Commit 106e5900 authored by Joerg Bruehe's avatar Joerg Bruehe

Fix Bug #56581 RPM scripts use hardcoded datadir location

When fixing the 27072 bug, the shell snippets running before/after
a RPM upgrade got expanded to look at files in the data directory
and at the PID file.
In this expansion, the standard locations were used.

There are users who configure their installations to use non-standard
locations for the data directory, the PID file, and other objects.
For these users, the fix of 27072 did not work.
As a result, the fact that a server was running at upgrade start was
not noticed, and the new server was not started after the upgrade.

With this patch, the shell snippets now try to get these locations
from "my_print_defaults" before falling back to the defaults.
Now, the fact that the old server is running is again noticed (even
with non-standard locations), and the new server is started.

Also, the upgrade log is written to the correct data directory.

support-files/mysql.spec.sh:
  See the global comment for the purpose of this change.
  
  In tests on SuSE 11, it was found necessary to use the full path name
  of "my_print_defaults", it seems $PATH die not include "/usr/bin".
parent a265fde6
# Copyright (c) 2000, 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2000, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
......@@ -610,7 +610,25 @@ touch $RBR%{_sysconfdir}/mysqlmanager.passwd
##############################################################################
%pre server
mysql_datadir=%{mysqldatadir}
# This is the code running at the beginning of a RPM upgrade action,
# before replacing the old files with the new ones.
# There are users who deviate from the default file system layout.
# Check local settings to support them.
if [ -x %{_bindir}/my_print_defaults ]
then
mysql_datadir=`%{_bindir}/my_print_defaults server mysqld | grep '^--datadir=' | sed -n 's/--datadir=//p'`
PID_FILE_PATT=`%{_bindir}/my_print_defaults server mysqld | grep '^--pid-file=' | sed -n 's/--pid-file=//p'`
fi
if [ -z "$mysql_datadir" ]
then
mysql_datadir=%{mysqldatadir}
fi
if [ -z "$PID_FILE_PATT" ]
then
PID_FILE_PATT="$mysql_datadir/*.pid"
fi
# Check if we can safely upgrade. An upgrade is only safe if it's from one
# of our RPMs in the same version family.
......@@ -681,7 +699,7 @@ 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`
NR_PID_FILES=`ls $PID_FILE_PATT 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' ;;
......@@ -703,8 +721,8 @@ if [ -f $STATUS_FILE ]; then
echo "before repeating the MySQL upgrade."
exit 1
elif [ -n "$SEVERAL_PID_FILES" ] ; then
echo "Your MySQL directory '$mysql_datadir' has more than one PID file:"
ls -ld $mysql_datadir/*.pid
echo "You have more than one PID file:"
ls -ld $PID_FILE_PATT
echo "Please check which one (if any) corresponds to a running server"
echo "and delete all others before repeating the MySQL upgrade."
exit 1
......@@ -729,17 +747,17 @@ if [ -d $mysql_datadir ] ; then
if [ -n "$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
ls -l $PID_FILE_PATT >> $STATUS_FILE
cat $PID_FILE_PATT >> $STATUS_FILE
echo >> $STATUS_FILE
echo "Server process:" >> $STATUS_FILE
ps -fp `cat $mysql_datadir/*.pid` >> $STATUS_FILE
ps -fp `cat $PID_FILE_PATT` >> $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
ls -l $PID_FILE_PATT >> $STATUS_FILE 2>&1
fi
fi
......@@ -754,7 +772,20 @@ if [ -x %{_sysconfdir}/init.d/mysql ] ; then
fi
%post server
mysql_datadir=%{mysqldatadir}
# This is the code running at the end of a RPM install or upgrade action,
# after the (new) files have been written.
# There are users who deviate from the default file system layout.
# Check local settings to support them.
if [ -x %{_bindir}/my_print_defaults ]
then
mysql_datadir=`%{_bindir}/my_print_defaults server mysqld | grep '^--datadir=' | sed -n 's/--datadir=//p'`
fi
if [ -z "$mysql_datadir" ]
then
mysql_datadir=%{mysqldatadir}
fi
NEW_VERSION=%{mysql_version}-%{release}
STATUS_FILE=$mysql_datadir/RPM_UPGRADE_MARKER
......@@ -1133,6 +1164,13 @@ fi
##############################################################################
%changelog
* Thu Feb 03 2011 Joerg Bruehe <joerg.bruehe@oracle.com>
- Fix bug#56581: If an installation deviates from the default file locations
("datadir" and "pid-file"), the mechanism to detect a running server (on upgrade)
should still work, and use these locations.
The problem was that the fix for bug#27072 did not check for local settings.
* Wed Nov 24 2010 Alexander Nozdrin <alexander.nozdrin@oracle.com>
- EXCEPTIONS-CLIENT has been deleted, remove it from here too.
......
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