2 KiB
2 KiB
Automatic update
An update script in your mailcow-dockerized directory will take care of updates.
But use it with caution! If you think you made a lot of changes to the mailcow code, you should use the manual update guide below.
Run the update script:
./update.sh
If it needs to, it will ask you how you wish to proceed. Merge errors will be reported. Some minor conflicts will be auto-corrected (in favour for the mailcow: dockerized repository code).
Options
# Options can be combined
# - Check for updates and show changes
./update.sh --check
# Do not try to update docker-compose, **make sure to use the latest docker-compose available**
./update.sh --no-update-compose
# - Do not start mailcow after applying an update
./update.sh --skip-start
# - Force update (unattended, but unsupported, use at own risk)
./update.sh --force
# - Run garbage collector to cleanup old image tags and exit
./update.sh --gc
# - Update with merge strategy option "ours" instead of "theirs"
# This will **solve conflicts** when merging in favor for your local changes and should be avoided. Local changes will always be kept, unless we changed file XY, too.
./update.sh --ours
# - Don't update, but prefetch images and exit
./update.sh --prefetch
I forgot what I changed before running update.sh
See git log --pretty=oneline | grep -i "before update"
, you will have an output similar to this:
22cd00b5e28893ef9ddef3c2b5436453cc5223ab Before update on 2020-09-28_19_25_45
dacd4fb9b51e9e1c8a37d84485b92ffaf6c59353 Before update on 2020-08-07_13_31_31
Run git diff 22cd00b5e28893ef9ddef3c2b5436453cc5223ab
to see what changed.
Can I role back?
Yes.
See the topic above, instead of a diff, you run checkout:
docker-compose down
# Replace commit ID 22cd00b5e28893ef9ddef3c2b5436453cc5223ab by your ID
git checkout 22cd00b5e28893ef9ddef3c2b5436453cc5223ab
docker-compose pull
docker-compose up -d
Footnotes
- There is no release cycle regarding updates.