Applicable Product:
- OrgPublisher
Applicable Release:
- V21.x and later
- 11.x
Summary:
Migrating your from legacy OrgPublisher (version 11.15.x and earlier) to the new version of OrgPublisher (v21.x and later) involves these steps:
Note: it is assumed that you have already installed version 21.x or later
A. Publish your chart(s) as HTML5 at least once, preferably using 11.15.13
B. Using the new OrgPublisher's Configuration tool's "Migration" function to read the published HTML5 files
A. Publishing your legacy chart as HTML5
- Start up the legacy OrgPublisher and open your chart like you normally do
- Click on File-->Publish
- If you see a publishing definition that says "HTML5" in the "Publish As" column, make a note of where the publish location is by clicking on the HTML5 publishing definition and then noting the "Publish where" path - you will need this path for the migration process:
- If you do not have an HTML5 publishing definition, click the "New" button
- Go through the publishing wizard and choose the "Advacned Mode" and then choose HTML5 option and go through the steps
- When you get to the "Publish Location" step, you can just create a folder on the desktop as the location to which you publish the chart
- Finish up the wizard and publish the chart
B. Migrating the chart to the new version of OrgPublisher
- Start up the OrgPublisherConfiguration tool for 21.x and later
- Click on the "Charting Web Apps" tab and then select the charting web app from the "App Name" droplist, into which you want to migrate the chart
- Then click on the "Migration" tab and click on the browse button for the "Legacy HTML5 Publish Folder" field:
- Browse to the folder where your published HTML5 charts are (step A.3 and A.6) and make sure you go to the "Data" sub folder:
- Then select the chart(s) you want to migrate, and then click on the "Migrate" button
- Once the migration process completes, you will be able to see the chart(s) and data source(s) in OrgPublisherAdministration
Keywords: Migration, legacy
Created: Alvin Ee
Reviewed: Larryl Shaw