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These upgrade instructions explain how to update an existing Linux-based Squirro installation to the current version.

Only follow these instructions if a specific Squirro release notes document references these as the correct upgrade instructions.

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Before Upgrading

Maintenance window

A Squirro upgrade requires a downtime. This is typically quite short, but will still affect user experience for a moment. As a result, upgrades to production systems should only be run in a maintenance window.

Storage vs. Cluster Nodes

Squirro distinguishes between storage and cluster nodes. These can be installed on the same server or split up. Both can also be horizontally scaled and have multiple instances. For full details see How Squirro Scales.

Independent of the setup, in the instructions below always execute all the storage node updates first, and only then do the cluster node updates. This applies independent of whether cluster and storage node are on the same system, whether they are split into one server each, or if they have multiple instances each.

Offline Repository

If you have used the offline installation, or have an internal mirror of the Squirro yum repository, please make sure this is updated prior to starting the Squirro update.

Upgrading

Storage nodes

Run these instructions on every single server that has storage nodes installed before moving on to the cluster nodes.

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# Clear all cached metadata
yum clean all

# Update Java JDK
yum update java-1.8.0-openjdk

# Update Elasticsearch
yum update elasticsearch

# Update storage node
yum update squirro-storage-node-users
yum update squirro-storage-node

Cluster nodes

Please note that user-provided custom assets which include a requirements.txt file (e.g., a custom data loader plugin) might need to re-uploaded after the upgrade if the packages they depend on (if any) do not work on Python 3.8.

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Code Block
languagebash
# Clear all cached metadata
yum clean all

# Update Java JDK
yum update java-1.8.0-openjdk

# Update cluster node
yum update squirro-cluster-node-users
yum update squirro-cluster-node

# Cleanup
yum autoremove
mv /opt/squirro/virtualenv3 /opt/squirro/virtualenv3.old
# /opt/squirro/virtualenv3.old is not needed for Squirro platform operation

# Make sure that all the Squirro packages have been updated
yum update squirro-*

At this point you will have to check if any *.rpmnew files have been created in /etc/squirro/ or /etc/nginx/conf.d/. See Configuration Conflicts for how to handle those conflicts.

Info

For example, the /etc/squirro/common.ini would need resolution if you are upgrading from a version that does not have the new pdfconversion service.

Finally, restart the services:

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systemctl restart mariadb
systemctl reload nginx
squirro_restart

And validate if everything is coming up (this may have to be run a few times until everything stabilizes):

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squirro_status
Note

The yum autoremove command can cause the Squirro systemd services not to start during a reboot. We recommend that you issue the following commands to fix this issue and reboot the system to ensure it works. This only is an issue with upgrades from 3.4 and earlier.

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This page can now be found at Upgrading Squirro on the Squirro Docs site.