The release handler process belongs to the SASL
      application, which is responsible for release handling,
      that is, unpacking, installation, and removal of release packages.
    An introduction to release handling and an example is provided in
      OTP Design
      Principles in System Documentation.
    A release package is a compressed tar file containing
      code for a certain version of a release, created by calling
      systools:make_tar/1,2.
      The release package is to be located in the $ROOT/releases
      directory of the previous version of the release, where
      $ROOT is the installation root directory,
      code:root_dir().
      Another releases directory can be specified using the SASL
      configuration parameter releases_dir or the OS environment
      variable RELDIR. The release handler must have write access
      to this directory to install the new release.
      The persistent state of the release handler is stored there in a
      file called RELEASES.
    A release package is always to contain:
    
      - A release resource file, Name.rel
- A boot script, Name.boot
The .rel file contains information about the release: its name,
      version, and which ERTS and application versions it uses.
    A release package can also contain:
    
      - A release upgrade file, relup
- A system configuration file, sys.config
- A system configuration source file, sys.config.src
The relup file contains instructions for how to upgrade
      to, or downgrade from, this version of the release.
    The release package can be unpacked, which extracts
      the files. An unpacked release can be installed.
      The currently used version of the release is then upgraded or
      downgraded to the specified version by evaluating the instructions
      in the relup file. An installed release can be made
      permanent. Only one permanent release can exist in
      the system, and this release is used if the system
      is restarted. An installed release, except the permanent one,
      can be removed. When a release is removed, all files
      belonging to that release only are deleted.
    Each release version has a status, which can be
      unpacked, current, permanent, or old.
      There is always one latest release, which either has status
      permanent (normal case) or current (installed, but
      not yet made permanent). The meaning of the status values are
      illustrated in the following table:
    
        Status     Action                NextStatus
        -------------------------------------------
        -          unpack                unpacked
        unpacked   install               current
                   remove                -
        current    make_permanent        permanent
                   install other         old
                   remove                -
        permanent  make other permanent  old
                   install               permanent
        old        reboot_old            permanent
                   install               current
                   remove                -The release handler process is a locally registered process on
      each node. When a release is installed in a distributed system,
      the release handler on each node must be called. The release
      installation can be synchronized between nodes. From an operator
      view, it can be unsatisfactory to specify each node. The aim is
      to install one release package in the system, no matter how many
      nodes there are. It is recommended that
      software management functions are written that take care of
      this problem. Such a function can have knowledge of the system
      architecture, so it can contact each individual release handler
      to install the package.
    For release handling to work properly, the runtime system must
      know which release it is running. It
      must also be able to change (in runtime) which boot script and
      system configuration file are to be used if the system is
      restarted. This is taken care of automatically if Erlang is
      started as an embedded system. Read about this in
      Embedded System in
      System Documentation. In this case, the system
      configuration file sys.config is mandatory.
    The installation of a new release can restart the system. Which
      program to use is specified by the SASL configuration
      parameter start_prg, which defaults
      to $ROOT/bin/start.
    The emulator restart on Windows NT expects that the system is
      started using the erlsrv program (as a service).
      Furthermore, the release handler expects that the service is named
      NodeName_Release, where NodeName is
      the first part of the Erlang node name (up to, but not including
      the "@") and Release is the current release version.
      The release handler furthermore expects that a
      program like start_erl.exe is specified as "machine" to
      erlsrv. During upgrading with restart, a new service
      is registered and started. The new service is set to
      automatic and the old service is removed when the new release
      is made permanent.
    The release handler at a node running on a diskless machine,
      or with a read-only file system, must be configured accordingly
      using the following SASL configuration parameters (for
      details, see sasl(6)):
    
      - masters
- 
        This node uses some master nodes to store
          and fetch release information. All master nodes must be
          operational whenever release information is written by this
          node. 
- client_directory
- 
        The client_directory in the directory structure of
          the master nodes must be specified. 
- static_emulator
- 
        This parameter specifies if the Erlang emulator is
          statically installed at the client node. A node with a static
          emulator cannot dynamically switch to a new emulator, as
          the executable files are statically written into memory. 
The release handler can also be used to unpack and
      install release packages when not running Erlang as an embedded
      system. However, in this case the user must somehow ensure that
      correct boot scripts and configuration files are used if
      the system must be restarted.
    Functions are provided for using another file structure
      than the structure defined in OTP. These functions can be used
      to test a release upgrade locally.