The Juju team is proud to release Juju 2.9.13 candidate. We aim to be your preferred tool for writing operators, software that manages software, whether your hosting infrastructure is Kubernetes, in the cloud or on-premises.
Because this is a release candidate, you’ll need to upgrade any existing controllers with --agent-stream=proposed
:
juju upgrade-controller <controller> --agent-stream=proposed
Bootstrapping a new controller is done in a similar way:
juju bootstrap <cloud> --config agent-stream=proposed
This release includes important fixes
- Private registry support for dockerhub ;
- LP#1942864 - juju fails to provision lxd containers with lxd 4.18
- LP#1942241 - Juju is unable to match machine address CIDRs to subnet CIDRs on Equinix Metal clouds
- LP#1942430 - /etc/profile.d/juju-introspection.sh is not POSIX shell compatible
Additional bugs fixed can be found in the milestone page.
How do I install Juju?
The best way to get a specific release of Juju is to install the snap from the appropriate channel. snap info juju
will give you a list of the current channels and the versions published in them. For the latest stable release of Juju:
sudo snap install juju --classic --channel=2.9/candidate
The Juju CLI is available for a variety of platforms, including Windows and macOS. Refer to the installation documentation for details.
How do I upgrade?
There are three binaries that make up a Juju deployment - the client, the server and the agents. To upgrade a running system:
Upgrade the client
Make sure you have the version of the Juju CLI that you want running across the system (controller and agents in any deployed models). If you installed the Juju snap, it will automatically be updated daily from the channel you selected, but you might want to sudo snap switch juju --channel=2.9/candidate
for example, to get a particular version. To get the latest binary from your channel:
snap refresh juju --channel=2.9/candidate
Upgrading the Juju client through other channels
Check version
Make sure that you’re using the Juju version you want.
juju version
What to do if Juju reports an old version
Backing up
The controller state can be saved to allow for recovery in case the upgrade process encounters a serious error.
juju create-backup
Upgrade a Juju server
You can see which servers your client knows about, and their versions, with this command:
juju controllers
Controller ... Version
azure* ... 2.8.3
jaas ... 2.7.6
You can instruct a server to upgrade itself to the latest version:
juju upgrade-controller <controller> --agent-stream=proposed
How to upgrade the controller
Upgrade deployed agents
Each running model includes a set of Juju agents which manage the communication between your charms and the Juju server. Your model agents remain at the same version until you ask to upgrade them.
juju upgrade-model <model>
How to upgrade your model(s)
Further instructions
For detailed information about the upgrade process please see:
- https://discourse.jujucharms.com/t/controller-backups/1106
- https://discourse.jujucharms.com/t/upgrading-models/1154
- https://discourse.jujucharms.com/t/notes-on-upgrading-juju-software/1153
- https://discourse.jujucharms.com/t/troubleshooting-model-upgrades/1186
Feedback Appreciated!
Let us know how you’re using Juju! Please ask questions on discourse.charmhub.io, tweet us @juju_devops with the hashtag #juju_devops, and chat with us at #juju on Freenode.