#!/bin/bash set -e . /usr/share/debconf/confmodule if [ -n "$DEBIAN_SCRIPT_DEBUG" ]; then set -v -x; DEBIAN_SCRIPT_TRACE=1; fi ${DEBIAN_SCRIPT_TRACE:+ echo "#42#DEBUG# RUNNING $0 $*" 1>&2 } export PATH=$PATH:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin # This command can be used as pipe to syslog. With "-s" it also logs to stderr. ERR_LOGGER="logger -p daemon.err -t mariadb-server.postinst -i" # Specify syslog tag name so it is clear the entry came from this postinst script. # This will make an error in a logged command immediately apparent by aborting # the install, rather than failing silently and leaving a broken install. set -o pipefail case "$1" in configure) # This is needed because mariadb-install-db removes the pid file in /run # and because changed configuration options should take effect immediately. # In case the server wasn't running at all it should be ok if the stop # script fails. I can't tell at this point because of the cleaned /run. set +e; invoke-rc.d mariadb stop; set -e # An existing /etc/init.d/mysql might be on the system if there was a # previous MySQL or MariaDB installation, since /etc/init.d files are # considered config files and stay around even after the package is removed. # # The install step of this package adds a new /etc/init.d/mariadb file. As # we also want to ensure that there are no old (and potentially outdated) # versions of /etc/init.d/mysql we simply replace it using a copy of the # latest 'mariadb' file. This has also the added benefit that anything that # invokes traditional sysv init with either 'mysql' or 'mariadb' will end up # controlling this newly installed MariaDB, and thus we maintain better # backwards compatibility. # # Note that the 'Provides' line is also updated to avoid 'insserv' exiting # on failure (when it is run by update-rc.d) because of duplicate service # names. if [ -f "/etc/init.d/mysql" ] && [ -f "/etc/init.d/mariadb" ] then # Copy init file and rename the service name and filename on the fly sed 's/Provides: mariadb/Provides: mysql/g' /etc/init.d/mariadb > /etc/init.d/mysql # NOTE: Number of spaces/tabs is important here! # Confirm if the sed worked if ! grep --quiet "Provides: mysql" /etc/init.d/mysql then # If not, then delete the file to avoid failures later on rm -f /etc/init.d/mysql echo "Warning! Failed creating a mysql named copy of mariadb init.d file" fi fi mysql_statedir=/usr/share/mariadb mysql_datadir=/var/lib/mysql mysql_logdir=/var/log/mysql mysql_cfgdir=/etc/mysql mysql_upgradedir=/var/lib/mysql-upgrade # If the following symlink exists, it is a preserved copy the old data dir # created by the preinst script during a upgrade that would have otherwise # been replaced by an empty mysql dir. This should restore it. for dir in DATADIR LOGDIR; do if [ "$dir" = "DATADIR" ]; then targetdir=$mysql_datadir else targetdir=$mysql_logdir fi savelink="$mysql_upgradedir/$dir.link" if [ -L "$savelink" ]; then # If the targetdir was a symlink before we upgraded it is supposed # to be either still be present or not existing anymore now. if [ -L "$targetdir" ]; then rm "$savelink" elif [ ! -d "$targetdir" ]; then mv "$savelink" "$targetdir" else # this should never even happen, but just in case... mysql_tmp=$(mktemp -d -t mysql-symlink-restore-XXXXXX) echo "this is very strange! see $mysql_tmp/README..." >&2 mv "$targetdir" "$mysql_tmp" cat << EOF > "$mysql_tmp/README" If you're reading this, it's most likely because you had replaced /var/lib/mysql with a symlink, then upgraded to a new version of mysql, and then dpkg removed your symlink (see #182747 and others). The mysql packages noticed that this happened, and as a workaround have restored it. However, because /var/lib/mysql seems to have been re-created in the meantime, and because we don't want to rm -rf something we don't know as much about, we are going to leave this unexpected directory here. If your database looks normal, and this is not a symlink to your database, you should be able to blow this all away. EOF fi fi rmdir $mysql_upgradedir 2>/dev/null || true done # Upgrading from mysql.com needs might have the root user as auth_socket. # auto.cnf is a sign of a mysql install, that doesn't exist in mariadb. # We use lsof to protect against concurrent access by mysqld (mariadb has # its own projection). We make sure we're not doing this on a MySQL-8.0 # directory. # This direct update is needed to enable an authentication mechanism to # perform mariadb-upgrade, (MDEV-22678). To keep the impact minimal, we # skip innodb and set key-buffer-size to 0 as it isn't reused. if [ -f "$mysql_datadir"/auto.cnf ] && [ -f "$mysql_datadir"/mysql/user.MYD ] && [ ! lsof -nt "$mysql_datadir"/mysql/user.MYD > /dev/null ] && [ ! -f "$mysql_datadir"/undo_001 ]; then echo "UPDATE mysql.user SET plugin='unix_socket' WHERE plugin='auth_socket';" | mariadbd --skip-innodb --key_buffer_size=0 --default-storage-engine=MyISAM --bootstrap 2> /dev/null fi # Ensure the existence and right permissions for the database and # log files. Use mkdir option 'Z' to create with correct SELinux context. if [ ! -d "$mysql_statedir" ] && [ ! -L "$mysql_statedir" ]; then mkdir -Z "$mysql_statedir"; fi if [ ! -d "$mysql_datadir" ] && [ ! -L "$mysql_datadir" ]; then mkdir -Z "$mysql_datadir" ; fi if [ ! -d "$mysql_logdir" ] && [ ! -L "$mysql_logdir" ]; then mkdir -Z "$mysql_logdir" ; fi # When creating an ext3 jounal on an already mounted filesystem like e.g. # /var/lib/mysql, you get a .journal file that is not modifiable by chown. # The mysql_statedir must not be writable by the mysql user under any # circumstances as it contains scripts that are executed by root. set +e chown -R 0:0 $mysql_statedir find $mysql_datadir ! -uid "$(id -u mysql)" -print0 | xargs -0 -r chown mysql chown -R mysql:adm $mysql_logdir chmod 2750 $mysql_logdir set -e ## Set the correct filesystem ownership for the PAM v2 plugin # eg. /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/mysql/plugin/auth_pam_tool_dir/ # NOTE! This is security sensitive, don't allow for a race condition. # # 1. Drop privileges of directory # -> At this point only root can see and execute auth_pam_tool chmod 0700 /usr/lib/mysql/plugin/auth_pam_tool_dir # # 2. Make binary setuid # -> At this point only root can run the setuid binary so no escalation here yet chmod 04755 /usr/lib/mysql/plugin/auth_pam_tool_dir/auth_pam_tool # # 3. Allow user 'mysql' to see and execute auth_pam_tool # -> Now user mysql owns the directory and can see and execute the binary inside # -> Since the binary is setuid, user mysql gets limited root powers here to # run the PAM authetications, which need root (e.g. to validate passwords # against /etc/shadow) chown mysql /usr/lib/mysql/plugin/auth_pam_tool_dir # This is important to avoid dataloss when there is a removed # mysql-server version from Woody lying around which used the same # data directory and then somehow gets purged by the admin. db_set mariadb-server/postrm_remove_database false || true # Clean up old flags before setting new one rm -f $mysql_datadir/debian-*.flag # Flag data dir to avoid downgrades touch "$mysql_datadir/debian-__MARIADB_MAJOR_VER__.flag" # initiate databases. Output is not allowed by debconf :-( # This will fail if we are upgrading an existing database; in this case # mariadb-upgrade, called from the /etc/mysql/debian-start script, will # handle things. # Debian: beware of the bashisms... # Debian: can safely run on upgrades with existing databases set +e bash /usr/bin/mariadb-install-db --rpm --cross-bootstrap --user=mysql \ --disable-log-bin --skip-test-db 2>&1 | \ $ERR_LOGGER set -e # On new installations root user can connect via unix_socket. # But on upgrades, scripts rely on debian-sys-maint user and # credentials in /etc/mysql/debian.cnf # All tools use --defaults-file=/etc/mysql/debian.cnf # And while it's not needed for new installations, we keep using # --defaults-file option for tools (for the sake of upgrades) # and thus need /etc/mysql/debian.cnf to exist, even if it's empty. # In the long run the goal is to obsolete this file. dc=$mysql_cfgdir/debian.cnf; if [ ! -d "$mysql_cfgdir" ]; then install -o 0 -g 0 -m 0755 -d $mysql_cfgdir fi if [ ! -e "$dc" ]; then cat /dev/null > $dc echo "# THIS FILE IS OBSOLETE. STOP USING IT IF POSSIBLE." >>$dc echo "# This file exists only for backwards compatibility for" >>$dc echo "# tools that run '--defaults-file=/etc/mysql/debian.cnf'" >>$dc echo "# and have root level access to the local filesystem." >>$dc echo "# With those permissions one can run 'mariadb' directly" >>$dc echo "# anyway thanks to unix socket authentication and hence" >>$dc echo "# this file is useless. See package README for more info." >>$dc echo "[client]" >>$dc echo "host = localhost" >>$dc echo "user = root" >>$dc echo "[mysql_upgrade]" >>$dc echo "host = localhost" >>$dc echo "user = root" >>$dc echo "# THIS FILE WILL BE REMOVED IN A FUTURE DEBIAN RELEASE." >>$dc fi # Keep it only root-readable, as it always was chown 0:0 $dc chmod 0600 $dc # If there is a real AppArmor profile, we reload it. # If the default empty profile is installed, then we remove any old # profile that may be loaded. # This allows upgrade from old versions (that have an apparmor profile # on by default) to work both to disable a default profile, and to keep # any profile installed and maintained by users themselves. profile="/etc/apparmor.d/usr.sbin.mariadbd" if [ -f "$profile" ] && aa-status --enabled 2>/dev/null; then if grep -q /usr/sbin/mariadbd "$profile" 2>/dev/null ; then apparmor_parser -r "$profile" || true else echo "/usr/sbin/mariadbd { }" | apparmor_parser --remove 2>/dev/null || true fi fi # The introduction of /etc/logrotate.d/mariadb has made the old config # obsolete and it needs to be disabled to prevent logrotate running twice. if [ -f /etc/logrotate.d/mysql-server ] then mv -vf /etc/logrotate.d/mysql-server /etc/logrotate.d/mysql-server.dpkg-bak fi # @TODO: Remove once buildbot.askmonty.org has been updated not to expect this file mkdir -p /etc/systemd/system/mariadb.service.d/ # Note that file cannot be empty, otherwise systemd version in Ubuntu Bionic # will think the service is masked echo "# empty placeholder" > /etc/systemd/system/mariadb.service.d/migrated-from-my.cnf-settings.conf ;; abort-upgrade|abort-remove|abort-configure) ;; triggered) if [ -d /run/systemd/system ]; then systemctl --system daemon-reload else invoke-rc.d mariadb restart fi ;; *) echo "postinst called with unknown argument '$1'" 1>&2 exit 1 ;; esac db_stop # in case invoke fails # dh_systemd_start doesn't emit anything since we still ship /etc/init.d/mariadb. # Thus MariaDB server is started via init.d script, which in turn redirects to # systemctl. If we upgrade from MySQL mysql.service may be masked, which also # means init.d script is disabled. Unmask mysql service explicitly. # Check first that the command exists, to avoid emitting any warning messages. if [ -x "$(command -v deb-systemd-helper)" ]; then deb-systemd-helper unmask mysql.service > /dev/null fi #DEBHELPER# # Modified dh_systemd_start snippet that's not added automatically if [ -d /run/systemd/system ]; then systemctl --system daemon-reload >/dev/null || true deb-systemd-invoke start mariadb.service >/dev/null || true # Modified dh_installinit snippet to only run with sysvinit elif [ -x "/etc/init.d/mariadb" ]; then if [ "$1" = "configure" ] || [ "$1" = "abort-upgrade" ]; then invoke-rc.d mariadb start || exit $? fi fi