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We know that do-release-upgrade “does a release upgrade”. But at a little lower level what does it really do?

I plan to do a more manual upgrade, for instance the Debian way: aptitude update and aptitude full-upgrade after setting up the sources. Actually, I plan to do it entirely interactive with aptitude. But that leaves me curious about what else do-relase-upgrade does, except hosing up my sources.list.

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do-release-upgrade is part of the package “update-manager-core”. The script seems to determine which release you are going to upgrade to, try to find out if it’s supported or not and complain about the latter. – If it’s convinced to work, it downloads the release-specific UpgradeTool and runs it.

Part of the “update-manager-core” package is the file /etc/update-manager/meta-release, where you can find the URL http://changelogs.ubuntu.com/meta-release and there you find the URL for the UpgradeTool to download.

The downloaded UpgradeTool tarball is packaged from the source package “ubuntu-release-upgrader” (before it was “update-manager”). The version corresponds to the latest updates for the target release.

The source has an old README from warty and hoary release times. It discusses what should be done during a release upgrade. It also mentions a link to a more detailed UpgradeTool proposal.

I list here the actions mentioned there and checked if they are actually implemented:

  • repository related
    • switch to new sources.list entries
    • remove unknown 3rd party repositories
    • possibly swap mirror (not implemented)
  • package related
    • check there are no broken packages before upgrading
    • update current release before upgrading (apt-get update only)
    • remove and install specific packages
    • check if {ubuntu,kubuntu,edubuntu}-desktop is installed
    • get rid of old kernels
    • have a removal-blacklist and -whitelist
    • remove or replace obsolete packages which existed in earlier releases
  • configuration related (possible in quirks: see below)
    • adding the default user to new groups (not done for the versions I checked)
    • check some config files

The UpgradeTool is configured for each release using the following files (open them to see!):

  • DistUpgrade.cfg
    • UpgradeTool-related configuration
    • release-related configuration
    • repositories (e.g. [Sources] ValidMirrors)
    • custom changes ([Distro] PostInstallScript)
    • special packages; processed only by DistUpgradeController.py:
      • [Distro] RemoveObsoletes, ForcedObsoletes, BaseMetaPkgs, MetaPkgs
      • [meta_package_name] ForcedObsoletes
    • ...and by DistUpgradeCache.py:
      • [Distro] MetaPkgs, RemovalBlacklist, RemoveEssentialOk, BadVersions, BaseMetaPkgs, PurgeObsoletes, Demotions, KeyDependencies
      • [Distro and meta_package_name] KeepInstalledPkgs, KeepInstalledSection, PostUpgrade*
      • [KernelRemoval] *
  • DistUpgradeQuirks.py
    • runs (release) specific functions (same file) and plugins (plugins directory)
    • functions must have specific names (e.g. from_nattyPreCacheOpen()) and plugins special condition attributes (e.g. * or PostInitialUpdate)
    • one of those functions, StartUpgrade(), is another grab-bag itself: among others it calls _applyPatches(), which goes over the files in the patches directory
    • all these do pretty much nothing on my installation (i386, packages not older than natty-updates)
  • more from DistUpgradeCache.py
    • runs get_kernel_list.sh (not in trusty) and makes sure one kernel is installed
    • some handling about Nvidia drivers

Checked versions:

  • natty → oneiric
  • oneiric → precise
  • precise → trusty (final as of 2014-04-18)
  • trusty → utopic (hours before release on 2014-10-23)
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    Each time I have used do-release-upgrade I have ended up with an unbootable system :)
    – juzzlin
    Mar 10, 2014 at 7:34
  • As examples of things the do-release-upgrade handles: nvidia binary drivers, multiarch changes, ndiswrapper, adding/removing architectures and kernel types (e.g. deprecating the server kernel)
    – NGRhodes
    Apr 10, 2014 at 10:13
  • @NGRhodes your comment is too vague for me: ndiswrapper was a special case back in feisty, not these days. No architectures are added or removed (except for amd64, which adds i386 as foreign, which you cover with “multiarch changes” I guess). – Nothing is “deprecated”: packages are removed or not. Apr 18, 2014 at 8:09

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