diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/guix.texi | 113 |
1 files changed, 113 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi index ca96ecc298..d45deed21e 100644 --- a/doc/guix.texi +++ b/doc/guix.texi @@ -12926,6 +12926,7 @@ declaration. * Scheduled Job Execution:: The mcron service. * Log Rotation:: The rottlog service. * Networking Services:: Network setup, SSH daemon, etc. +* Unattended Upgrades:: Automated system upgrades. * X Window:: Graphical display. * Printing Services:: Local and remote printer support. * Desktop Services:: D-Bus and desktop services. @@ -15298,6 +15299,117 @@ Use this to add additional options and manage shared secrets out-of-band. @end table @end deftp +@node Unattended Upgrades +@subsection Unattended Upgrades + +@cindex unattended upgrades +@cindex upgrades, unattended +Guix provides a service to perform @emph{unattended upgrades}: +periodically, the system automatically reconfigures itself from the +latest Guix. Guix System has several properties that make unattended +upgrades safe: + +@itemize +@item +upgrades are transactional (either the upgrade succeeds or it fails, but +you cannot end up with an ``in-between'' system state); +@item +the upgrade log is kept---you can view it with @command{guix system +list-generations}---and you can roll back to any previous generation, +should the upgraded system fail to behave as intended; +@item +channel code is authenticated so you know you can only run genuine code +(@pxref{Channels}); +@item +@command{guix system reconfigure} prevents downgrades, which makes it +immune to @dfn{downgrade attacks}. +@end itemize + +To set up unattended upgrades, add an instance of +@code{unattended-upgrade-service-type} like the one below to the list of +your operating system services: + +@lisp +(service unattended-upgrade-service-type) +@end lisp + +The defaults above set up weekly upgrades: every Sunday at midnight. +You do not need to provide the operating system configuration file: it +uses @file{/run/current-system/configuration.scm}, which ensures it +always uses your latest configuration---@pxref{provenance-service-type}, +for more information about this file. + +There are several things that can be configured, in particular the +periodicity and services (daemons) to be restarted upon completion. +When the upgrade is successful, the service takes care of deleting +system generations older that some threshold, as per @command{guix +system delete-generations}. See the reference below for details. + +To ensure that upgrades are actually happening, you can run +@command{guix system describe}. To investigate upgrade failures, visit +the unattended upgrade log file (see below). + +@defvr {Scheme Variable} unattended-upgrade-service-type +This is the service type for unattended upgrades. It sets up an mcron +job (@pxref{Scheduled Job Execution}) that runs @command{guix system +reconfigure} from the latest version of the specified channels. + +Its value must be a @code{unattended-upgrade-configuration} record (see +below). +@end defvr + +@deftp {Data Type} unattended-upgrade-configuration +This data type represents the configuration of the unattended upgrade +service. The following fields are available: + +@table @asis +@item @code{schedule} (default: @code{"30 01 * * 0"}) +This is the schedule of upgrades, expressed as a gexp containing an +mcron job schedule (@pxref{Guile Syntax, mcron job specifications,, +mcron, GNU@tie{}mcron}). + +@item @code{channels} (default: @code{#~%default-channels}) +This gexp specifies the channels to use for the upgrade +(@pxref{Channels}). By default, the tip of the official @code{guix} +channel is used. + +@item @code{services-to-restart} (default: @code{'(mcron)}) +This field specifies the Shepherd services to restart when the upgrade +completes. + +Those services are restarted right away upon completion, as with +@command{herd restart}, which ensures that the latest version is +running---remember that by default @command{guix system reconfigure} +only restarts services that are not currently running, which is +conservative: it minimizes disruption but leaves outdated services +running. + +By default, the @code{mcron} service is restarted. This ensures that +the latest version of the unattended upgrade job will be used next time. + +@item @code{system-expiration} (default: @code{(* 3 30 24 3600)}) +This is the expiration time in seconds for system generations. System +generations older that this amount of time are deleted with +@command{guix system delete-generations} when an upgrade completes. + +@quotation Note +The unattended upgrade service does not run the garbage collector. You +will probably want to set up your own mcron job to run @command{guix gc} +periodically. +@end quotation + +@item @code{maximum-duration} (default: @code{3600}) +Maximum duration in seconds for the upgrade; past that time, the upgrade +aborts. + +This is primarily useful to ensure the upgrade does not end up +rebuilding or re-downloading ``the world''. + +@item @code{log-file} (default: @code{"/var/log/unattended-upgrade.log"}) +File where unattended upgrades are logged. +@end table +@end deftp + @node X Window @subsection X Window @@ -29628,6 +29740,7 @@ extend it by passing it lists of packages to add to the system profile. @end defvr @cindex provenance tracking, of the operating system +@anchor{provenance-service-type} @defvr {Scheme Variable} provenance-service-type This is the type of the service that records @dfn{provenance meta-data} in the system itself. It creates several files under |