Upgrading Pagure ================ From 2.12 to 2.13 ---------------- The 2.13 release brings some adjustments to the database scheme. * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` From 2.11 to 2.12 ---------------- From this release on, we will have alembic migration script for new table creation, so there will no longer be a need to use ``createdb.py`` The 2.12 release brings some adjustments to the database scheme. * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` From 2.10 to 2.11 ---------------- The 2.10 releases brings some adjustments to the database scheme. * Create the new DB tables and the new status field using the ``createdb.py`` script. * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` From 2.9 to 2.10 ---------------- The 2.10 releases brings some little changes to the database scheme. Therefore when upgrading to 2.10, you will have to: * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` From 2.8 to 2.9 --------------- The 2.9 releases brings some adjustments to the database scheme. * Create the new DB tables and the new status field using the ``createdb.py`` script. * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` If you are interested in loading your local data into the ``pagure_logs`` table that this new release adds (data which is then displayed in the calendar heatmap on the user's page), you can find two utility scripts in https://pagure.io/pagure-utility that will help you to do that. They are: * fill_logs_from_db - Based on the data present in the database, this script fills the ``pagure_logs`` table (this will add: new ticket, new comment, new PR, closing a PR or a ticket and so on). * fill_logs_from_gits - By going through all the git repo hosted in your pagure instance, it will log who did what when. From 2.7 to 2.8 --------------- 2.8 brings a little change to the database scheme. Therefore when upgrading to from 2.7 to 2.8, you will have to: * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` From 2.6 to 2.7 --------------- 2.7 adds new tables as well as changes some of the existing ones. Therefore when upgrading to 2.7, you will have to: * Create the new DB tables and the new status field using the ``createdb.py`` script. * Update the database schame using alembic, one of the upgrade will require access to pagure's configuration file, which should thus be passed onto the command via an environment variable: ``PAGURE_CONFIG=/path/to/pagure.cf alembic upgrade head`` This release also brings a new configuration key: * ``INSTANCE_NAME`` used in the welcome screen shown upon first login (only with FAS and OpenID auth) to describe the instance The API has also been upgraded to a version ``0.8`` due to the changes (backward compatible) made to support the introduction of `close_status` to issues. From 2.5 to 2.6 --------------- 2.6 brings quite a few changes and some of them impacting the database scheme. Therefore when upgrading from 2.4 to 2.6, you will have to: * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` From 2.4 to 2.5 --------------- 2.5 brings quite a few changes and some of them impacting the database scheme. Therefore when upgrading from 2.4 to 2.5, you will have to: * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` From 2.3 to 2.4 --------------- 2.4 brings quite a few changes and some of them impacting the database scheme. Therefore when upgrading from 2.3.x to 2.4, you will have to: * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` This update also brings some new configuration keys: * ``VIRUS_SCAN_ATTACHMENTS`` allows turning on or off checking attachments for virus using clamav. This requires pyclamd but is entirely optional (and off by default) * ``PAGURE_CI_SERVICES`` allows specifying with which CI (Continuous Integration) services this pagure instance can integrate with. Currently, only `Jenkins` is supported, but this configuration key defaults to ``None``. From 2.2 to 2.3 --------------- 2.3 brings a few changes impacting the database scheme, including a new `duplicate` status for tickets, a feature allowing one to `watch` or `unwatch` a project and notifications on tickets as exist on pull-requests. Therefore, when upgrading from 2.2.x to 2.3, you will have to : * Create the new DB tables and the new status field using the ``createdb.py`` script. * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` This update also brings a new configuration key: * ``PAGURE_ADMIN_USERS`` allows to mark some users as instance-wide admins, giving them full access to every projects, private or not. This feature can then be used as a way to clean spams. * ``SMTP_PORT`` allows to specify the port to use when contacting the SMTP server * ``SMTP_SSL`` allows to specify whether to use SSL when contacting the SMTP server * ``SMTP_USERNAME`` and ``SMTP_PASSWORD`` if provided together allow to contact an SMTP requiring authentication. In this update is also added the script ``api_key_expire_mail.py`` meant to be run by a daily cron job and warning users when their API token is nearing its expiration date. 2.2.2 ----- Release 2.2.2 contains an important security fix, blocking a source of XSS attack. From 2.1 to 2.2 --------------- 2.2 brings a number of bug fixes and a few improvements. One of the major changes impacts the databases where we must change some of the table so that the foreign key cascade on delete (fixes deleting a project when a few plugins were activated). When upgrading for 2.1 to 2.2 all you will have to do is: * Update the database scheme using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` .. note:: If you run another database system than PostgreSQL the alembic revision ``317a285e04a8_delete_hooks.py`` will require adjustment as the foreign key constraints are named and the names are driver dependant. From 2.0 to 2.1 --------------- 2.1 brings its usual flow of improvements and bug fixes. When upgrading from 2.0.x to 2.1 all you will have to: * Update the database schame using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` From 1.x to 2.0 --------------- As the version change indicates, 2.0 brings quite a number of changes, including some that are not backward compatible. When upgrading to 2.0 you will have to: * Update the database schema using alembic: ``alembic upgrade head`` * Create the new DB tables so that the new plugins work using the ``createdb.py`` script * Move the forks git repo Forked git repos are now located under the same folder as the regular git repos, just under a ``forks/`` subfolder. So the structure changes from: :: repos/ ├── foo.git └── bar.git forks/ ├── patrick/ │ ├── test.git │ └── ipsilon.git └── pingou/ ├── foo.git └── bar.git to: :: repos/ ├── foo.git ├── bar.git └── forks/ ├── patrick/ │ ├── test.git │ └── ipsilon.git └── pingou/ ├── foo.git └── bar.git So the entire ``forks`` folder is moved under the ``repos`` folder where the other repositories are, containing the sources of the projects. Git repos for ``tickets``, ``requests`` and ``docs`` will be trickier to move as the structure changes from: :: tickets/ ├── foo.git ├── bar.git ├── patrick/ │ ├── test.git │ └── ipsilon.git └── pingou/ ├── foo.git └── bar.git to: :: tickets/ ├── foo.git ├── bar.git └── forks/ ├── patrick/ │ ├── test.git │ └── ipsilon.git └── pingou/ ├── foo.git └── bar.git Same for the ``requests`` and the ``docs`` git repos. As you can see in the ``tickets``, ``requests`` and ``docs`` folders there are two types of folders, git repos which are folder with a name ending with ``.git``, and folder corresponding to usernames. These last ones are the ones to be moved into a subfolder ``forks/``. This can be done using something like: :: mkdir forks for i in `ls -1 |grep -v '\.git'`; do mv $i forks/; done * Re-generate the gitolite configuration. This can be done via the ``Re-generate gitolite ACLs file`` button in the admin page. * Keep URLs backward compatible The support of pseudo-namespace in pagure 2.0 has required some changes to the URL schema: https://pagure.io/pagure/053d8cc95fcd50c23a8b0a7f70e55f8d1cc7aebb became: https://pagure.io/pagure/c/053d8cc95fcd50c23a8b0a7f70e55f8d1cc7aebb (Note the added /c/ in it) We introduced a backward compatibility fix for this. This fix is however *disabled* by default so if you wish to keep the URLs valid, you will need to adjust you configuration file to include: :: OLD_VIEW_COMMIT_ENABLED = True