搜尋 Mozilla 技術支援網站

防止技術支援詐騙。我們絕對不會要求您撥打電話或發送簡訊,或是提供個人資訊。請用「回報濫用」功能回報可疑的行為。

Learn More

Migrating Thunderbird files to New Computer

  • 4 回覆
  • 1 有這個問題
  • 9 次檢視
  • 最近回覆由 saxlawyer

more options

I have read and followed the HELP suggestions on here for moving my Thunderbird files to my new computer, but it isn't working.

I store my Thunderbird data files (meaning the actual e-mails/mailbox folders) in a separate directory on my C drive. I copied over all the profile folders as per the online instructions (locating the profile path on my computer, then copying all the Thunderbird folders under "roaming" in that path and then installing Thunderbird on the new computer, locating the new profile path there, and copying all the folders into the "roaming" folder on the new computer).

I also tried copying the data files into the new Thunderbird folder on the new computer roaming path, but that did not work. When I run Thunderbird, it just asks me to set up an account.

I somehow need to incorporate my data files into the new profile path but can't figure out how to do that.

Can anyone help? Thank you so much!

I have read and followed the HELP suggestions on here for moving my Thunderbird files to my new computer, but it isn't working. I store my Thunderbird data files (meaning the actual e-mails/mailbox folders) in a separate directory on my C drive. I copied over all the profile folders as per the online instructions (locating the profile path on my computer, then copying all the Thunderbird folders under "roaming" in that path and then installing Thunderbird on the new computer, locating the new profile path there, and copying all the folders into the "roaming" folder on the new computer). I also tried copying the data files into the new Thunderbird folder on the new computer roaming path, but that did not work. When I run Thunderbird, it just asks me to set up an account. I somehow need to incorporate my data files into the new profile path but can't figure out how to do that. Can anyone help? Thank you so much!

所有回覆 (4)

more options

saxlawyer said

I store my Thunderbird data files (meaning the actual e-mails/mailbox folders) in a separate directory on my C drive.

Kindly elaborate on the above. Do you mean you changed the Message Storage > Local Directory path for each account on the old computer?

more options

Correct. The message storage location had been changed. I don't think that was the problem. I was actually able to complete the migration by using the Add-On "Import Export Tools NG". First I imported my old profile and then I imported the "folder with subfolders with structure" from the old computer and that seems to have worked. For some reason, some of the e-mails from earlier that day did not make it through the transfer (even though I closed the old program before doing any of the transfers) but good enough.

I am concerned, however, for dealing with this in the future. It does not seem enough to just back up the profile file and the e-mails because I cannot import them without that Add On Tool. So if Thunderbird stops working on this new computer (for whatever reason) I won't be able to export the files.

more options

You can always transfer mail between profiles or computers by manually copying the mbox files - the large ones with no extension, named after folders, in Mail/<popserver>, ImapMail/<imapserver> and Mail/Local Folders in the source computer - to Mail/Local Folders in the target computer. That will work even if Mail and ImapMail are not located in the usual place as subfolders of the profile, as long as TB is pointed to the Local Directory in Server Settings.

more options

Thanks. That's what I did. I copied everything over, into the the "roaming" directory of the new profile path on the new computer, but when I opened TB, it just kept asking me to set up a new e-mail, and did not display any of my accounts or mail. So something wasn't connecting. Either I needed to edit the profiles.ini file or something like that because it wasn't reading any of the prior data until I used that Add-On.