Commit 971b82a8 authored by Joerg Bruehe's avatar Joerg Bruehe

Fix bug#27072: RPM autostarts the server

This is the fix for 5.5, where the behaviour on both installation
and upgrade is changed:
On installation, we do not start the server, to allow automated
installs (which happen in some indeterminate machine status).
If the server was stopped when the upgrade begins, we assume the
administrator is taking manual action, so we do not start the (new)
server at the end of the upgrade.
We still install the start/stop script, so it will be started on reboot.


support-files/mysql.spec.sh:
  In the "pre" section of the spec file, check the server status, and write
  the result to a file.
  In the "post" section, evaluate the status file, and start the server if
  it was running during status analysis.
  In 5.5, we do *not* start the server if there is no status file (which will happen on first installation, when there is no data directory yet).
parents 95c34621 cb6641ab
......@@ -504,6 +504,7 @@ rm -f $RBR%{_mandir}/man1/make_win_bin_dist.1*
##############################################################################
%pre -n MySQL-server%{product_suffix}
mysql_datadir=%{mysqldatadir}
# Check if we can safely upgrade. An upgrade is only safe if it's from one
# of our RPMs in the same version family.
......@@ -576,7 +577,74 @@ HERE
fi
fi
# We assume that if there is exactly one ".pid" file,
# it contains the valid PID of a running MySQL server.
NR_PID_FILES=`ls $mysql_datadir/*.pid 2>/dev/null | wc -l`
case $NR_PID_FILES in
0 ) SERVER_TO_START='' ;; # No "*.pid" file == no running server
1 ) SERVER_TO_START='true' ;;
* ) SERVER_TO_START='' # Situation not clear
SEVERAL_PID_FILES=true ;;
esac
# That logic may be debated: We might check whether it is non-empty,
# contains exactly one number (possibly a PID), and whether "ps" finds it.
# OTOH, if there is no such process, it means a crash without a cleanup -
# is that a reason not to start a new server after upgrade?
STATUS_FILE=$mysql_datadir/RPM_UPGRADE_MARKER
if [ -f $STATUS_FILE ]; then
echo "Some previous upgrade was not finished:"
ls -ld $STATUS_FILE
echo "Please check its status, then do"
echo " rm $STATUS_FILE"
echo "before repeating the MySQL upgrade."
exit 1
elif [ -n "$SEVERAL_PID_FILES" ] ; then
echo "Your MySQL directory '$mysql_datadir' has more than one PID file:"
ls -ld $mysql_datadir/*.pid
echo "Please check which one (if any) corresponds to a running server"
echo "and delete all others before repeating the MySQL upgrade."
exit 1
fi
NEW_VERSION=%{mysql_version}-%{release}
# The "pre" section code is also run on a first installation,
# when there is no data directory yet. Protect against error messages.
if [ -d $mysql_datadir ] ; then
echo "MySQL RPM upgrade to version $NEW_VERSION" > $STATUS_FILE
echo "'pre' step running at `date`" >> $STATUS_FILE
echo >> $STATUS_FILE
echo "ERR file(s):" >> $STATUS_FILE
ls -ltr $mysql_datadir/*.err >> $STATUS_FILE
echo >> $STATUS_FILE
echo "Latest 'Version' line in latest file:" >> $STATUS_FILE
grep '^Version' `ls -tr $mysql_datadir/*.err | tail -1` | \
tail -1 >> $STATUS_FILE
echo >> $STATUS_FILE
if [ -n "$SERVER_TO_START" ] ; then
# There is only one PID file, race possibility ignored
echo "PID file:" >> $STATUS_FILE
ls -l $mysql_datadir/*.pid >> $STATUS_FILE
cat $mysql_datadir/*.pid >> $STATUS_FILE
echo >> $STATUS_FILE
echo "Server process:" >> $STATUS_FILE
ps -fp `cat $mysql_datadir/*.pid` >> $STATUS_FILE
echo >> $STATUS_FILE
echo "SERVER_TO_START=$SERVER_TO_START" >> $STATUS_FILE
else
# Take a note we checked it ...
echo "PID file:" >> $STATUS_FILE
ls -l $mysql_datadir/*.pid >> $STATUS_FILE 2>&1
fi
fi
# Shut down a previously installed server first
# Note we *could* make that depend on $SERVER_TO_START, but we rather don't,
# so a "stop" is attempted even if there is no PID file.
# (Maybe the "stop" doesn't work then, but we might fix that in itself.)
if [ -x %{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql ] ; then
%{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql stop > /dev/null 2>&1
echo "Giving mysqld 5 seconds to exit nicely"
......@@ -585,17 +653,33 @@ fi
%post -n MySQL-server%{product_suffix}
mysql_datadir=%{mysqldatadir}
NEW_VERSION=%{mysql_version}-%{release}
STATUS_FILE=$mysql_datadir/RPM_UPGRADE_MARKER
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Create data directory if needed
# Create data directory if needed, check whether upgrade or install
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
if [ ! -d $mysql_datadir ] ; then mkdir -m 755 $mysql_datadir; fi
if [ ! -d $mysql_datadir/mysql ] ; then mkdir $mysql_datadir/mysql; fi
if [ -f $STATUS_FILE ] ; then
SERVER_TO_START=`grep '^SERVER_TO_START=' $STATUS_FILE | cut -c17-`
else
SERVER_TO_START=''
fi
# echo "Analyzed: SERVER_TO_START=$SERVER_TO_START"
if [ ! -d $mysql_datadir/mysql ] ; then
mkdir $mysql_datadir/mysql;
echo "MySQL RPM installation of version $NEW_VERSION" >> $STATUS_FILE
else
# If the directory exists, we may assume it is an upgrade.
echo "MySQL RPM upgrade to version $NEW_VERSION" >> $STATUS_FILE
fi
if [ ! -d $mysql_datadir/test ] ; then mkdir $mysql_datadir/test; fi
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Make MySQL start/shutdown automatically when the machine does it.
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# NOTE: This still needs to be debated. Should we check whether these links
# for the other run levels exist(ed) before the upgrade?
# use insserv for older SuSE Linux versions
if [ -x /sbin/insserv ] ; then
/sbin/insserv %{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql
......@@ -677,17 +761,30 @@ if [ -x sbin/restorecon ] ; then
sbin/restorecon -R var/lib/mysql
fi
# Restart in the same way that mysqld will be started normally.
if [ -x %{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql ] ; then
%{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql start
echo "Giving mysqld 2 seconds to start"
sleep 2
# Was the server running before the upgrade? If so, restart the new one.
if [ "$SERVER_TO_START" = "true" ] ; then
# Restart in the same way that mysqld will be started normally.
if [ -x %{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql ] ; then
%{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql start
echo "Giving mysqld 2 seconds to start"
sleep 2
fi
# Allow mysqld_safe to start mysqld and print a message before we exit
sleep 2
fi
# Allow mysqld_safe to start mysqld and print a message before we exit
sleep 2
# Collect an upgrade history ...
echo "Upgrade/install finished at `date`" >> $STATUS_FILE
echo >> $STATUS_FILE
echo "=====" >> $STATUS_FILE
STATUS_HISTORY=$mysql_datadir/RPM_UPGRADE_HISTORY
cat $STATUS_FILE >> $STATUS_HISTORY
rm $STATUS_FILE
%preun -n MySQL-server%{product_suffix}
if [ $1 = 0 ] ; then
# Stop MySQL before uninstalling it
if [ -x %{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql ] ; then
......@@ -892,6 +989,17 @@ fi
# merging BK trees)
##############################################################################
%changelog
* Tue Jun 15 2010 Joerg Bruehe <joerg.bruehe@sun.com>
- Change the behaviour on installation and upgrade:
On installation, do not autostart the server.
*Iff* the server was stopped before the upgrade is started, this is taken as a
sign the administrator is handling that manually, and so the new server will
not be started automatically at the end of the upgrade.
The start/stop scripts will still be installed, so the server will be started
on the next machine boot.
This is the 5.5 version of fixing bug#27072 (RPM autostarting the server).
* Tue Jun 1 2010 Jonathan Perkin <jonathan.perkin@oracle.com>
- Implement SELinux checks from distribution-specific spec file.
......
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