#!/bin/bash

# With systemd, we can force logging to the journal. This is better than
# spamming the world with cron mails. You can then view these logs using
# "journalctl -rat upgrade-and-reboot".
if [[ "$1" != '-w' ]]
then
    if which systemd-cat >/dev/null 2>&1
    then
        if [[ "$1" != "is-logging" ]]
        then
            exec systemd-cat -t upgrade-and-reboot "$0" is-logging "$@"
        else
            shift
        fi
    fi
fi

statusfile=/var/tmp/unattended_upgrades.status
# Workaround, because /var/tmp is usually 1777
[[ "$UID" == 0 ]] && chown root:root "$statusfile"

logins=$(ps h -C sshd -o euser | awk '$1 != "root" && $1 != "sshd" && $1 != "sshmon"')
if [[ -n "$logins" ]]
then
    echo "Will abort now, there are active SSH logins: $logins"
    echo "abort_ssh" > "$statusfile"
    exit 1
fi

softlockdir=/var/lib/bundlewrap/soft-${node.name}
mkdir -p "$softlockdir"
printf '{"comment": "UPDATE", "date": %s, "expiry": %s, "id": "UNATTENDED", "items": ["*"], "user": "root@localhost"}\n' \
    $(date +%s) \
    $(date -d 'now + 30 mins' +%s) \
    >"$softlockdir"/UNATTENDED
trap 'rm -f "$softlockdir"/UNATTENDED' EXIT

(
    apt-get update
    DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get -y -q -o Dpkg::Options::=--force-confold -o Dpkg::Options::=--force-confdef dist-upgrade
)
ret=$?
if (( $ret != 0 ))
then
    echo "apt-get dist-upgrade exited $ret"
    echo "$ret" > "$statusfile"
    exit 1
fi

DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get -y -q autoclean
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get -y -q autoremove

if [[ -f /var/run/reboot-required ]]
then
    date | mail -s "SYSREBOOTNOW ${node.name}" ${data['mail']}
    systemctl reboot
fi