Book Image

Odoo 11 Development Cookbook - Second Edition - Second Edition

Book Image

Odoo 11 Development Cookbook - Second Edition - Second Edition

Overview of this book

Odoo is a full-featured open source ERP with a focus on extensibility. The flexibility and sustainability of open source are also a key selling point of Odoo. It is built on a powerful framework for rapid application development, both for back-end applications and front-end websites. Version 11 offers better usability and speed: a new design (as compared to the current Odoo Enterprise version) and a mobile interface. The book starts by covering Odoo installation and administration and Odoo Server deployment. It then delves into the implementation of Odoo modules, the different inheritance models available in Odoo. You will then learn how to define access rules for your data; how to make your application available in different languages; how to expose your data models to end users on the back end and on the front end; and how to create beautiful PDF versions of your data. By the end of the book, you will have a thorough knowledge of Odoo and will be able to build effective applications by applying Odoo development best practices
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Updating Odoo from source

In the first recipe, we saw how to install Odoo from source using the git repository. The main benefit of this setting is being able to update the source code of Odoo using git to get the latest bug fixes.

Getting ready

Stop any instance currently running with the Odoo source you are about to update.

Make a backup of all the databases you care about in case something goes bad. This is obviously something you need to do for production databases. Refer to the Managing Odoo server databases recipe for instructions.

Then, make a note of the current version of the source you are running. The best way is to create a lightweight tag using the following command:

$ cd ~/odoo-dev/odoo
$ git checkout 11.0
$ git tag 11.0-before-update-$(date --iso)

How to do it...

To update the source code of Odoo, use the following command:

$ git pull –-ff-only origin 11.0

This will fetch the latest version of the source code committed to the current branch.

To update an instance running on this code, run the following command:

$ ./odoo-bin -c myodoo.cfg --stop-after-init -u base

-u
is the shortcut notation for the --update option of odoo-bin.

If you don't have a database set in the configuration file, you will have to add the
-d database_name option. This command is to be repeated for all of the instances running with this version of the source code.

If the update fails, don't panic, because you have backups:

  1. Read the error message carefully and save it to a file, as it will be useful to make a bug report later
  2. If you cannot figure out what the problem is, restore the service; restore the Odoo source code to the previous version, which is known to work using the tag you set before updating the source version:
$ git reset --hard 11.0-before-update-$(date --iso)
  1. Drop the broken databases and restore them from the backups you made (refer to the Managing Odoo server databases recipe for instructions)
  2. Restart your instances and tell your users that the upgrade has been postponed
Note that in real life, this should never happen on a production database, because you would have tested the upgrade beforehand on a copy of the database, fixed the issues, and only done the upgrade on the production server after ensuring that it runs flawlessly. However, sometimes you still get surprises, so even if you are really sure, make a backup.

How it works...

Updating the source code is done by ensuring that we are on the correct branch using git checkout, and then fetching the new revisions using git pull. The --ff-only option will cause a failure if you have local commits not present in the remote repository. If this happens and you want to keep your changes, you can use git pull (without --ff-only) to merge the remote changes with yours; otherwise, use git reset --hard origin/11.0 to force the update, discarding your local modifications.

The update command uses the following options:

  • -c: Specifies the configuration file
  • --stop-after-init: Stops the instance when the update is over
  • -u base or --update base: Requests the update of the base module

When updating a module, Odoo does the following:

  • It updates the database structure for the models defined in the module for which the structure changes. For updates on the stable branch of Odoo, there should be no such changes, but this can happen for your own addons or third party addons.
  • It updates the database records stored in data files of the module, most notably the views. It then recursively updates the installed modules that have declared a dependency on the module.

Since the base module is an implicit dependency of all Odoo modules, updating it will trigger an update of all of the installed modules in your instance. To update all installed modules, the alias all can be used instead of base.