Document offloading from FTP to Azure Blob storage
Hi ,
As part of the cloud migration project from App9 to IFS Cloud, we need to know how to transfer documents from APP9 FTP to Cloud Azure Blob.
Currently, documents are stored on FTP, and we hope to move them to Cloud Azure Blob.
We recently updated 24R1 to our Cloud environment, therefore FTP will no longer be supported in the future, so we'd need to know how to migrate the document from FTP to Azure Blob Storage.
Is there anyone who has done this before? We are an IFS managed cloud customer, and we want to know if this is doable. According to a recent call with IFS, they state it is not supported by this tool and we need to consider moving from Database to Azure Blob directly.
The support for FTP and Shared repos is mentioned directly after the section you linked to:
To be clear: it IS possible to migrate from FTP and Shared repositories, but it's not as convenient as when using Database storage since you need to populate that text file plus make sure the tool has access to read the source files.
If it's an option to pre-migrate from FTP/Shared into the Database storage in the source environment, and then use the tool, things might go smoother, but that's an extra step that takes time of course, and it will make the database bigger.
I encourage you to consult the documentation, perhaps read it several times, perhaps even try a small test migration to get a feeling for the tool works. The tool does a lot for you, compared to you doing the migration using some custom method, but it still means work and using it requires planning.
If you have any questions not covered in the documentation, or if anything in there is not clear, just come back here and ask.
Good luck!
PS. Try to use the name File Storage, Cloud File Storage or IFS Cloud File Storage. While Azure Blob Storage is used in the background (in Cloud deployment), it is in a way an implementation detail. IFS Cloud might in theory switch to a different storage option (no plans as far as I know).
I tried with the following command line arguments and it doesn't work. Try 1: fsmigtool --docsfromfile TEST.txt --docsfromfilesource FOLDER --dbconn "jdbc:oracle:thin:@//XXX.ifscloud.net/XXXMGR" --dbuser IFSAPP --dbpass XXX--cloudurl https://XXX-XXX.ifs.cloud --cloudclientid IFS_fsmigtool --cloudclientsecret XXX --cloudrealm XXXXXX1 --logmigtable
You don't - the FS mig tool doesn't have support for accessing files from the FTP server (check the documentation for the tool). You need to make sure the files are copied to some place where the tool can read them, and then list each file path and name in the text file (also documented).
The tool has "somewhat" support for FTP and Shared repositories, you can say. Again, as documented. Have a read, especially the introduction and what to expect from the tool, then come back and ask more questions.
In short, you should provide path and file names to a local drive and folder or a network share, where the file can be accessed by the tool.
Hi @Mathias Dahl ,
Thanks for the support so far, I noted that you have updated below community post:
UPDATE, November 2024
Although the support for Shared and FTP repositories are still deprecated (it will be removed in a coming release), it's still available. However, since 24R1 it's disabled by default. Refer to our release notes for information on how to enable it again. Before you do that though, please consider migrating to one of the other options we have: Database or File Storage.
According to the updated section you added, if a system administrator can change the value of the object property FTP_SHARED_OVERRIDE in the object LU EdmLocation from DISABLED to FORCE_ENABLE_DEPRECATED_FEATURE, FTP repository support is enabled.
All of the data in APP9 is now transferred to FTP and kept there because Cloud Storage is not supported for IFSAPP9. Can we use this FTP by forcing it to be enabled for our go live, and then, after the go live, can we choose File Storage and use a cloud tool to migrate the documents to File Storage from FTP?
Best Regards,
Oshada
@Oshada Samarasinghe What you suggest might work but it's nothing we designed the File Storage migration tool for and nothing we tested, so be prepared for some trial and error.