This document covers every changes an Ops needs to be aware of when running James.
The following procedures are to take as it, and the Apache Software Foundation, nor its contributors, can not be responsible for any damages generated by following the below procedures.
Before performing these operations, you should ensure to have the skills to conduct the operations, and you should read other software documentation. Do not follow this guide blindly!
Note: this section is in progress. It will be updated during all the development process until the release.
Changes to apply between 3.4.x and 3.5.x will be reported here.
Change list:
Date: 25/09/2019
SHA-1: f721747edf8deb50406a5a44f6476507a03e2543
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JAMES-2703
Concerned products: Spring, default bundled mailets
This includes:
Changes to apply between 3.3.x and 3.4.x will be reported here.
Change list:
Date: 31/07/2019
SHA-1: f19642aef4a67cd6675f66278792ba4aa85d6d6e
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JAMES-2850
Concerned products: (experimental) RabbitMQ MailQueue
RabbitMQ MailQueue projection in Cassandra relies on a map allowing a single specific header per recipient header. This limitation causes rejection of emails with multiple per-recipient headers (which happens when forwarding to a remote server a mail checked against SpamAssassin).
In order to fix this issue, the structure of the underlying table was updated. A new table is created upon the first startup following the upgrade, and the old one is ignored.
Impact: the mails enqueued before the update can not be browsed nor removed from the queue after the update.
Recommendation: Conduct this update with an empty mail queue.
To do so:
Date: XX/06/2019
SHA-1: XXXXX
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JAMES-2794
Concerned products: (experimental) RabbitMQ MailQueue
RabbitMQ mail queue combines RabbitMQ with projections in Cassandra to offer advanced management capabilities expected from a mail queue (browse, delete, size, clear). In these projections, the mails are identified by there name. Thus enqueuing a mail that had already been processed will lead the given email to be considered already deleted and it will be discarded and lost.
This is an issue, as several other components build features around submitting a mail several time with the name.
For instance:
We thus changed the table structure of RabbitMQ mail queue projections to be built around an EnqueueId. This additional level of indirection allows several enqueues with the same name.
Upgrade to the newest James server needs to be performed with an empty MailQueue.
To do so:
Date: 27/05/2019
SHA-1: bbdf88e56d7a22fe92e1360ef563004f3bc0dd98
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JAMES-2766
Concerned products: (experimental) Cassandra-guice products.
In version 3.3.0 indexing for the Cassandra product was handled using ElasticSearch 2.2 released on the 31 march 2016. Some major upgrades had been included in recent ElasticSearch version.
Note that ElasticSearch APIs had been undergoing some major changes, making a smooth migration hard to provide. We proposed 2 migration strategies. A simple one leading to major search inconsistencies in the process, and another one mitigating these inconsistencies (but getting rid of them).
ElasticSearch 6 driver is relying on the high-level REST client and no more on the internal transport protocol.
Thus, you need to update your configuration files accordingly:
In elasticsearch.properties
modify the elasticsearch.port
properties to reference the HTTP port of your ElasticSearch nodes (9200 by default instead of the previous default value of 9300).
Procedure:
Keep in mind that full reIndexing needs to process all users email and thus can be slow.
Obviously this approach trades search consistency against ease of migration.
If search consistency during the migration is important for you, consider the next approach
Procedure:
Keep in mind that full reIndexing needs to process all users email and thus can be slow.
Changes to apply between 3.2.0 and 3.3.0 had been reported here.
Change list:
Date: 30/11/2018
SHA-1: 7e32da51a29bee1c732b2b13708bb4b986140119
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MAILBOX-292
MailboxId are now persisted in a james-mailboxId
file. This file is created on the fly, so no action is required for users relying on the MailDir mailbox.
Date: 30/11/2018
SHA-1: d9bcebc7dd546bd5f11f3d9b496491e7c9042fe2
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MAILBOX-354
Only user written components performing MailboxListener registration will be affected.
The MailboxPath is mutable and thus can be changed upon mailbox rename. This leads to significantly complex code with possible inconsistency windows.
Using the mailboxId, which is immutable, solves these issues.
Date: 05/12/2018
SHA-1: 985b9a4a75bfa75c331cba6cbf835c043185dbdb
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JAMES-2555
We made this API introduced in James 3.2.0 a bit more REST friendly. If you developed tools using this API, you will need to update them.
For more details please refer to the latest WebAdmin documentation.
Date: 19/12/2018
SHA-1: e25967664538be18ec29f47e73e661bdf29da41f
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/projects/MAILBOX/issues/MAILBOX-356
Required: Yes
Concerned products: all JPA related products
Rename KEY
column in JAMES_MAILBOX_ANNOTATION
table. The syntax is:
ALTER TABLE JAMES_MAILBOX_ANNOTATION CHANGE KEY ANNOTATION_KEY varchar(200);
ALTER TABLE JAMES_MAILBOX_ANNOTATION CHANGE COLUMN KEY ANNOTATION_KEY varchar(200);
or the syntax corresponding to your database.
In order to allow safe serialization and strong typing org.apache.mailet.Mail
have changed.
These methods have been deprecated and replaced:
getSender()
in favor of getMaybeSender()
getAttribute(String)
in favor of getAttribute(AttributeName)
setAttribute(String, Serializable)
in favor of setAttribute(Attribute)
removeAttribute(String)
in favor of removeAttribute(AttributeName)
getAttributeNames()
in favor of attributeNames()
and attributesMap()
Some plain-string AttributeName
have also been replaced:
SMTP_AUTH_USER_ATTRIBUTE_NAME
in favor of SMTP_AUTH_USER
MAILET_ERROR_ATTRIBUTE_NAME
in favor of MAILET_ERROR
SENT_BY_MAILET
in favor of SENT_BY_MAILET_ATTRIBUTE
's name, it is recommended to directly set the Attribute
.Changes to apply between 3.1.0 and 3.2.0 had been reported here.
Changelist:
Date: 31/10/2018
SHA-1: 485406252d82c2d23a4078c76b26d6fc8973bbd7
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JAMES-2557
Required: Yes
Concerned products: User developed extensions - mailet/matcher
As part of the SMTP protocol, a mail can be sent without sender. This was represented implicitly in James by a potentially null MailAddress (null
or MailAddress.nullSender()
). This means that mailet/matcher implementers needs to be aware, and handle these cases. This implicit handling makes nullSender hard to work with, and prooved to be error prone as part of the 3.2.0 development process.
Hence we propose an alternative API returning a MaybeSender
object, requiring the caller to explicitly handle missing sender.
Mail::getSender
had then been deprecated. We strongly encourage our users to rely on Mail::getMaybeSender
.
Note: thanks to java-8 default API methods, this is not a breaking change.
Date: 30/08/2018
SHA-1: 9ba6a1dd270f99735c7f9d3d4b2adb5076583c10
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JAMES-2529
Required: Yes
Concerned products: Cassandra Guice products
This mailet allow users filtering rules to be applied for incoming emails.
Add this line before the LocalDelivery
mailet of your transport
processor:
<mailet match="RecipientIsLocal" class="org.apache.james.jmap.mailet.filter.JMAPFiltering"/>
Date: 03/08/2018
SHA-1: de0fa8a3df69f50cbc0684dfb1b911ad497856d7
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JAMES-2514
Required: Yes
Concerned products: Cassandra Guice products
James Cassandra Guice now officially uses Cassandra 3.11.3 as a storage backend. After performing the upgrade, the team did perform some breaking changes, detailed below. James Cassandra Guice products are no more tested against Cassandra 2.2.x. Thus we strongly advise our users to upgrade.
Replace in default compaction strategies “DateTieredCompactionStrategy” by “TimeWindowCompactionStrategy”.
This means you can no more start James on top of an empty Cassandra 2.2.x cluster, but existing deployments should not be impacted.
We will assume that Cassandra had been installed with a debian package. Upgrade procedure stays similar in other cases.
/etc/apt/sources.list.d/cassandra.list
to match 311x repositorydeb http://www.apache.org/dist/cassandra/debian 311x main
$ apt-get update $ apt-get install cassandra=3.11.3
Edit /etc/cassandra/cassandra.yaml and ensure to really specify the interface cassandra is listening on as seeds.
4.1. Drain data & stop
$ nodetool drain $ nodetool stop
4.2. start Cassandra
$ nodetool upgradesstables apache_james