys.config is  not  present.  If  relup  file  is
              present, its contents are checked and {error,Reason} is returned if an error is found. Also checks
              that all required applications are present and that all new code can be loaded; {error,Reason}  is
              returned if an error is found.

              Evaluates  all  instructions  that  occur before the point_of_no_return instruction in the release
              upgrade script.

              Returns the same as install_release/1. Descr defaults to "" if no relup file is found.

              If option purge is specified, all old code that can be  soft-purged  is  purged  after  all  other
              checks   are   successfully   completed.  This  can  be  useful  to  reduce  the  time  needed  by
              install_release/1.

       create_RELEASES(Root, RelDir, RelFile, AppDirs) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Root = RelDir = RelFile = string()
                 AppDirs = [{App, Vsn, Dir}]
                  App = atom()
                  Vsn = Dir = string()
                 Reason = term()

              Creates an initial RELEASES file to be used by the  release  handler.  This  file  must  exist  to
              install new releases.

              Root  is  the root of the installation ($ROOT) as described earlier. RelDir is the directory where
              the RELEASES file is to be created (normally $ROOT/releases). RelFile is the name of the .rel file
              that describes the initial release, including the extension .rel.

              AppDirs  can  be  used  to specify from where the modules for the specified applications are to be
              loaded. App is the name of an application, Vsn is  the  version,  and  Dir  is  the  name  of  the
              directory  where  App-Vsn  is  located. The corresponding modules are to be located under Dir/App-
              Vsn/ebin. The directories for applications not specified in AppDirs are assumed to be  located  in
              $ROOT/lib.

       install_file(Vsn, File) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Vsn = File = string()
                 Reason = term()

              Installs  a release-dependent file in the release structure. The release-dependent file must be in
              the release structure when a new release is installed: start.boot, relup, and sys.config.

              The function can be called, for example, when  these  files  are  generated  at  the  target.  The
              function is to be called after set_unpacked/2 has been called.

       install_release(Vsn) -> {ok, OtherVsn, Descr} | {error, Reason}
       install_release(Vsn,  [Opt])  ->  {ok,  OtherVsn,  Descr}  |  {continue_after_restart, OtherVsn, Descr} |
       {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Vsn = OtherVsn = string()
                 Opt = {error_action, Action} | {code_change_timeout, Timeout}
                  | {suspend_timeout, Timeout} | {update_paths, Bool}
                  Action = restart | reboot
                  Timeout = default | infinity | pos_integer()
                  Bool = boolean()
                 Descr = term()
                 Reason = {illegal_option, Opt}  |  {already_installed,  Vsn}  |  {change_appl_data,  term()}  |
                 {missing_base_app, OtherVsn, App} | {could_not_create_hybrid_boot, term()} | term()
                 App = atom()

              Installs  the  specified  version  Vsn  of the release. Looks first for a relup file for Vsn and a
              script {UpFromVsn,Descr1,Instructions1} in this file for upgrading from the  current  version.  If
              not  found,  the  function  looks  for  a  relup  file  for  the  current  version  and  a  script
              {Vsn,Descr2,Instructions2} in this file for downgrading to Vsn.

              If a script is found, the first thing that happens is  that  the  application  specifications  are
              updated according to the .app files and sys.config belonging to the release version Vsn.

              After  the  application  specifications  have  been  updated,  the  instructions in the script are
              evaluated and the function returns {ok,OtherVsn,Descr} if successful. OtherVsn and Descr  are  the
              version (UpFromVsn or Vsn) and description (Descr1 or Descr2) as specified in the script.

              If  {continue_after_restart,OtherVsn,Descr}  is  returned,  the  emulator  is restarted before the
              upgrade instructions are executed. This occurs if the emulator or any of the applications  Kernel,
              STDLIB,  or  SASL  are updated. The new emulator version and these core applications execute after
              the restart. For all other applications the old versions are started and the upgrade is  performed
              as normal by executing the upgrade instructions.

              If  a  recoverable  error occurs, the function returns {error,Reason} and the original application
              specifications are restored. If a non-recoverable error occurs, the system is restarted.

              Options:

                error_action:
                  Defines if the node is to be restarted (init:restart()) or rebooted (init:reboot())  if  there
                  is an error during the installation. Default is restart.

                code_change_timeout:
                  Defines  the  time-out  for  all  calls to stdlib:sys:change_code. If no value is specified or
                  default is specified, the default value defined in sys is used.

                suspend_timeout:
                  Defines the time-out for all calls to stdlib:sys:suspend. If no value is specified, the values
                  defined  by  the Timeout parameter of the upgrade or suspend instructions are used. If default
                  is specified, the default value defined in sys is used.

                {update_paths,Bool}:
                  Indicates if all application code paths are to be updated (Bool==true) or if only  code  paths
                  for  modified  applications  are  to  be  updated (Bool==false, default). This option has only
                  effect for  other  application  directories  than  the  default  $ROOT/lib/App-Vsn,  that  is,
                  application  directories  specified  in  argument  AppDirs  in  a call to create_RELEASES/4 or
                  set_unpacked/2.

                  Example:

                  In  the  current  version  CurVsn  of  a  release,  the  application  directory  of  myapp  is
                  $ROOT/lib/myapp-1.0.  A  new  version  NewVsn  is unpacked outside the release handler and the
                  release handler is informed about this with a call as follows:

                release_handler:set_unpacked(RelFile, [{myapp,"1.0","/home/user"},...]).
                => {ok,NewVsn}

                  If NewVsn  is  installed  with  option  {update_paths,true},  then  kernel:code:lib_dir(myapp)
                  returns /home/user/myapp-1.0.

          Note:
              Installing  a  new  release  can  be time consuming if there are many processes in the system. The
              reason is that each process must be checked for references to old code  before  a  module  can  be
              purged. This check can lead to garbage collections and copying of data.

              To  speed  up  the  execution  of  install_release, first call check_install_release, using option
              purge. This does the same check for old code. Then purges all modules that can be soft-purged. The
              purged  modules  do  then no longer have any old code, and install_release does not need to do the
              checks.

              This does not reduce the overall time for the upgrade, but  it  allows  checks  and  purge  to  be
              executed in the background before the real upgrade is started.

          Note:
              When  upgrading  the  emulator  from  a version older than OTP R15, an attempt is made to load new
              application beam code into the old emulator. Sometimes the new beam format cannot be read  by  the
              old  emulator,  so the code loading fails and the complete upgrade is terminated. To overcome this
              problem, the new application code is to be compiled with the old emulator.  For  more  information
              about emulator upgrade from pre OTP R15 versions, see Design Principles in System Documentation.

       make_permanent(Vsn) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Vsn = string()
                 Reason = {bad_status, Status} | term()

              Makes the specified release version Vsn permanent.

       remove_release(Vsn) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Vsn = string()
                 Reason = {permanent, Vsn} | client_node | term()

              Removes  a  release  and its files from the system. The release must not be the permanent release.
              Removes only the files and directories not in use by another release.

       reboot_old_release(Vsn) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Vsn = string()
                 Reason = {bad_status, Status} | term()

              Reboots the system by making the old release permanent,  and  calls  init:reboot()  directly.  The
              release must have status old.

       set_removed(Vsn) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Vsn = string()
                 Reason = {permanent, Vsn} | term()

              Makes  it  possible  to  handle removal of releases outside the release handler. Tells the release
              handler that the release is removed from the system. This function does not delete any files.

       set_unpacked(RelFile, AppDirs) -> {ok, Vsn} | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 RelFile = string()
                 AppDirs = [{App, Vsn, Dir}]
                  App = atom()
                  Vsn = Dir = string()
                 Reason = term()

              Makes it possible to handle unpacking of releases outside the release handler. Tells  the  release
              handler that the release is unpacked. Vsn is extracted from the release resource file RelFile.

              AppDirs  can  be  used  to specify from where the modules for the specified applications are to be
              loaded. App is the name of an application, Vsn is  the  version,  and  Dir  is  the  name  of  the
              directory  where  App-Vsn  is  located. The corresponding modules are to be located under Dir/App-
              Vsn/ebin. The directories for applications not specified in AppDirs are assumed to be  located  in
              $ROOT/lib.

       unpack_release(Name) -> {ok, Vsn} | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Name = Vsn = string()
                 Reason = client_node | term()

              Unpacks a release package Name.tar.gz located in the releases directory.

              Performs some checks on the package, for example, checks that all mandatory files are present, and
              extracts its contents.

       which_releases() -> [{Name, Vsn, Apps, Status}]

              Types:

                 Name = Vsn = string()
                 Apps = ["App-Vsn"]
                 Status = unpacked | current | permanent | old

              Returns all releases known to the release handler.

       which_releases(Status) -> [{Name, Vsn, Apps, Status}]

              Types:

                 Name = Vsn = string()
                 Apps = ["App-Vsn"]
                 Status = unpacked | current | permanent | old

              Returns all releases, known to the release handler, of a specific status.

APPLICATION UPGRADE/DOWNGRADE

       The following functions can be used to test upgrade and downgrade  of  single  applications  (instead  of
       upgrading/downgrading an entire release). A script corresponding to the instructions in the relup file is
       created on-the-fly, based on the .appup file for the application, and evaluated exactly in the  same  way
       as release_handler does.

   Warning:
       These  functions  are  primarily intended for simplified testing of .appup files. They are not run within
       the context of the release_handler process. They must therefore  not  be  used  together  with  calls  to
       install_release/1,2, as this causes the release_handler to end up in an inconsistent state.

       No persistent information is updated, so these functions can be used on any Erlang node, embedded or not.
       Also, using these functions does not affect which code is loaded if there is a reboot.

       If the upgrade or downgrade fails, the application can end up in an inconsistent state.

EXPORTS

       upgrade_app(App, Dir) -> {ok, Unpurged} | restart_emulator | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 App = atom()
                 Dir = string()
                 Unpurged = [Module]
                  Module = atom()
                 Reason = term()

              Upgrades an application App from the current version to a new version located in Dir according  to
              the .appup file.

              App  is  the  name  of the application, which must be started. Dir is the new library directory of
              App. The corresponding modules as well as the .app and  .appup  files  are  to  be  located  under
              Dir/ebin.

              The function looks in the .appup file and tries to find an upgrade script from the current version
              of the application using upgrade_script/2. This script  is  evaluated  using  eval_appup_script/4,
              exactly in the same way as install_release/1,2 does.

              Returns one of the following:

                * {ok,  Unpurged}  if  evaluating the script is successful, where Unpurged is a list of unpurged
                  modules

                * restart_emulator if this instruction is encountered in the script

                * {error, Reason} if an error occurred when finding or evaluating the script

              If  the  restart_new_emulator  instruction  is  found  in  the   script,   upgrade_app/2   returns
              {error,restart_new_emulator}.  This  because  restart_new_emulator  requires  a new version of the
              emulator to be started before the rest of the upgrade instructions can be executed, and  this  can
              only be done by install_release/1,2.

       downgrade_app(App, Dir) ->
       downgrade_app(App, OldVsn, Dir) -> {ok, Unpurged} | restart_emulator | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 App = atom()
                 Dir = OldVsn = string()
                 Unpurged = [Module]
                  Module = atom()
                 Reason = term()

              Downgrades an application App from the current version to a previous version OldVsn located in Dir
              according to the .appup file.

              App is the name of the application, which must be started.  OldVsn  is  the  previous  application
              version  and  can be omitted if Dir is of the format "App-OldVsn". Dir is the library directory of
              the previous version of App. The corresponding modules and the old .app file  are  to  be  located
              under  Dir/ebin.  The  .appup  file  is to be located in the ebin directory of the current library
              directory of the application (code:lib_dir(App)).

              The function looks in the .appup file and tries to find a downgrade script to the previous version
              of  the  application using downgrade_script/3. This script is evaluated using eval_appup_script/4,
              exactly in the same way as install_release/1,2 does.

              Returns one of the following:

                * {ok, Unpurged} if evaluating the script is successful, where Unpurged is a  list  of  unpurged
                  modules

                * restart_emulator if this instruction is encountered in the script

                * {error, Reason} if an error occurred when finding or evaluating the script

       upgrade_script(App, Dir) -> {ok, NewVsn, Script}

              Types:

                 App = atom()
                 Dir = string()
                 NewVsn = string()
                 Script = Instructions

              Tries  to  find  an  application  upgrade script for App from the current version to a new version
              located in Dir.

              The upgrade script can then be evaluated using  eval_appup_script/4.  It  is  recommended  to  use
              upgrade_app/2 instead, but this function (upgrade_script) is useful to inspect the contents of the
              script.

              App is the name of the application, which must be started. Dir is the  new  library  directory  of
              App.  The  corresponding  modules  as  well  as  the .app and .appup files are to be located under
              Dir/ebin.

              The function looks in the .appup file and tries  to  find  an  upgrade  script  from  the  current
              application  version.  High-level  instructions  are  translated  to  low-level  instructions. The
              instructions are sorted in the same manner as when generating a relup file.

              Returns {ok, NewVsn, Script} if successful, where NewVsn  is  the  new  application  version.  For
              details about Script, see appup(5).

              Failure: If a script cannot be found, the function fails with an appropriate error reason.

       downgrade_script(App, OldVsn, Dir) -> {ok, Script}

              Types:

                 App = atom()
                 OldVsn = Dir = string()
                 Script = Instructions

              Tries  to  find  an  application  downgrade  script for App from the current version to a previous
              version OldVsn located in Dir.

              The downgrade script can then be evaluated using eval_appup_script/4. It  is  recommended  to  use
              downgrade_app/2,3  instead, but this function (downgrade_script) is useful to inspect the contents
              of the script.

              App is the name of the application, which must be started. Dir is the previous  library  directory
              of  App.  The  corresponding  modules  and the old .app file are to be located under Dir/ebin. The
              .appup file is to be located in the ebin  directory  of  the  current  library  directory  of  the
              application (code:lib_dir(App)).

              The  function  looks  in  the  .appup  file  and tries to find a downgrade script from the current
              application version.  High-level  instructions  are  translated  to  low-level  instructions.  The
              instructions are sorted in the same manner as when generating a relup file.

              Returns {ok, Script} if successful. For details about Script, see appup(5).

              Failure: If a script cannot be found, the function fails with an appropriate error reason.

       eval_appup_script(App, ToVsn, ToDir, Script) -> {ok, Unpurged} | restart_emulator | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 App = atom()
                 ToVsn = ToDir = string()
                 Script
                   See upgrade_script/2, downgrade_script/3
                 Unpurged = [Module]
                  Module = atom()
                 Reason = term()

              Evaluates   an   application   upgrade  or  downgrade  script  Script,  the  result  from  calling
              upgrade_script/2 or downgrade_script/3, exactly in the same way as install_release/1,2 does.

              App is the name  of  the  application,  which  must  be  started.  ToVsn  is  the  version  to  be
              upgraded/downgraded  to,  and  ToDir  is  the library directory of this version. The corresponding
              modules as well as the .app and .appup files are to be located under Dir/ebin.

              Returns one of the following:

                * {ok, Unpurged} if evaluating the script is successful, where Unpurged is a  list  of  unpurged
                  modules

                * restart_emulator if this instruction is encountered in the script

                * {error, Reason} if an error occurred when finding or evaluating the script

              If  the  restart_new_emulator  instruction  is  found  in  the script, eval_appup_script/4 returns
              {error,restart_new_emulator}. This because restart_new_emulator requires  a  new  version  of  the
              emulator  to  be started before the rest of the upgrade instructions can be executed, and this can
              only be done by install_release/1,2.

TYPICAL ERROR REASONS

         {bad_masters, Masters}:
           The master nodes Masters are not alive.

         {bad_rel_file, File}:
           Specified .rel file File cannot be read or does not contain a single term.

         {bad_rel_data, Data}:
           Specified .rel file does not contain a recognized release specification, but another term Data.

         {bad_relup_file, File}:
           Specified relup file Relup contains bad data.

         {cannot_extract_file, Name, Reason}:
           Problems when extracting from a tar file, erl_tar:extract/2 returned {error, {Name, Reason}}.

         {existing_release, Vsn}:
           Specified release version Vsn is already in use.

         {Master, Reason, When}:
           Some operation, indicated by the term When, failed on the master node Master with the specified error
           reason Reason.

         {no_matching_relup, Vsn, CurrentVsn}:
           Cannot find a script for upgrading/downgrading between CurrentVsn and Vsn.

         {no_such_directory, Path}:
           The directory Pathdoes not exist.

         {no_such_file, Path}:
           The path Path (file or directory) does not exist.

         {no_such_file, {Master, Path}}:
           The path Path (file or directory) does not exist at the master node Master.

         {no_such_release, Vsn}:
           The specified release version Vsn does not exist.

         {not_a_directory, Path}:
           Path exists but is not a directory.

         {Posix, File}:
           Some  file  operation  failed  for  File.  Posix is an atom named from the Posix error codes, such as
           enoent, eacces, or eisdir. See file(3erl) in Kernel.

         Posix:
           Some file operation failed, as for the previous item in the list.

SEE ALSO

       OTP Design Principles, config(5), rel(5), relup(5), script(5), sys(3erl), systools(3erl)