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Writing app scripts | docs |
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App scripts are the essential logic defining what happens when an app is install
ed, remove
d, upgrade
d, backup
ed, or restore
d. They are written in Bash which is the same stuff you type in interactive mode in a terminal, though we added a bunch of custom YunoHost functions that we call helpers
to standardize many common operations - for example adding the nginx configuration.
Note that starting from packaging v2, the logic or what happens when an app is installed, etc. is also contained partially in the resource configuration in the manifest.toml
.
In the scripts
folder of an app, you can expect to find:
manifest.toml
scripts/
- _common.sh # Some "common" definition, typically custom helpers or global variables used accross all scripts
- install # The install procedure
- remove # The remove procedure
- upgrade # The upgrade procedure
- backup # The backup procedure - in fact it only "declares" what should be backup / no actual real backup happens at this point except dumping SQL databases
- restore # The restore procedure
- change_url # Some apps do also provide a change url script, which corresponds to changing the URL endpoint of the app, which may be as simple as changing the nginx conf, or may involve significant changes in the app DB
Here is an example of the simple install script for the helloworld
app:
#!/bin/bash
# This is where we load the official YunoHost helpers
source /usr/share/yunohost/helpers
#=================================================
# DOWNLOAD, CHECK AND UNPACK SOURCE
# This is where we would usually fetch the .tar.gz archive
# from the upstream and extract it into our local install dir
#=================================================
# At the beginning of each major operation, we call this helper
# that creates a progress bar
ynh_script_progression --message="Setting up source files..." --weight=1
echo "Hello world!" > $install_dir/index.html
chown -R www-data: "$install_dir"
#=================================================
# NGINX CONFIGURATION
# This is where the nginx conf snippet for the app is created using the
# configuration template provided in conf/nginx.conf
# and added to /etc/nginx/conf.d/$domain.d/$app.conf
#=================================================
ynh_script_progression --message="Configuring nginx web server..." --weight=1
ynh_add_nginx_config
Note that the scripts are run with the set -eu
options (except for the remove script), which means that any failing command or use of non-existing variable will trigger an error and stop the script execution.
Variables available in a script context
Special variables are automatically defined in the context of a script:
$app
is the app ID. It will typically be the ID from the app's manifest.toml, for examplehelloworld
, but will behelloworld__2
,__3
etc for multi-instance installs.- During install, answers to install questions are automatically available as bash variables. For example, the
$domain
setting corresponds to thedomain
question, same for$prefered_pet
, etc... Note that - apart from special questions such asinit_main_permission
or user-provided passwords - they are also automatically saved as settings (cf next section). - During other scripts, all app settings are also loaded and automatically available.
- Note that some settings are automatically created/updated by app ressources. For example, the
install_dir
setting will automatically be available too and corresponds to typically/var/www/$app
Setting system
Application often need to store long term information in between scripts triggered by the admin. For this, YunoHost has a key-value store for each application called "setting" and is stored in /etc/yunohost/apps/$app/settings.yml
.
Apps can interact with this key value store in this way:
# Retrieve a setting into variable "db_name"
db_name=$(ynh_app_setting_get --app=$app --key=db_name)
# Update a setting
ynh_app_setting_set --app=$app --key=db_name --value=$db_name
Helper system
We call helpers a set of custom bash function created by the YunoHost project to standardize common operations accross all apps. They are all prefixed with ynh_
. The full list and documentation of these helpers is available on this page. Some of these helpers are now partially obsolete as they are now handled by the core via app resources.
Here is the list of the major ones:
ynh_app_setting_get
/ynh_app_setting_set
ynh_script_progression
ynh_setup_source
- nginx:
ynh_add_nginx_config
/ynh_remove_nginx_config
- php:
ynh_add_fpm_config
/ynh_remove_fpm_config
- systemd:
ynh_add_systemd_config
/ynh_remove_systemd_config
- fail2ban:
ynh_add_fail2ban_config
/ynh_remove_fail2ban_config
- custom:
ynh_add_config
- nodejs:
ynh_install_nodejs
/ynh_use_nodejs
ynh_exec_warn_less
ynh_local_curl
ynh_secure_remove
ynh_backup
/ynh_restore_file
Configuration/template system
App scripts will often need to create a bunch of configuration files.
Configuration templates are canonically stored provided in the conf/
folder of the app, such as nginx.conf
, extra_php-fpm.conf
, systemd.conf
, or some-custom-app-conf.env
...
In these templates, you can use the syntax __FOOBAR__
which will automatically be replaced by the variable $foobar
during runtime, when the conf is installed via the ynh_add_*_config
helpers.
For example, an app's NGINX conf snippet may look like:
# The next line starting with '#sub_path_only' is automatically uncommented only when $path is not /
#sub_path_only rewrite ^__PATH__$ __PATH__/ permanent;
location __PATH__/ {
alias __INSTALL_DIR__/;
# Some headers and tweaks
}
App sources
App scripts will often need to download the upsteam app sources to be deployed in the install dir, via ynh_setup_source
.
The ynh_setup_source
is coupled to another conf file, usually conf/app.src
which describes where to download the sources, how to check integrity, and how to extract the source.
For example, this is an app.src
for wordpress:
SOURCE_URL=https://downloads.wordpress.org/release/wordpress-6.1.1.zip # The url of the sources
SOURCE_SUM=088280b34aebc7331693e729d8e6b05eb8b9998c.... # The sha256 checksum
SOURCE_SUM_PRG=sha256sum
SOURCE_FORMAT=zip # The format is zip
SOURCE_IN_SUBDIR=true # This is wether or not the sources are directly in the install root
SOURCE_EXTRACT=true # (yes, we want to extract the zip)