![]() ![]() A "Migrate to Nextcloud" page should appear. Visit the script in a browser by accessing. If you haven't got command line access simply download the script and upload it in the ownCloud/updater folder manually.ģ. Move the migration script into the updater folder with mv index.php.1 updater/index.php Go into your owncloud folder and download the migration script with wget Ģ. This guide should work in both situations.ġ. Side note: It doesn't matter if you have got command line access or simply installed your cloud on a shared web hosting package. Let's say your current ownCloud installation is available under and is located on the server in the ownCloud folder. Then, Nextcloud 12.0.12 can be upgraded step by step until the last major release is reached. The trick is to migrate ownCloud version 10.5.0 with the official migration tool to Nexcloud version 12.0.12 (some bug fixing must be done during the steps). With the help of some forum posts, user input and bug reports I created this guide and successfully tested it with two installations. In this guide, I present to you how to make the migration to Nextcloud and how to fix upcoming bugs. I decided to give it a try and successfully made a migration without data loss and with the takeover of the shared folders and federations (so don't worry, you don't need to give your users new shared links). ![]() Thus, switching from ownCloud 10.5 isn't that easy and (officially) not supported. It turned out that an upgrade from ownCloud version 8.2 - 10.0 is pretty easy with the official migration guide but it becomes a lot harder with newer releases because both systems drifted apart. First I thought this would be an easy thing because the foundation of both systems is mainly the same. Therefore, I decided to switch from the latest ownCloud version to Nextcloud. Nexcloud becomes a lot more interesting for users and developers. I am using ownCloud for a pretty long time now but in the last years, things changed. ![]()
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