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After a long discussion, it turned out that CodiMD as community project and HackMD as a company, have fundamental different views on the project governance. Due to this, it came to point where the decision for a fork was made. After the fork and move towards an own organisation, this patch updates all links inside the project to the new repositories. Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>
131 lines
4.2 KiB
Markdown
131 lines
4.2 KiB
Markdown
Pad migration guide from etherpad-lite
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===
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The goal of this migration is to do a "dumb" import from all the pads in Etherpad, to notes in
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CodiMD. In particular, the url locations of the pads in Etherpad will be lost. Furthermore, any
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metadata in Etherpad, such as revisions, author data and also formatted text will not be migrated
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to CodiMD (only the plain text contents).
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Note that this guide is not really meant as a support guide. I migrated my own Etherpad to CodiMD,
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and it turned out to be quite easy in my opinion. In this guide I share my experience. Stuff may
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require some creativity to work properly in your case. When I wrote this guide, I was using
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[Etherpad 1.7.0] and [CodiMD 1.2.1]. Good luck!
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[Etherpad 1.7.0]: https://github.com/ether/etherpad-lite/tree/1.7.0
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[CodiMD 1.2.1]: https://github.com/codimd/server/tree/1.2.1
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## 0. Requirements
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- `curl`
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- running Etherpad server
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- running CodiMD server
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- [codimd-cli]
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[codimd-cli]: https://github.com/codimd/cli/blob/master/bin/codimd
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## 1. Retrieve the list of pads
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First, compose a list of all the pads that you want to have migrated from your Etherpad. Other than
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the admin interface, Etherpad does not have a dedicated function to dump a list of all the pads.
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However, the Etherpad wiki explains how to list all the pads by [talking directly to the
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database][howtolistallpads].
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You will end up with a file containing a pad name on each line:
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```
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date-ideas
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groceries
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london
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weddingchecklist
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(...)
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```
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[howtolistallpads]: https://github.com/ether/etherpad-lite/wiki/How-to-list-all-pads/49701ecdcbe07aea7ad27ffa23aed0d99c2e17db
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## 2. Run the migration
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Download [codimd-cli] and put the script in the same directory as the file containing the pad names.
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Add to this directory the file listed below, I called it `migrate-etherpad.sh`. Modify at least the
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configuration settings `ETHERPAD_SERVER` and `CODIMD_SERVER`.
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```shell
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#!/bin/sh
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# migrate-etherpad.sh
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#
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# Description: Migrate pads from etherpad to codimd
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# Author: Daan Sprenkels <hello@dsprenkels.com>
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# This script uses the codimd command line script[1] to import a list of pads from
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# [1]: https://github.com/codimd/cli/blob/master/bin/codimd
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# The base url to where etherpad is hosted
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ETHERPAD_SERVER="https://etherpad.example.com"
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# The base url where codimd is hosted
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CODIMD_SERVER="https://codimd.example.com"
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# Write a list of pads and the urls which they were migrated to
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REDIRECTS_FILE="redirects.txt"
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# Fail if not called correctly
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if (( $# != 1 )); then
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echo "Usage: $0 PAD_NAMES_FILE"
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exit 2
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fi
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# Do the migration
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for PAD_NAME in $1; do
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# Download the pad
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PAD_FILE="$(mktemp)"
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curl "$ETHERPAD_SERVER/p/$PAD_NAME/export/txt" >"$PAD_FILE"
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# Import the pad into codimd
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OUTPUT="$(./codimd import "$PAD_FILE")"
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echo "$PAD_NAME -> $OUTPUT" >>"$REDIRECTS_FILE"
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done
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```
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Call this file like this:
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```shell
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./migrate-etherpad.sh pad_names.txt
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```
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This will download all the pads in `pad_names.txt` and put them on CodiMD. They will get assigned
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random ids, so you won't be able to find them. The script will save the mappings to a file though
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(in my case `redirects.txt`). You can use this file to redirect your users when they visit your
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etherpad using a `301 Permanent Redirect` status code (see the next section).
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## 3. Setup redirects (optional)
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I got a `redirects.txt` file that looked a bit like this:
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```
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date-ideas -> Found. Redirecting to https://codimd.example.com/mPt0KfiKSBOTQ3mNcdfn
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groceries -> Found. Redirecting to https://codimd.example.com/UukqgwLfhYyUUtARlcJ2_y
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london -> Found. Redirecting to https://codimd.example.com/_d3wa-BE8t4Swv5w7O2_9R
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weddingchecklist -> Found. Redirecting to https://codimd.example.com/XcQGqlBjl0u40wfT0N8TzQ
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(...)
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```
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Using some `sed` magic, I changed it to an nginx config snippet:
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```
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location = /p/date-ideas {
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return 301 https://codimd.example.com/mPt0M1KfiKSBOTQ3mNcdfn;
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}
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location = /p/groceries {
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return 301 https://codimd.example.com/UukqgwLfhYyUUtARlcJ2_y;
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}
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location = /p/london {
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return 301 https://codimd.example.com/_d3wa-BE8t4Swv5w7O2_9R;
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}
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location = /p/weddingchecklist {
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return 301 https://codimd.example.com/XcQGqlBjl0u40wfT0N8TzQ;
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}
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```
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I put this file into my `etherpad.example.com` nginx config, such that all the users would be
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redirected accordingly.
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