I want to back up my Thunderbird 60.6.1 (32-bit) profile in case of crash
I am still using Mozbackup which has successfully kept my Thunderbird up to date by making a copy every 3 months or so. Over the last decade I have transferred my profile after broken laptop incidents 3 times. I was surprised to read that Mozbackup stopped being updated some years ago. Although it continues to function adequately in saving all (if not 90%+) of my message and subscription feed files all grouped under 'Mail' folders, one for each customer, perhaps it is time to use another back-up solution. I am sure Mozilla has its own method of saving such a backup, but I cannot find it.
Vsi odgovori (5)
The simplest backup method is to copy the Thunderbird folder, which contains all the data for all profiles. The (hidden by default) location in W10 is:
C:\Users\windowsusername\AppData\Roaming\Thunderbird
To restore it to the same or another computer, simply replace the Thunderbird folder with the backed-up copy.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/moving-thunderbird-data-to-a-new-computer
Another (Windows) option is to use a program like MailStore to continuously archive TB mail. But the other method backs up all data, including contacts, calendars, add-ons, feeds, settings etc.
Thank you. I used your simplest method, with help from the following help page https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/profiles-where-thunderbird-stores-user-data#w_where-is-my-profile-stored I used the %APPDATA% approach in order to find my profile following your first suggestion as in "the (hidden by default) location in W10". My W10 Acer laptop is in German, and I am the only User ("Benutzer"), so the %APPDATA% route simplified finding the hidden file : " %APPDATA% is shorthand for the C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\ folder, which depends on your Windows user account name." There I found " Roaming > Thunderbird > Profiles ". The profile folder contains a file with 8 characters, in this case 6 letters and 2 numbers. I take it that this is the file to highlight - right-click and copy to an external disc. When it comes to restoring this profile, I would use the same procedure in reverse as it were : from the external hard disk to the hidden file on Drive C.
So basically I followed your: "The simplest backup method is to copy the Thunderbird folder, which contains all the data for all profiles. The (hidden by default) location in W10 is: C:\Users\windowsusername\AppData\Roaming\Thunderbird To restore it to the same or another computer, simply replace the Thunderbird folder with the backed-up copy."
As I only wanted to do a trial run, I left the Thunderbird program running so that it could not complete the copy, but will close it when I actually make the copy on an external disc.
Sorry to be so long-winded, but does that sound like I got it right?
Almost. While it's true that all the user data is contained in the profile folder, the Thunderbird folder also includes the all-important profiles.ini file that points the TB program to the location of the profile folder. It's a lot easier to copy your data to another computer or restore to the current one if you deal with the Thunderbird folder - and it doesn't require any significant extra space.
The same method applies to the ...\Roaming\Mozilla\Firefox folder.
Thank you very much, especially for the key .ini file point. In the AppData\Roaming\Thunderbird I see the following files : Crash Reports, Pending Pings (empty) , Profiles, and profiles (the all-important .ini file....of 122 Bytes!) So whenever I want to make a backup every 3 months or so, I just copy and paste this entire Roaming\Thunderbird folder onto external disk? Good.
BTW I see I downloaded the Mailstore App a few months ago to try it out. Whether I did that correctly or not I don't know, but it took AGES. In fact I cannot even find the folder it created on the same external disk. Your method just took a about 2 minutes to copy and paste externally maximum. While you are there, I would be most grateful if you could tell me where I would find the Mailstore App on my Drive C, so that I could either delete or uninstall it.
I don't have MailStore installed, but I'm sure you can remove it by right-clicking the icon in the Start menu, Uninstall.