Update changelog entry to be more informative

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Slavi Pantaleev 2020-12-23 11:21:06 +02:00
parent 3475b98b76
commit 4fe1248d95

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@ -21,9 +21,23 @@ Moving all services to Postgres brings a few **benefits** to us:
- for existing installations which use our integrated Postgres database server (`matrix-postgres`, which is the default), **we automatically migrate data** from SQLite/nedb to Postgres and **archive the database files** (`something.db` -> `something.db.backup`), so you can restore them if you need to go back (see how below). - for existing installations which use our integrated Postgres database server (`matrix-postgres`, which is the default), **we automatically migrate data** from SQLite/nedb to Postgres and **archive the database files** (`something.db` -> `something.db.backup`), so you can restore them if you need to go back (see how below).
- this is a **very large and somewhat untested change** (potentially dangerous), so **if you're not feeling confident/experimental, opt-out** of it for now (see below). Still, it's the new default and what we (and various bridges) will focus on going forward, so don't stick to old ways for too long. ### Opting-out of the Postgres migration
- you can remain on SQLite/nedb (at least for now) by adding a variable like this to your `vars.yml` file for each service you use: `matrix_COMPONENT_database_engine: sqlite` (e.g. `matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_engine: sqlite`). Some services (like `appservice-irc` and `appservice-slack`) don't use SQLite, so use `nedb`, instead of `sqlite` for them. If the playbook had already migrated you to Postgres, you will need to rename back the database files (`something.db.backup` -> `something.db`). This is a **very large and somewhat untested change** (potentially dangerous), so **if you're not feeling confident/experimental, opt-out** of it for now. Still, it's the new default and what we (and various bridges) will focus on going forward, so don't stick to old ways for too long.
You can remain on SQLite/nedb (at least for now) by adding a variable like this to your `vars.yml` file for each service you use: `matrix_COMPONENT_database_engine: sqlite` (e.g. `matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_engine: sqlite`).
Some services (like `appservice-irc` and `appservice-slack`) don't use SQLite, so use `nedb`, instead of `sqlite` for them.
### Going back to SQLite/nedb if things went wrong
If you went with the Postgres migration and it went badly for you (some bridge not working as expected or not working at all), do this:
- stop all services (`ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=stop`)
- SSH into the server and rename the old database files (`something.db.backup` -> `something.db`). Example: `mv /matrix/mautrix-facebook/data/mautrix-facebook.db.backup /matrix/mautrix-facebook/data/mautrix-facebook.db`
- switch the affected service back to SQLite (e.g. `matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_engine: sqlite`). Some services (like `appservice-irc` and `appservice-slack`) don't use SQLite, so use `nedb`, instead of `sqlite` for them.
- re-run the playbook (`ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all,start`)
- [get in touch](README.md#support) with us
# 2020-12-11 # 2020-12-11