Mercurial > prosody-modules
view mod_migrate/README.markdown @ 5356:959dc350f2ad
mod_http_oauth2: Declare https as required of URIs in schema
If util.jsonschema happens to gain support for 'pattern' (regular
expression validation) then this would be picked up. Until then,
declarative annotations are nice.
author | Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 22 Apr 2023 14:06:41 +0200 |
parents | c5122b7633a8 |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
--- summary: prosodyctl cross storage driver migration tool ... Introduction ============ This module adds a command to `prosodyctl` for copying data between storage drivers. Usage ===== prosodyctl mod_migrate example.com <source-store>[-<store-type>] <target-driver> [users]* `<source-store>` would be e.g. `accounts` or `private`. To migrate archives, the optional suffix `<store-type>` would be set to `archive`, so e.g. `archive2-archive` or `muc_log-archive`. Multiple stores can be given if separated by commas. `<target-driver>` is the storage driver to copy data to, sans the `mod_storage_` prefix. `mod_migrate` tries to request a list of users from `usermanager`, but this does not always work. If so, you can supply usernames as arguments after the target driver. The process is something like this: 1. Decide on the future configuration and add for example SQL connection details to your prosody config, but don't change the `store` option yet. 2. With Prosody shut down, run `prosodyctl mod_migrate example.com accounts sql` 3. Repeat for each store, substituting 'accounts'. E.g. vcards, private... 4. Change the [`storage` configuration](https://prosody.im/doc/storage) to use the new driver. 5. Start prosody again. Examples ======== ``` sh prosodyctl mod_migrate example.com accounts,roster,private,vcard sql ``` Compatibility ============= Should work with 0.8 and later.