Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

How can I make new OS and Thunderbird versions use old profile data?

  • 7 پاسخ
  • 1 has this problem
  • 16 views
  • آخرین پاسخ توسّط Matt

more options

I recently changed from Scientific Linux to Ubuntu. The thunderbird in Ubuntu wants me to create a new profile but I really do not want to have to set up all the mail accounts etc all over again. I have a complete copy of the .thunderbird directory from the Scientific Linux version. How do I get the new version to use that data?

I recently changed from Scientific Linux to Ubuntu. The thunderbird in Ubuntu wants me to create a new profile but I really do not want to have to set up all the mail accounts etc all over again. I have a complete copy of the .thunderbird directory from the Scientific Linux version. How do I get the new version to use that data?

Chosen solution

Did you read the last past of the topic about downgrade protection? I think not as it addresses exactly that message and tells you how you how start Thunderbird to allow the downgrade.

Read this answer in context 👍 1

All Replies (7)

more options

Following that advice I get a dialog box saying

"A newer version of Thunderbird may have made changes to your profile which are no longer compatible with this older version. Use this profile only with that newer version, or create a new profile for this installation of Thunderbird. Creating a new profile requires setting up your accounts, calendars and add-ons again."

The last sentence of that dialog is exactly what I want to avoid having to do (what a waste of time it would be when things ran fine before I changed the choice of Linux distro)

more options

Chosen Solution

Did you read the last past of the topic about downgrade protection? I think not as it addresses exactly that message and tells you how you how start Thunderbird to allow the downgrade.

more options

I did see that but I had the same problem as the anonymous commenter of November 21. However, in view of your further response - for which many thanks - I followed Ariana's comment and then running thunderbird -allow-downgrade has apparently fixed things just fine. (The instruction to change to the Thunderbird installation directory and then run the command as ./thunderbird.... is not necessary for Linux users whose paths are set up so the command above will work.)

more options

mahmacc said

(The instruction to change to the Thunderbird installation directory and then run the command as ./thunderbird.... is not necessary for Linux users whose paths are set up so the command above will work.)

Hmm, and who has their path set correctly. My experience is that the more people need help the less likely they are to even know what a path is. That is certainly the case on Windows where very few appear to even have heard of the path. It is still there and works like it always did. But the user base of windows has no idea.

more options

So after adding -allow-downgrade to the launch string. What next?

I have been using Thunderbird for 10 years, my profile is a little over 5gb. When I added the allow downgrade switch it fixed the problem, but does that mean I will forever use the older profile structure? Will future versions of Thunderbird support it? Is there a way to fix the profile so Thunderbird 68.7+ can use my profile without needing the -allow downgrade switch?

Thanks

more options

Tim said

So after adding -allow-downgrade to the launch string. What next?

Nothing, you have downgraded your profile. You only use it once.