Update from 7.11 to 7.12
This document guides you through the update from Camunda 7.11.x
to 7.12.0
. It covers these use cases:
- For administrators and developers: Database Updates
- For administrators and developers: Full Distribution Update
- For administrators: Standalone Web Application
- For developers: Spring Boot Starter Update
- For developers: External Task Client Update
- For developers: Security-related HTTP Headers (Webapps)
- For developers: Camunda Commons Typed Values Migration
- For developers: Camunda DMN Engine Migration
- For developers: Task Lifecycle State and Task Events
- For administrators and developers: PostgreSQL Support Clarification
This guide covers mandatory migration steps as well as optional considerations for the initial configuration of new functionality included in Camunda 7.12.
Database Updates
Every Camunda installation requires a database schema update.
Procedure
Check for available database patch scripts for your database that are within the bounds of your update path. Locate the scripts at
$DISTRIBUTION_PATH/sql/upgrade
in the pre-packaged distribution (where$DISTRIBUTION_PATH
is the path of an unpacked distribution) or in the Camunda Artifact Repository. We highly recommend executing these patches before updating. Execute them in ascending order by version number. The naming pattern is$DATABASENAME_engine_7.11_patch_?.sql
.Execute the corresponding update scripts named
$DATABASENAME_engine_7.11_to_7.12.sql
The scripts update the database from one minor version to the next, and change the underlying database structure. So make sure to backup your database in case there are any failures during the update process.
We highly recommend to also check for any existing patch scripts for your database that are within the bounds of the new minor version you are updating to. Execute them in ascending order by version number. Attention: This step is only relevant when you are using an enterprise version of Camunda 7, e.g.,
7.12.X
whereX > 0
. The procedure is the same as in step 1, only for the new minor version.
Full Distribution
This section is applicable if you installed the Full Distribution with a shared process engine.
The following steps are required:
- Update the Camunda libraries and applications inside the application server
- Migrate custom process applications
Before starting, make sure that you have downloaded the Camunda 7.12 distribution for the application server you use. It contains the SQL scripts and libraries required for the update. This guide assumes you have unpacked the distribution to a path named $DISTRIBUTION_PATH
.
Camunda Libraries and Applications
Please choose the application server you are working with from the following list:
Custom Process Applications
For every process application, the Camunda dependencies should be updated to the new version. Which dependencies you have is application- and server-specific. Typically, the dependencies consist of any of the following:
camunda-engine-spring
camunda-engine-cdi
camunda-ejb-client
- …
There are no new mandatory dependencies for process applications.
Standalone Web Application
If the standalone web application is in use, the current war
artifact must be replaced by its new version.
If a database other than the default H2 database is used, the following steps must be taken:
- Undeploy the current version of the standalone web application
- Update the database to the new schema as described in the database update section
- Reconfigure the database as described in the installation section
- Deploy the new and configured standalone web application to the server
Spring Boot Starter Update
If you are using Camunda Spring Boot Starter within you Spring Boot application, then you need to:
- Check Version Compatibility Matrix
- Update Spring Boot Starter and, when required, Spring Boot versions in your
pom.xml
. - Update the Camunda 7 version in your
pom.xml
in case you override it before (e.g., when using the enterprise version or a patch releases)
External Task Client Update
If you are using the Camunda External Task Client, please make sure to:
- Check out the Version Compatibility Matrix
- Update the version in your
pom.xml
(Java) orpackage.json
(NodeJs)
Security-related HTTP Headers (Webapps)
In this release, we introduced the following HTTP response headers in the web applications which are available by default:
- Content Security Policy (
Content-Security-Policy
) - Content-Type Options (
X-Content-Type-Options
)
Please see the documentation about the HTTP Header Security to learn more about the several headers, the defaults, and how to configure or even disable them according to your needs.
Camunda Commons Typed Values Migration
Starting with version 7.12, the camunda-commons-typed-values
library has been migrated into the camunda-bpm-platform
repository.
The changes include:
- The library version has changed from Camunda Commons (currently at 1.8.0) to Camunda 7 version (7.12.0). You can find the new Maven coordinates below:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.camunda.commons</groupId>
<artifactId>camunda-commons-typed-values</artifactId>
<version>7.12.0</version>
</dependency>
- The library isn’t part of the
camunda-commons-bom
anymore. Now, it is directly part of thecamunda-bom
. Users that are importing thecamunda-commons-bom
now need to either replace the import with thecamunda-bom
, or, explicitly declare the library version as described above. - When updating the
camunda-commons-typed-values
library on a Container-Managed Process Engine, the newcamunda-commons-typed-values
artifact name contains the Camunda 7 version.
Camunda DMN Engine Migration
The Camunda DMN Engine is another migration to the camunda-bpm-platform
repository happening in version 7.12.0. The DMN Engine migration doesn’t require any adjustments. However, any contributions to the DMN Engine needs to be addressed to the camunda-bpm-platform repository.
Task Lifecycle State and Task Events
The 7.12.0 release provides a more defined User Task lifecycle. This impacts the order in which Task events are fired. Previously, when the process execution arrived in a User Task, the assignment event was fired before the create event (if an assignee was set). With the new Task lifecycle, if an assignee is explicitly set on the User Task an assignment event is fired after the create event is fired.
Any create
Task Listeners that depend on the execution of an assignment
Task Listener need to be adjusted. The same goes for assignment
Task Listeners that hold the assumption that
they are the first to execute. They need to be adjusted to consider that create
Task Listeners are executed before them.
Furthermore, assignment
Task Listeners will no longer be triggered through an assignment within
another Task Listener. Those that hold this assumption need to be adjusted, with this
limitation in mind, by explicitly performing an assignment through the TaskService
.
PostgreSQL Support Clarification
According to the PostgreSQL versioning documentation, the PostgreSQL versioning
scheme changed from PostgreSQL 10. For versions before PostgreSQL 10, a major version was marked by the first two
version numbers, e.g. 9.4
, 9.6
. From PostgreSQL 10, a major version is marked by a single version number, e.g. 10
,
11
.
As this was only a change to the versioning scheme, the content of the minor releases (e.g. 9.4.6
,
9.6.18
, 10.13
, 11.2
, etc.) didn’t change. Therefore, we have updated the Camunda Supported Environments,
to reflect that Camunda supports all the minor version updates of a major PostgreSQL version.
Note that this adjustment doesn’t change the supported versions of Amazon Aurora PostgreSQL. This is a database service built on top of PostgreSQL, and as such, needs to be tested for support separately from PostgreSQL.