44 Zeilen
1,8 KiB
Markdown
44 Zeilen
1,8 KiB
Markdown
If you want to migrate your old mailcow:dockerized installation to a new server you can follow this:
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**1\.**
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Install [Docker](https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/linux/) and [Docker Compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/) on your new server.
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Quick installation for most operation systems:
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- Docker
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```
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curl -sSL https://get.docker.com/ | CHANNEL=stable sh
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# After the installation process is finished, you may need to enable the service and make sure it is started (e.g. CentOS 7)
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systemctl enable docker.service
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```
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- docker-compose
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```
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curl -L https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/$(curl -Ls https://www.servercow.de/docker-compose/latest.php)/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m) > /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
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chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
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```
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Please use the latest Docker engine available and do not use the engine that ships with your distros repository.
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**2\.** Make sure that Docker is stopped:
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```
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systemctl status docker.service
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```
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**3\.** Run the following commands on the source machine (take care of adding the trailing slashes in the first path parameter as shown below!):
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```
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rsync -aHhP --numeric-ids --delete /opt/mailcow-dockerized/ root@some.other.machine.net:/opt/mailcow-dockerized
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rsync -aHhP --numeric-ids --delete /var/lib/docker/volumes/ root@some.other.machine.net:/var/lib/docker/volumes
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```
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**4\.** Shut down Mailcow via `docker-compose down` and stop Docker on the source machine.
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**5\.** Repeat step 3 with the same commands (this will be much quicker than the first time).
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**6\.** Start docker on the target machine `systemctl start docker.service`.
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**7\.** Go into the /opt/mailcow-dockerized directory and run `docker-compose pull`.
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**8\.** Start the whole mailcow stack with `docker-compose up -d` and everything should be fine.
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**9\.** Change your DNS settings.
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