Introduction

Description

What we are talking about.

What does it mean to upgrade Plone?

This document covers the procedures and issues involved in upgrading an existing Plone installation. This involves both the upgrading of the program set, and migration of the site itself.

Generally, you will often see the word migration used as the word we use to describe the process of getting your Plone site from one version of a given component to a newer version. For most people, this means upgrading Plone to a newer release, for example from 2.5.x to 3.3.x.

Migration is necessary because the internals of Plone sometimes change to support new functionality. When that's the case, the content which is stored in your Plone instance may not match what the new version of the software expects. Plone has a builtin tool that migrates existing content to the new structure.

This guide describes migration in Plone, specifically how you upgrade between different versions.

Before migrating you should read this entire document to understand the potential impact migrating will have on your Plone site. In particular, read everything in the common problems and issues section.

The guide applies to all contemporary versions of Plone, and we have also included the older, unsupported versions for reference.

A note about version numbering and terminology

Up until Plone 2.1, the policy was that each of our major releases would be incremented 0.1, like a standard framework policy. This caused some confusion and false expectations on how complex an upgrade would be, and have since changed this policy.

Starting after the 2.5 release, we have moved to a policy that increases the version number to a .0 on every major release. This means that when we say a major release, we are referring to a x.0 release, whereas a minor release has the version numbering 2.5.x or 3.0.x.

In addition to the general procedure there are version-specific migration guides. These guides contain more specific instructions and valuable information that has been collected from real-life migration cases.