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OSGi Installer

Overview

The OSGi installer is a central service for handling installs, updates and uninstall of "artifacts". By default, the installer supports bundles and has an extension for handling configurations for the OSGi configuration admin.

Apache Sling OSGI Installer Diagram

The OSGi installer itself is "just" the central service managing the tasks and states of the artifacts. The artifacts can be provided through various providers, e.g. through a file system provider reading artifacts from configured directories or the jcr provider reading artifacts from a JCR repository.

A provider is just scanning for artifacts and their removal. It informs the OSGi installer about new artifacts and removed artifacts. The provider itself has usually no knowledge about the contents of an artifact. It does not know about bundles, configurations etc.

As the OSGi installer itself is not performing the actual install, update or removal of an artifact, its possible to install transformers and installer factories. A transformer inspects the artifacts and tries to detect its type. By default, detecting of bundles and configurations is supported. The final service is an installer factory creating the actual task, like install this bundle, update that bundle etc.

It's possible to add own providers, transformers and installer factories to support custom scenarios.

API

The installer API is defined by the org.apache.sling.installer.api package of the org.apache.sling.installer.core module. The main interface is the OsgiInstaller with which installable resources can be registered.

The [installer integration tests][1] module can be useful to understand the details of how the installer works.

Artifact Handling

Once an artifact is detected by a transformer, it gets a unique id. By default a bundle gets the symbolic name as the unique identifier and a configuration the PID. In addition to this id, an artifact gets a priority information from the provider. The priority is used if an artifact with the same id is provided several times from different locations. For example if a file system provider is scanning two directories and an artifact with the same id (like a configuration) is added to both directories, one should have precedence over the other. This is handled by the priority.

Artifacts with the same unique id are grouped and then sorted by priority and maybe other artifact dependent metadata like the bundle version. Only the first artifact in this sorted group is tried to be applied!

Bundle Handling

In general, the OSGi installer always tries to install the highest version of a bundle if several bundles with the same symbolic name are provided. In this case higher version wins over priority. If an installed bundle is removed by a provider, for example deleted in the repository, the OSGi installer uninstall the bundle. If a bundle is removed from a provider which is currently not installed, this has no effect at all. If an installed bundle is removed and another version of this bundle is provided (a lower version), than this one is installed instead. This is basically a downgrade of the bundle. If a bundle is installed and a higher version is provided, an upgrade is performed. If an installed bundle is managed via any other OSGi tooling, like uninstalling it through the web console, the OSGi installer does no action at all!

If a failure occurs during bundle installation or update, the OSGi installer will retry this as soon as another bundle has been installed. The common use case is an application installation with several bundles where one bundle depends on another. As they are installed in arbitrary order, this mechanism ensures that in the end all bundles are properly wired and installed.

When all artifacts have been processed (either install, update or delete), a package refresh is automatically called.

Versions and Snapshots

The OSGi installer asumes that a symbolic name and version (not a snapshot version) uniquely identifies a bundle. Obviously this is a common development requirement that a released version of an artifact never changes over time. Therefore, once a bundle with a specific version is installed, it will not be reinstalled if the corresponding artifact changes. For example, if bundle A with version 1.0 is put into the JCR repository, it gets installed. If now this jar in the repository is overwritten either with the same contents or with a different one, and this new artifact has again A as the symbolic name and version set to 1.0, nothing will happen as this exact bundle is already installed.

During development, SNAPSHOT versions should be used, like 1.0.0-SNAPSHOT (using the Maven convention). If a bundle with a snapshot version is changed, it gets updated by the OSGI installer.

Start Level Handling

The OSGi installer supports handling of start levels for bundles. If the provided bundle artifacts contain a start level information the bundle is installed with that start level, otherwise the default start level is used. Therefore, for initial provisioning to make use of start levels, the OSGi installer and the corresponding provider (see below) should run at a very low start level, probably at 1. This ensure that the bundles with a start level are started with respect to the start level.

When an update of bundles is performed through the installer, by default the installer stays in the current start level and updates the bundles. However, if bundles at low start levels are affected, this might result in a lot of churn going on. Therefore, the OSGi installer can be configured to use a more intelligent start level handling:

Plugins

Factories

An installer factory provides support for a specific artifact type, like a configuration or a deployment package etc.

Providers

A provider provides artifacts, e.g. by scanning a directory or a database etc.

Health Check

The OSGi installer provides a Sling Health Check which validates that the processed OSGi installer resources have the correct state (SLING-5888). By default it will only check resources with a URL prefix jcrinstall:/apps/, so only the resources being provided through the JCR Installer Provider initially located below the repository resource /apps/ are considered. The health check will fail in the following cases:

Bundles Installation Failure

The checked bundle was not installed because it has been installed in a newer version through some other means (e.g. manually through the Felix Web Console or by another provider. For further details please review the OSGi Installer console at /system/console/osgi-installer and check for all bundles with the given symbolic name (=OSGi installers resource id) and the according URL.

Configuration Installation Failure

The checked configuration was not installed because it has either been overwritten manually in the Felix Web Console or is installed by some non-checked provider (which has a higher priority). To revert manually overwritten configurations just go to /system/console/configMgr and delete the according configuration. That way the OSGi installer should automatically create a new configuration for the same PID based on the configuration provided by some provider with the highest prio. In case another non-checked provider has provided already a configuration you can see from where it has been installed by looking at the OSGi Installer console at /system/console/osgi-installer and look for all configurations with the given PID.

Rev. 1756615 by kwin on Wed, 17 Aug 2016 11:17:54 +0000
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