#!/bin/sh
# Copyright 1999  Patrick Volkerding, Moorhead, Minnesota, USA 
# Copyright 2001, 2002, 2003  Slackware Linux, Inc., Concord, California, USA
# All rights reserved.
#
# Redistribution and use of this script, with or without modification, is
# permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
#
# 1. Redistributions of this script must retain the above copyright
#    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
#
#  THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
#  WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
#  MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO
#  EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
#  SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
#  PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS;
#  OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
#  WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
#  OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
#  ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
#
# Modified to handle either old 8.3 or new package-version-arch-build.tgz
# packages, Sat Nov 17 14:25:58 PST 2001 volkerdi
#
# Rewritten to clean out _all_ old packages of a given basename, not just
# the first one found, Thu Apr  4 01:01:05 PST 2002 volkerdi
#
# Added --install-new and --reinstall, Fri May 31 14:11:14 PDT 2002 volkerdi
# Added --dry-run, Sat Apr 26 18:13:29 PDT 2003

usage() {
 cat << EOF

Usage: upgradepkg newpackage [newpackage2 ... ]
       upgradepkg oldpackage%newpackage [oldpackage2%newpackage2 ... ]

Upgradepkg upgrades a Slackware .tgz package from an older version to a
newer one.  It does this by INSTALLING the new package onto the system, and
then REMOVING any files from the old package that aren't in the new package.
If the old and new packages have the same name, a single argument is all that
is required.  If the packages have different names, supply the name of the
old package followed by a percent symbol (%), then the name of the new package.
Do not add any extra whitespace between pairs of old/new package names.

Before upgrading a package, save any configuration files (such as in /etc)
that you wish to keep.  Sometimes these will be preserved, but it depends on
the package structure.  If you want to force new versions of the config files
to be installed, remove the old ones manually prior to running upgradepkg.

To upgrade in a directory other than / (such as /mnt):  

   ROOT=/mnt upgradepkg package.tgz

EOF
}

# Make sure there's a proper temp directory:
TMP=$ROOT/var/log/setup/tmp
# If the $TMP directory doesn't exist, create it:
if [ ! -d $TMP ]; then
  rm -rf $TMP # make sure it's not a symlink or something stupid
  mkdir $TMP
  chmod 700 $TMP # no need to leave it open
fi

# This script expects an 022 umask:
umask 022

# $ROOT defined?
if [ -d "$ROOT" ]; then
  export ROOT
fi

# --help or no args?
if [ "$1" = "" -o "$1" = "--help" -o "$1" = "-?" ]; then
  usage;
  exit 1;
fi

# Arg processing loop.  These must come before any packages are listed.
while [ 0 ]; do
  if [ "$1" = "--no-paranoia" ]; then
    # Enable --no-paranoia mode.  This is so not-recommended that we're
    # not even going to document it. ;)   If a file used to be directly
    # managed and now is moved into place, using --no-paranoia will cause
    # it to improperly disappear.  It does slightly speed things up, though.
    # Don't use it.
    NOT_PARANOID="true"
    shift 1
  elif [ "$1" = "--install-new" ]; then
    # Install packages that do not already have an installed version.
    # The usual default is to skip them.
    INSTALL_NEW="yes"
    shift 1
  elif [ "$1" = "--reinstall" ]; then
    # Reinstall packages even if the installed one is the same version.
    REINSTALL="true"
    shift 1
  elif [ "$1" = "--verbose" -o "$1" = "-v" ]; then
    # We're adding a --verbose mode that doesn't filter removepkg as much
    VERBOSE="verbose"
    shift 1
  elif [ "$1" = "--dry-run" ]; then
    # Output a report about which packages would be installed or upgraded
    # but don't actually perform the upgrades.
    DRY_RUN="true"
    shift 1
  else # no more args
    break;
  fi
done # processing args

# Here's a function to figure out the package name from one of those
# new long filenames.  We'll need this to double check the name of the
# old package.

package_name() {
  STRING=`basename $1 .tgz`
  # Check for old style package name with one segment:
  if [ "`echo $STRING | cut -f 1 -d -`" = "`echo $STRING | cut -f 2 -d -`" ]; then
    echo $STRING
  else # has more than one dash delimited segment
    # Count number of segments:
    INDEX=1
    while [ ! "`echo $STRING | cut -f $INDEX -d -`" = "" ]; do
      INDEX=`expr $INDEX + 1`
    done
    INDEX=`expr $INDEX - 1` # don't include the null value
    # If we don't have four segments, return the old-style (or out of spec) package name:
    if [ "$INDEX" = "2" -o "$INDEX" = "3" ]; then
      echo $STRING
    else # we have four or more segments, so we'll consider this a new-style name:
      NAME=`expr $INDEX - 3`
      NAME="`echo $STRING | cut -f 1-$NAME -d -`"
      echo $NAME
      # cruft for later ;)
      #VER=`expr $INDEX - 2`
      #VER="`echo $STRING | cut -f $VER -d -`"
      #ARCH=`expr $INDEX - 1`
      #ARCH="`echo $STRING | cut -f $ARCH -d -`"
      #BUILD="`echo $STRING | cut -f $INDEX -d -`"
    fi
  fi
}

ERRCODE=0

# Main processing loop:
while [ ! "$1" = "" ]; do

# Figure out the names of the old and new packages:
OLD=`echo $1 | cut -f 1 -d '%'`
NEW=`echo $1 | cut -f 2 -d '%'`
INCOMINGDIR=`dirname $NEW`
OLD=`basename $OLD .tgz`
NEW=`basename $NEW .tgz`

# Check and fix the old package name:
SHORT="`package_name $OLD`"
if [ ! -r $ROOT/var/log/packages/$OLD ]; then
  if ls $ROOT/var/log/packages/$SHORT* 1> /dev/null 2> /dev/null ; then
    for installed_package in $ROOT/var/log/packages/$SHORT* ; do
      if [ "`package_name $installed_package`" = "$SHORT" ]; then # found one
        OLD="`basename $installed_package`"
        break
      fi
    done
  fi
fi

# Test to see if both the old and new packages are where we expect them
# to be -- skip to the next package (or package pair) if anything's wrong:

if [ ! -r $ROOT/var/log/packages/$OLD ]; then
  if [ ! "$INSTALL_NEW" = "yes" ]; then
    if [ "$DRY_RUN" = "true" ]; then
      echo "$OLD would not be upgraded (no installed package named $SHORT)."
    else  
      echo
      echo "Error:  there is no installed package named $OLD."
      echo "        (looking for $ROOT/var/log/packages/$OLD)"
      echo
    fi
    ERRCODE=1
  else # --install-new was given, so install the new package:
    if [ "$DRY_RUN" = "true" ]; then
      echo "$NEW would be installed (new package)."
    else
      cat << EOF

+==============================================================================
| Installing new package $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz
+==============================================================================

EOF
      installpkg $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz
    fi
  fi
  shift 1
  continue;
elif [ ! -r "$INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz" ]; then
  if [ "$DRY_RUN" = "true" ]; then
    echo "$NEW incoming package not found (command line)."
  else
    echo
    echo "Error:  incoming package $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz not found."
    echo
  fi
  shift 1
  ERRCODE=1
  continue;
fi

# Unless --reinstall was given, compare the package names
# and skip any exact matches:
if [ ! "$REINSTALL" = "true" ]; then
  if [ "$OLD" = "$NEW" ]; then
    if [ "$DRY_RUN" = "true" ]; then
      echo "$NEW would be skipped (already installed)."
    else
      cat << EOF

+==============================================================================
| Skipping package $NEW (already installed)
+==============================================================================

EOF
    fi
    shift 1
    continue; 
  fi
fi

# Showtime.  Let's do the upgrade.  First, we will rename all the
# installed packages with this basename to make them easy to remove later:

TIMESTAMP=`date +%Y-%m-%d,%T`
SHORT="`package_name $OLD`"
if [ "$DRY_RUN" = "true" ]; then
  echo -n "$NEW would upgrade: "
  for installed_package in $ROOT/var/log/packages/$SHORT* ; do
  if [ "`package_name $installed_package`" = "$SHORT" ]; then
    echo -n "`basename $installed_package .tgz` "
  fi
  done
  echo
  shift 1
  continue
fi
for installed_package in $ROOT/var/log/packages/$SHORT* ; do
  if [ "`package_name $installed_package`" = "$SHORT" ]; then
    mv $installed_package ${installed_package}-upgraded-$TIMESTAMP
  fi
done
for installed_script in $ROOT/var/log/scripts/$SHORT* ; do
  if [ "`package_name $installed_script`" = "$SHORT" ]; then
    if [ -r $installed_script ]; then
      mv $installed_script ${installed_script}-upgraded-$TIMESTAMP
    fi
  fi
done

# Print a banner for the current upgrade:
cat << EOF

+==============================================================================
| Upgrading $OLD package using $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz
+==============================================================================

EOF

# Next, the new package is pre-installed:
if [ "$VERBOSE" = "verbose" ]; then
  installpkg $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz
  RETCODE=$?
else
  echo "Pre-installing package $NEW..."
  installpkg $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz 1> /dev/null
  RETCODE=$?
fi
# Make sure that worked:
if [ ! $RETCODE = 0 ]; then
  echo "ERROR:  Package $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz did not install"
  echo "correctly.  You may need to reinstall your old package"
  echo "to avoid problems.  Make sure the new package is not"
  echo "corrupted."
  sleep 30
  # Skip this package, but still try to proceed.  Good luck...
  shift 1
  continue;
fi

# Now, the leftovers from the old package(s) can go.  Pretty simple, huh? :)
if [ -d "$ROOT" ]; then
  ( cd $ROOT/var/log/packages
    for rempkg in *-$TIMESTAMP ; do
      if [ "$VERBOSE" = "verbose" ]; then
        ROOT=$ROOT removepkg $rempkg
      else
        ROOT=$ROOT removepkg $rempkg | grep -v "Skipping\." | grep -v "Removing files:"
      fi
    done
  )
else
  ( cd /var/log/packages
    for rempkg in *-$TIMESTAMP ; do
      if [ "$VERBOSE" = "verbose" ]; then
        removepkg $rempkg
      else
        removepkg $rempkg | grep -v "Skipping\." | grep -v "Removing files:"
      fi
    done
  )
fi
echo

# Again!  Again!
# Seriously, the reinstalling of a package can be crucial if any files
# shift location, so we should always reinstall as the final step:
if [ ! "$NOT_PARANOID" = "true" ]; then
  installpkg $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz
fi

echo "Package $OLD upgraded with new package $INCOMINGDIR/$NEW.tgz."
ERRCODE=0

# Process next parameter:
shift 1

done

if [ ! "$DRY_RUN" = "true" ]; then
  echo
fi
exit $ERRCODE