harbor/make/photon/db/docker-entrypoint.sh
Yang Jiao 0f4972ad92
Bump up photon version to 4.0 on release-1.10.0 (#18302)
Bump up photon version to 4.0
Bump up redis version to 7.0
Bump up postgresql version to 13.10

Signed-off-by: Yang Jiao <jiaoya@vmware.com>
2023-04-11 15:09:07 +08:00

69 lines
2.5 KiB
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#!/bin/bash
set -e
source $PWD/initdb.sh
CUR=$PWD
PG_VERSION_OLD=$1
PG_VERSION_NEW=$2
PGBINOLD="/usr/local/pg${PG_VERSION_OLD}/bin"
PGDATAOLD=${PGDATA}/pg${PG_VERSION_OLD}
PGDATANEW=${PGDATA}/pg${PG_VERSION_NEW}
# to handle the PG 9.6 only
if [ -s $PGDATA/PG_VERSION ]; then
PGDATAOLD=$PGDATA
fi
#
# Init DB: $PGDATA is empty.
# Upgrade DB: 1, has $PGDATA\PG_VERSION. 2, has pg old version directory with PG_VERSION inside.
#
if [ "$(ls -A $PGDATA)" ]; then
if [ ! -d $PGDATANEW ]; then
if [ ! -d $PGDATAOLD ] || [ ! -s $PGDATAOLD/PG_VERSION ]; then
echo "incorrect data: $PGDATAOLD, make sure $PGDATAOLD is not empty and with PG_VERSION inside."
exit 1
fi
initPG $PGDATANEW false
set +e
# In some cases, like helm upgrade, the postgresql may not quit cleanly.
# Use start & stop to clean the unexpected status. Error:
# There seems to be a postmaster servicing the new cluster.
# Please shutdown that postmaster and try again.
# Failure, exiting
$PGBINOLD/pg_ctl -D "$PGDATAOLD" -w -o "-p 5433" start
$PGBINOLD/pg_ctl -D "$PGDATAOLD" -m fast -w stop
./$CUR/upgrade.sh --old-bindir $PGBINOLD --old-datadir $PGDATAOLD --new-datadir $PGDATANEW
# it needs to clean the $PGDATANEW on upgrade failure
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "remove the $PGDATANEW after fail to upgrade"
rm -rf $PGDATANEW
exit 1
fi
set -e
echo "remove the $PGDATAOLD after upgrade success."
if [ "$PGDATAOLD" = "$PGDATA" ]; then
find $PGDATA/* -prune ! -name pg${PG_VERSION_NEW} -exec rm -rf {} \;
else
rm -rf $PGDATAOLD
fi
else
echo "no need to upgrade postgres, launch it."
fi
else
initPG $PGDATANEW true
fi
POSTGRES_PARAMETER=''
file_env 'POSTGRES_MAX_CONNECTIONS' '1024'
# The max value of 'max_connections' is 262143
if [ $POSTGRES_MAX_CONNECTIONS -le 0 ] || [ $POSTGRES_MAX_CONNECTIONS -gt 262143 ]; then
POSTGRES_MAX_CONNECTIONS=262143
fi
POSTGRES_PARAMETER="${POSTGRES_PARAMETER} -c max_connections=${POSTGRES_MAX_CONNECTIONS}"
exec postgres -D $PGDATANEW $POSTGRES_PARAMETER