I have a Nextcloud v24.xx install on shared hosting, good host that would probably help, but I want to learn. I hve looked through the Nextcloud site and my OS/browsers are deemed too old. I can run MX KDE off a stick but not for long because it runs the fans hard on my old MBP (2009).
I’ve had an issue with the internal GUI updater getting stuck on Step 3 for a long time. There was a file to remove so I could try again, which I did back then in the v25 days, but it kept stopping at Step 3, and I’ve been ill, so I let it go.
Now I look and NC is on v28? And I now have a little time. I have SSH access and the cPanel terminal available, and when Softalicious did the install I chose the db name and can find that info and have PHP MyAdmin access.
But I am not certain about some things, one being that I see advice out there to update one version at a time, which seems like it’ll be a long slog if it can be done at all, since I’m on 24.xx now.
Softalicious, BTW, also could not do the update back then and then at a certain point told me it was too many versions behind instead of just failing with no explication.
I’d either like to update in one swoop, or save my data/db and do a new install and import my data from a backup and point it to the db. I’m assuming there were database changes along the way and a 24.x db might not import.
Suggestions welcomed, anything I learn I’ll post if helpful.
On my install, I do the updates through the console via
occ
. I think it has to update incrementally and step through each release version, or at least that’s how it’s always updated for me.I was pretty far behind at one point, and it took a bit to step through the intermediate versions, but not too long. I think less than an hour to go 2 or 3 major versions and the point releases in between.
It also allowed me to check which apps broke with each update.
Thank you!
I’d either like to update in one swoop
Not a good idea. There may be db update scripts running during each update. You don’t want to miss them.
The way is: the latest 24. Then 25. Then 26 etc.
As the other comment says, if you do it with occ, the whole thing is done in an hour.