Single server setup. In this procedure, we'll assume that you are upgrading on the
same server where your existing TeamForge
17.4 site is running.
The following instructions are valid for both RHEL/CentOS 6.9/7.3 platforms. Specific steps, if
applicable only for a particular RHEL/CentOS platform, are called out
explicitly.
Before you begin:
- TeamForge 17.8 supports
both RHEL/CentOS 6.9 and 7.3. See TeamForge installation requirements
- For the ETL service to run as expected in a distributed TeamForge
installation, all servers must have the same time zone.
- While you can run both EventQ and TeamForge on the same server, CollabNet
recommends such an approach only for testing purposes. It's always
recommended to run EventQ on a separate server for optimal scalability. See
EventQ installation requirements.
- Installing or upgrading TeamForge needs root privileges.
You must log on as root or use a root shell to install or upgrade
TeamForge.
- In a distributed setup, stop TeamForge services on all the servers while
upgrading to TeamForge 17.8.
- Reset the PASSWORD_CONTROL_EFFECTIVE_DATE token while
upgrading to TeamForge 17.8. If not reset, the Password Control Kit (PCK)
disables, deletes or expires user accounts immediately.
In this setup, all the following services run on a single RHEL/CentOS
6.9/
7.3 server (we call this
server-01).
- TeamForge Application Server (ctfcore)
- Codesearch Server (codesearch)
- Mail Server (mail)
- Database Server (ctfcore-database and
ctfcore-datamart)
- ETL Server (etl)
- Git Integration Server
(gerrit
and
gerrit-database)
- SCM Integration Server (subversion and
cvs)
- Search Server (search)
- TeamForge EventQ Server (eventq, mongodb, redis
and rabbitmq)
Do the following on the TeamForge Application Server (server-01)
-
Back up all your custom event handlers and remove all the
event handler JAR files before starting your TeamForge 17.8 upgrade process.
-
Go to .
-
Click System Tools from the
Projects menu.
-
Click Customizations.
-
Select the custom event handler and click
Delete.
Important: Post upgrade, you can add custom event handlers
again from the backup while making sure that you don't have SOAP50
(deprecated) library used.
-
Uninstall hotfixes and add-ons, if any, installed on your site.
-
If you have Review Board installed,
uninstall it.
- cd /opt/collabnet/RBInstaller-17.4.7
- python ./install.py
-u
-
Stop TeamForge.
If you are upgrading from TeamForge 16.7 or earlier releases:
- /etc/init.d/collabnet stop all
If you are upgrading from TeamForge 16.10 or later releases:
- /opt/collabnet/teamforge/bin/teamforge
stop
-
Make sure EventQ services have been stopped.
If you are upgrading from TeamForge 16.3 to TeamForge 17.8 (or later):
- /etc/init.d/orchestrate stop
If you are upgrading from TeamForge 17.1 (or earlier) to TeamForge 17.8 (or later):
- /etc/init.d/eventq stop
- /etc/init.d/collabnet-rabbitmq-server
stop
- /etc/init.d/collabnet-mongod stop
Use the following command otherwise:
- /opt/collabnet/teamforge/bin/teamforge
stop
-
No backup is required for same hardware upgrades. However, you can create a
backup as a precaution. See Back up and restore TeamForge and EventQ to
learn more about backing up TeamForge
and EventQ database and file system.
-
Upgrade the operating system packages.
-
Configure your TeamForge installation repository.
- TeamForge installation repository configuration for sites with internet
access
-
Contact the CollabNet Support and download the TeamForge
17.8
installation repository package to /tmp.
-
Install the repository package.
- yum install -y
/tmp/collabnet-teamforge-repo-17.8-1.noarch.rpm
-
Refresh your repository cache.
- TeamForge installation repository configuration for sites without
internet access
-
Contact the CollabNet Support to get the auxiliary installer package for
TeamForge
17.8
disconnected installation and save it in
/tmp.
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux/CentOS
6.9 64 bit RPM package: CTF-Disconnected-media-17.8.655-104.rhel6.x86_64.rpm
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux/CentOS
7.3 64 bit RPM package: CTF-Disconnected-media-17.8.655-104.rhel7.x86_64.rpm
Note: In
addition to the above CentOS
7.3 64 bit RPM package, you must get the following CentOS
7.3 compatibility RPM, which is required for TeamForge
17.8
disconnected media installation on CentOS
7.3 profile:
compat-ctf-dc-media-1.1-1.el7.noarch.rpm.
-
Unpack the disconnected installation package.
-
Unpack the
compat-ctf-dc-media-1.1-1.el7.noarch.rpm
package if you are installing TeamForge
17.8
on CentOS
7.3.
- rpm -ivh
compat-ctf-dc-media-1.1-1.el7.noarch.rpm
-
Note: If the Red Hat Enterprise Linux/CentOS installation DVD is mounted already, skip the following instructions.
If not, mount the DVD.
Mount the Red Hat Enterprise Linux/CentOS installation DVD. The DVD contains the necessary software and
utilities required for installing TeamForge without internet access.
In the following commands, replace "cdrom" with the identifier for
your server's CD/DVD drive, if necessary.
- cd /media/
- mkdir cdrom
- mount /dev/cdrom ./cdrom/
If there are any spaces in the automount, unmount it first and mount
it as a filepath, with no spaces.
-
Create a yum configuration file that points to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux/CentOS installation DVD.
- vi /etc/yum.repos.d/cdrom.repo
Here's a sample yum configuration
file.[RHEL-CDROM]
name=RHEL CDRom
baseurl=file:///media/cdrom/Server/
gpgfile=file:///media/cdrom/RPM-GPG-KEY-redhat-release
enabled=1
gpgcheck=0
-
Verify your yum configuration files.
- yum list httpd
- yum list apr
-
Install the following application packages.
-
TeamForge: To install the
TeamForge application
packages run the following command:
- yum install teamforge CN-eventq collabnet-nginx
collabnet-passenger
Attention: TeamForge installer has been optimized quite a
bit. It's likely that you might come across a lot of warning messages while
upgrading from TeamForge 8.2 (or earlier)
to TeamForge
17.8 on the same hardware (when
you run the yum install teamforge command). You can safely
ignore such warning messages and proceed with the upgrade.
Important: The following warning message,
which shows up during TeamForge install/upgrade (while installing
CN-eventq rpm) can be safely
ignored.
Don't run Bundler as root. Bundler can ask for sudo if it is needed, and
installing your bundle as root will break this application for all non-root
users on this machine.
...
...
Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory - git
...
...
Run
the following command to install the Binary application packages.
This is required if and only if you are upgrading from TeamForge
17.1 (or earlier) to TeamForge 17.8 (or later).
-
Set up your site's master configuration file.
-
Set up your site options. See Site options change log for a
list of site option changes. While upgrading to a latest TeamForge
release, make sure that obsolete site option tokens, if any, are removed
from the site-options.conf file of the TeamForge
version you are upgrading to.
- vi /opt/collabnet/teamforge/etc/site-options.conf
-
Configure the services and domain name tokens.
server-01:SERVICES=ctfcore ctfcore-database ctfcore-datamart mail etl search codesearch
subversion cvs eventq redis mongodb rabbitmq cliserver gerrit gerrit-database binary binary-database
reviewboard reviewboard-database reviewboard-adapter
server-01:PUBLIC_FQDN=my.app.domain.com
Note: You may remove the identifiers of components you do not want. For
example, remove binary and
binary-database if you are not planning to
install binary repository managers such as Nexus.
-
Set the MONGODB_APP_DATABASE_NAME token with
EventQ’s database name in the site-options.conf
file. Do this if and only if you are upgrading from TeamForge 17.1 or
earlier to TeamForge 17.4 or later.
MONGODB_APP_DATABASE_NAME=orchestrate
-
If the token REQUIRE_PASSWORD_SECURITY is enabled,
then set this PASSWORD_CONTROL_EFFECTIVE_DATE token
with a future date. If already set, reset the
PASSWORD_CONTROL_EFFECTIVE_DATE with a future
date while upgrading to TeamForge 17.8.
CAUTION:
The Password Control Kit (PCK) disables, deletes or
expires user accounts that don't meet the password security
requirements starting from the date set for the
PASSWORD_CONTROL_EFFECTIVE_DATE token. If a
date is not set, the PCK disables, deletes or expires user accounts
immediately. You must set (or reset if required) this token with a
future date. For example, you can use the following logic and pick a
future date:
PASSWORD_CONTROL_EFFECTIVE_DATE=<the day
on which TeamForge upgrade is done> +
PASSWORD_WARNING_PERIOD. See
PASSWORD_CONTROL_EFFECTIVE_DATE for more
information.
-
Attention: SSL is
enabled by default and a self-signed certificate is auto-generated. Use
the following tokens to adjust this behavior. To generate the SSL
certificates, see
Generate SSL certificates.
Have the custom SSL certificate and private key for custom SSL
certificate in place and provide their absolute paths in these tokens.
SSL_CHAIN_FILE (intermediate certificate) is
optional.
SSL_CERT_FILE=
SSL_KEY_FILE=
SSL_CHAIN_FILE=
Important: All SSL certificates including self-signed
certificates are added automatically.
-
TeamForge 7.1 and later
support automatic password creation. See AUTO_DATA for more information.
-
If you have LDAP set up for external authentication, you must set the
“REQUIRE_USER_PASSWORD_CHANGE” site options token to
false.
-
Make sure the PostgreSQL tokens in the
site-options.conf file are set as recommended
in the following topic: What are the right PostgreSQL settings for my site?
-
Configure the JBOSS_JAVA_OPTS site-options.conf
token. See JBOSS_JAVA_OPTS.
Important: All JVM parameters but
-Xms1024m
and
-Xmx2048m have been hard-coded in the TeamForge core
application. You cannot manually configure any of the following default JVM
parameters in the
site-options.conf file.
- -XX:+UseParallelGC
- -XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=512m
- -XX:ReservedCodeCacheSize=128M
- -server
- -XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError
- -XX:HeapDumpPath=/tmp -verbose:gc
- -XX:+PrintCodeCache
- -Djsse.enableSNIExtension=false
- -Dsun.rmi.dgc.client.gcInterval=600000
- -Dsun.rmi.dgc.server.gcInterval=600000
- -Djava.security.egd=file:/dev/urandom
- -Djava.awt.headless=true.
When you change the default value of a JVM parameter such as
"-XX:HeapDumpPath", the JBoss runtime parameters include both the user defined
and default values for the JVM parameter. However, JBoss runs with the default
value and ignores any user defined value.
-
Save the site-options.conf file.
-
Provision
services.
Note:
TeamForge 17.4 (and later) installer expects the system locale to be
LANG=en_US.UTF-8. TeamForge "provision" command fails otherwise.
-
Run the /var/lib/pgsql/analyze_new_cluster.sh script. This
is required if and only if you are upgrading from TeamForge 17.1 (or earlier) to
TeamForge 17.8 (or later).
- su -
postgres -c
"/var/lib/pgsql/analyze_new_cluster.sh"
-
If you have CVS integrations, synchronize permissions post upgrade. See, Synchronize TeamForge source control integrations.
-
Verify TeamForge installation.
-
Log on to the TeamForge web application using the default Admin
credentials.
- Username: "admin"
- Password: "admin"
-
If your site has custom branding, verify that your branding changes
still work as intended.
See Customize TeamForge
.
-
Let your site's users know they've been upgraded.
See Create a Side-wide Broadcast.
-
Remove the backup files, if any, after the TeamForge site is up and running as
expected. Remove the repository and the file system backup from the
/tmp/backup_dir directory.
- TeamForge Avatar display issue on
RHEL/CentOS 6.9
- TeamForge Avatar image is not
displayed properly post Review Board installation on RHEL/CentOS 6.9. Run
the following commands to work around this issue:
- yum erase python-imaging
- yum install teamforge
- service httpd
restart