collective.upgrade

CMF portal upgrade helpers


Keywords
Zope, CMF, Plone, GenericSetup, upgrade
License
GPL-2.0+
Install
pip install collective.upgrade==1.0

Documentation

collective.upgrade

This package provides helpers for upgrading CMF portals, such as Plone sites, supporting incremental commits, upgrading multiple portals at once, and a command-line script for upgrading scripts outside the browser with post-mortem debugging of errors. Together, these features greatly reduce the amount of time spent on each iteration of developing your upgrade steps.

Also included are a number of upgrade steps for cleaning up messy portals during upgrades including cleaning up broken objects, components and registrations.

CAUTION

Use of this package will immediately commit changes to your ZODB. There is no "dry run" option as that is contrary to it's purpose. As such, it should never be used on a ZODB that has not been backed up along with the BLOBs immediately before use. Neither should it be used directly on production as a first attempt at upgrading portals.

Quick Start

In a buildout with:

[instance1]
recipe = plone.recipe.zope2instance
eggs = ...

Add another part like so:

parts =
    ...
    upgrade
...

[instance1]
...
eggs = ...
    collective.upgrade
http-address = localhost:8080
...

[upgrade]
recipe = zc.recipe.egg
eggs = ${instance1:eggs}
scripts = upgrade-portals
arguments = args=[
    '--zope-conf', '${instance1:location}/etc/zope.conf',
    '--log-file', '${buildout:directory}/var/log/upgrade.log']
...

Then, after running buildout, you can upgrade all Plone portals and their add-ons and monitor the progress in var/log/upgrade.log with:

$ bin/upgrade-portals

Alternatively, you can open the following URL in your browser to upgrade all portals and the logs of progress will be streamed to your browser:

http://localhost:8080/@@collective.upgrade.form?submitted=1

Use the --help option for more details:

$ bin/upgrade-portals --help
usage: upgrade-portals [-h] [-l FILE] [-z FILE] [-d] [-U] [-G PROFILE_ID] [-A]
                       [PATH [PATH ...]]

Upgrade CMF portals in a Zope 2 application using GenericSetup upgrade steps

positional arguments:
  PATH                  Run upgrades for the portals at the given paths only
                        (default: upgrade all CMF portals in the Zope app)

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -l FILE, --log-file FILE
                        Log upgrade messages, filtered for duplicates, to FILE
  -z FILE, --zope-conf FILE
                        The "zope.conf" FILE to use when starting the Zope2 app.
                        Can be omitted when used as a zopectl "run" script.
  -d, --disable-link-integrity
                        When upgrading a portal using plone.app.linkintegrity,
                        disable it during the upgrade.
  -u, --username
                        Specify username to use during the upgrade (if not
                        provided, a special user will run the upgrade).
  -D, --pdb
                        When upgrading a portal enable post-mortem debugging.

upgrades:
  -U, --skip-portal-upgrade
                        Skip running the upgrade steps for the core Plone
                        baseline profile.
  -G PROFILE_ID, --upgrade-profile PROFILE_ID
                        Run all upgrade steps for the given profile (default:
                        upgrade all installed extension profiles)
  -A, --skip-all-profiles-upgrade
                        Skip running all upgrade steps for all installed
                        extension profiles.

Incremental Commits

Since upgrades are often long running, restarting the upgrade on every error can make troubleshooting and debugging extremely time consuming. It's also unsafe, however, to commit the results of an upgrade that failed in the middle since there's no way to guarantee of cleanup the partial execution of an upgrade step.

Fortunately, the upgrade step support for Products.GenericSetup profiles provides a good way to incrementally commit upgrade progress in a way that much less risky and can save a lot of time in the upgrade troubleshooting and debugging process.

The core of collective.upgrade are upgrader classes which support incremental upgrading of a portal using GenericSetup profiles. Upgrade starts with the portal's base profile and then proceeds to upgrade all the other installed profiles. While processing each profile, it commits at the last successful profile version reached but aborting any set of upgrade steps that did not succeed.

In other words, each time a collective.upgrade upgrader runs, it will pick up from the last successful profile version reached without having to repeat what has already succeeded.

To use this upgrader you can simply visit the @@collective.upgrade.form?submitted=1 view on the portal to upgrade. Alternatively, you can use the upgrade-portals console script described in the Quick Start section.

Multiple Portals

Another form supports upgrading multiple portals at once. By default the form will start at the form context and walk the Zope OFS object tree applying the upgrade to each CMF portal found. It is also possible to specify the paths of the portals to upgrade.

It uses the same incremental commit support described above for each portal and commits after each portal and can also be run using the @@collective.upgrade.form?submitted=1 view on the container of the portals to upgrade or using the console script described in the Quick Start section.

Command-line Script

This package also provides a runnable script which can be installed and used to run the multiple portal upgrade process without using the browser. The script logs upgrade messages to a separate log file filtering for duplicates to make the upgrade process much easier to monitor and review for any unexpected issues. If the upgrade raises an exception, the upgrader will abort the transaction and the console script will invoke pdb.post_mortem() to allow inspecting the error. Together, these features make the console script a much faster way to iterate through the development of an upgrade procedure.

Use the --help option of the script or see the Quick Start section for details.

Reconciling Users and Groups

Reconcile users and groups between two PluggableAuthService plugins. Useful, for example, to migrate users and groups from the local storage plugins to an LDAP plugin added later.

  1. The export steps search the destination plugins for users and groups that correspond to those in the source plugins. Use real names for search when an exact match on id can't be found.

  2. The export step writes a CSV file listing all users and groups from the source plugins including those that match exactly on id, those that found matches on real names, and those that found no matches.

    This CSV can be edited to add manual matches and can be used as a list of users to notify that their logins or passwords may change between the source and destination plugins.

  3. The import step reads the same CSV file to update:

    • OFS ownership
    • CMF creators
    • local roles
    • group memberships

To use these steps, make sure the destination PAS plugin is the first activated IUserEnumerationPlugin, IGroupEnumerationPlugin, and IPropertiesPlugin plugin, then run the reconcile_users and reconcile_groups export steps. The CSV files generated in the export can then be edited and adjusted until they represent the changes that should be applied at which point they can be placed inside a GS import profile and imported to apply the changes.

Upgrade Steps

This package also registers additional upgrade steps for the Plone 3.* to 4.0 upgrade which do the following:

  • cleanup broken OFS objects
  • cleanup broken TextIndexes objects
  • cleanup broken component registrations
  • cleanup broken setup registrations
  • cleanup broken cmfeditions versions
  • migrate cmfeditions folder versions to btrees
  • cleanup duplicate UIDs

Registered for the 3.* to 4.0 upgrade by default, these steps can be registered for any upgrade you might need them for. If you find that a particular Plone upgrade is helped by registering one of the existing steps or a new step, let me know and I'll likely add it to the registrations in this package.

Including experimental.broken while running the upgrade steps for cleaning up broken objects is probably a better idea than not doing so. This will be included automatically if you require the collective.upgrade [steps] extra.

An unregistered upgrade step function, collective.upgrade.steps.setDefaultEditor, can be registered in ZCML to set the default editor for all users. It requires collective.setdefaulteditor which will be included automatically if you require the collective.upgrade [steps] extra.

Helper functions are also available in the collective.upgrade.steps module. These helpers are all meant to be used when writing your own upgrades steps. See the collective.upgrade.steps source for details:

  • reset the site to the baseline GenericSetup profile plus default extensions
  • delete custom skin objects
  • cleanup missing skin/theme layers
  • uninstall add-ons
  • pack the ZODB pruning old revision history
  • BBB import/export steps for resource registries before the Plone 5 switch to using plone.app.registry