10 Releases
This section is to be read with the rel(4)
, systools(3)
, and script(4)
manual pages in SASL.
10.1 Release Concept
When you have written one or more applications, you might want to create a complete system with these applications and a subset of the Erlang/OTP applications. This is called a release.
To do this, create a release resource file
that defines which applications are included in the release.
The release resource file is used to generate boot scripts
and release packages
. A system that is transferred to and installed at another site is called a target system. How to use a release package to create a target system is described in System Principles.
10.2 Release Resource File
To define a release, create a release resource file, or in short a .rel
file. In the file, specify the name and version of the release, which ERTS version it is based on, and which applications it consists of:
{release, {Name,Vsn}, {erts, EVsn}, [{Application1, AppVsn1}, ... {ApplicationN, AppVsnN}]}.
Name
, Vsn
, EVsn
, and AppVsn
are strings.
The file must be named Rel.rel
, where Rel
is a unique name.
Each Application
(atom) and AppVsn
is the name and version of an application included in the release. The minimal release based on Erlang/OTP consists of the Kernel and STDLIB applications, so these applications must be included in the list.
If the release is to be upgraded, it must also include the SASL application.
Example: A release of ch_app
from Applications
has the following .app
file:
{application, ch_app, [{description, "Channel allocator"}, {vsn, "1"}, {modules, [ch_app, ch_sup, ch3]}, {registered, [ch3]}, {applications, [kernel, stdlib, sasl]}, {mod, {ch_app,[]}} ]}.
The .rel
file must also contain kernel
, stdlib
, and sasl
, as these applications are required by ch_app
. The file is called ch_rel-1.rel
:
{release, {"ch_rel", "A"}, {erts, "5.3"}, [{kernel, "2.9"}, {stdlib, "1.12"}, {sasl, "1.10"}, {ch_app, "1"}] }.
10.3 Generating Boot Scripts
systools
in the SASL application includes tools to build and check releases. The functions read the rel
and .app
files and perform syntax and dependency checks. The systools:make_script/1,2
function is used to generate a boot script (see System Principles):
1> systools:make_script("ch_rel-1", [local]). ok
This creates a boot script, both the readable version, ch_rel-1.script
, and the binary version, ch_rel-1.boot
, used by the runtime system.
-
"ch_rel-1"
is the name of the.rel
file, minus the extension. -
local
is an option that means that the directories where the applications are found are used in the boot script, instead of$ROOT/lib
($ROOT
is the root directory of the installed release).
This is a useful way to test a generated boot script locally.
When starting Erlang/OTP using the boot script, all applications from the .rel
file are automatically loaded and started:
% erl -boot ch_rel-1 Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 5.3 Eshell V5.3 (abort with ^G) 1> =PROGRESS REPORT==== 13-Jun-2003::12:01:15 === supervisor: {local,sasl_safe_sup} started: [{pid,<0.33.0>}, {name,alarm_handler}, {mfa,{alarm_handler,start_link,[]}}, {restart_type,permanent}, {shutdown,2000}, {child_type,worker}] ... =PROGRESS REPORT==== 13-Jun-2003::12:01:15 === application: sasl started_at: nonode@nohost ... =PROGRESS REPORT==== 13-Jun-2003::12:01:15 === application: ch_app started_at: nonode@nohost
10.4 Creating a Release Package
The systools:make_tar/1,2
function takes a .rel
file as input and creates a zipped tar file with the code for the specified applications, a release package:
1> systools:make_script("ch_rel-1"). ok 2> systools:make_tar("ch_rel-1"). ok
The release package by default contains:
- The
.app
files - The
.rel
file - The object code for all applications, structured according to the
application directory structure
- The binary boot script renamed to
start.boot
% tar tf ch_rel-1.tar lib/kernel-2.9/ebin/kernel.app lib/kernel-2.9/ebin/application.beam ... lib/stdlib-1.12/ebin/stdlib.app lib/stdlib-1.12/ebin/beam_lib.beam ... lib/sasl-1.10/ebin/sasl.app lib/sasl-1.10/ebin/sasl.beam ... lib/ch_app-1/ebin/ch_app.app lib/ch_app-1/ebin/ch_app.beam lib/ch_app-1/ebin/ch_sup.beam lib/ch_app-1/ebin/ch3.beam releases/A/start.boot releases/A/ch_rel-1.rel releases/ch_rel-1.rel
A new boot script was generated, without the local
option set, before the release package was made. In the release package, all application directories are placed under lib
. You do not know where the release package will be installed, so no hard-coded absolute paths are allowed.
The release resource file mysystem.rel
is duplicated in the tar file. Originally, this file was only stored in the releases
directory to make it possible for the release_handler
to extract this file separately. After unpacking the tar file, release_handler
would automatically copy the file to releases/FIRST
. However, sometimes the tar file is unpacked without involving the release_handler
(for example, when unpacking the first target system) and the file is therefore now instead duplicated in the tar file so no manual copying is necessary.
If a relup
file and/or a system configuration file called sys.config
, or a sys.config.src
, is found, these files are also included in the release package. See Release Handling
.
Options can be set to make the release package include source code and the ERTS binary as well.
For information on how to install the first target system, using a release package, see System Principles. For information on how to install a new release package in an existing system, see Release Handling
.
10.5 Directory Structure
The directory structure for the code installed by the release handler from a release package is as follows:
$ROOT/lib/App1-AVsn1/ebin /priv /App2-AVsn2/ebin /priv ... /AppN-AVsnN/ebin /priv /erts-EVsn/bin /releases/Vsn /bin
-
lib
- Application directories -
erts-EVsn/bin
- Erlang runtime system executables -
releases/Vsn
-.rel
file and boot scriptstart.boot
; if present in the release package,relup
and/orsys.config
orsys.config.src
-
bin
- Top-level Erlang runtime system executables
Applications are not required to be located under directory $ROOT/lib
. Several installation directories, which contain different parts of a system, can thus exist. For example, the previous example can be extended as follows:
$SECOND_ROOT/.../SApp1-SAVsn1/ebin /priv /SApp2-SAVsn2/ebin /priv ... /SAppN-SAVsnN/ebin /priv $THIRD_ROOT/TApp1-TAVsn1/ebin /priv /TApp2-TAVsn2/ebin /priv ... /TAppN-TAVsnN/ebin /priv
$SECOND_ROOT
and $THIRD_ROOT
are introduced as variables
in the call to the systools:make_script/2
function.
Disk-Less and/or Read-Only Clients
If a complete system consists of disk-less and/or read-only client nodes, a clients
directory is to be added to the $ROOT
directory. A read-only node is a node with a read-only file system.
The clients
directory is to have one subdirectory per supported client node. The name of each client directory is to be the name of the corresponding client node. As a minimum, each client directory is to contain the bin
and releases
subdirectories. These directories are used to store information about installed releases and to appoint the current release to the client. The $ROOT
directory thus contains the following:
$ROOT/... /clients/ClientName1/bin /releases/Vsn /ClientName2/bin /releases/Vsn ... /ClientNameN/bin /releases/Vsn
This structure is to be used if all clients are running the same type of Erlang machine. If there are clients running different types of Erlang machines, or on different operating systems, the clients
directory can be divided into one subdirectory per type of Erlang machine. Alternatively, one $ROOT
can be set up per type of machine. For each type, some of the directories specified for the $ROOT
directory are to be included:
$ROOT/... /clients/Type1/lib /erts-EVsn /bin /ClientName1/bin /releases/Vsn /ClientName2/bin /releases/Vsn ... /ClientNameN/bin /releases/Vsn ... /TypeN/lib /erts-EVsn /bin ...
With this structure, the root directory for clients of Type1
is $ROOT/clients/Type1
.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.