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Upgrade content databases to SharePoint Server 2019

APPLIES TO: no-img-132013 yes-img-162016 yes-img-192019 no-img-seSubscription Edition no-img-sopSharePoint in Microsoft 365

When you upgrade from SharePoint Server 2016 to SharePoint Server 2019, you must use a database attach upgrade, which means that you upgrade only the content for your environment and not the configuration settings. After you have configured the SharePoint Server 2016 environment, copied the content and service application databases, and upgraded the service applications, you can attach and upgrade the content databases to SharePoint Server 2019. This article explains the steps you take to attach and upgrade the content databases to SharePoint Server 2019.

Phase 4 of the upgrade process: Upgrade content databases

Phase 4 of the upgrade process: Upgrade content databases

Phase Description
123 steps This is the fourth phase in the process to upgrade SharePoint Server 2016 data and sites to SharePoint Server 2019. The process includes the following phases that must be completed in order:
Create the SharePoint Server 2019 farm for a database attach upgrade
Copy databases to the new farm for upgrade to SharePoint Server 2019
Upgrade service applications to SharePoint Server 2019
Upgrade content databases to SharePoint Server 2019 (this phase)

For an overview of the whole process, see Overview of the upgrade process to SharePoint Server 2019.

Before you begin

Before you attach and upgrade the content databases, review the following information and take any recommended actions.

  • Make sure that the account that you use to attach the databases is a member of the db_owner fixed database role for the content databases that you want to upgrade.

  • Make sure that the account that you use to create web applications is a member of the Farm administrators group in Central Administration.

Create web applications

Create a web application for each web application that existed in the SharePoint Server 2016 environment. For each web application, do the following:

  • Use the same URL (including name, port, and host header) and configure alternate-access mapping settings.

    If you use a different URL, Office applications might not be redirected correctly to the new URLs and all bookmarks to the old URLs will not work.

  • Use the same authentication method.

    Because claims-based authentication is now the default option for SharePoint Server 2019, you must use Microsoft PowerShell to create a web application that uses Windows Classic authentication. .

  • Recreate managed paths.

  • Recreate quota templates.

  • Configure email settings for the web application.

  • Enable self-service site creation for any web application that used it in the previous environment. Recreate any self-service site creation settings.

  • Create the managed path for the My Sites (/personal) on the web application that hosts My Sites. My Sites are available in SharePoint Server only.

  • Recreate any web application policies or other web application settings that you had configured in the previous environment.

Reapply customizations

One frequent cause of failures during upgrade is that the new environment does not have customized features, solutions, or other elements. Make sure that all custom elements from the SharePoint Server 2016 environment are installed on your front-end web servers before you upgrade any content databases.

In this step, you manually transfer all customizations to your new farm. Make sure to install any components that your sites depend on to work correctly, such as the following:

  • Custom site definitions

  • Custom style sheets, such as cascading style sheets, and images

  • Custom Web Parts

  • Custom Web services

  • Custom features and solutions

  • Custom assemblies

  • Web.config changes (such as security)

    Ensure that you transfer all unique settings from the Web.config files for each web application to the new servers.

  • Administrator-approved form templates (.xsn files) and data connection files (.udcx files) for InfoPath.

  • Any other components or files on which your sites depend.

The installation for SharePoint Server 2019 continues to use 16 as its major version number including in the file system paths.

Verify custom components

To make sure that you have identified all custom components for your environment, use the Stsadm -o enumallwebs operation in the SharePoint Server 2016 environment and use the includefeatures and includewebparts parameters. This operation can report the templates, features, Web Parts, and other custom elements that are used for each site. For more information about how to use the enumallwebs operation, see Enumallwebs: Stsadm operation (Office SharePoint Server).

You can also use the Get-SPWeb cmdlet in your SharePoint Server 2016 environment to see template that are associated with each site and then verify that the template is installed in your SharePoint Server 2019 environment. For more information about this operation, see Get-SPWeb.

Before you attach the content databases to the web applications, use the Test-SPContentDatabase cmdlet to verify that you have all the custom components that you must have for that database.

To verify custom components are available by using PowerShell

  1. Verify that you have the following memberships:
  • securityadmin fixed server role on the SQL Server instance.

  • db_owner fixed database role on all databases that are to be updated.

  • Administrators group on the server on which you are running the PowerShell cmdlets.

    An administrator can use the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet to grant permissions to use SharePoint Server 2016 cmdlets.

    Note

    If you do not have permissions, contact your Setup administrator or SQL Server administrator to request permissions. For additional information about PowerShell permissions, see Add-SPShellAdmin.

  1. Start the SharePoint 2019 Management Shell.

  2. At the PowerShell command prompt, type the following command:

Test-SPContentDatabase -Name DatabaseName -WebApplication URL
Where:
  • DatabaseName is the name of the database that you want to test.

  • URL is the URL for the web application that will host the sites.

For more information, see Test-SPContentDatabase.

Attach a content database to a web application and upgrade the database

When you attach a content database, you upgrade the database and add the site collections in that database to the web application that you specify. After the databases are upgraded, the site collection upgrade process is automatically started by default.

When you attach a content database, for a web application that spans multiple content databases, make sure that you attach the content database that contains the root site collection first. In other words, before you continue, examine the root of the web application in the SharePoint Server 2016 server farm to determine the first site collection. After you attach the database that contains the root site, attach the other content databases for the web application in any order. You do not have to create any site collections to store the content before you attach the database. This process attaches the content databases and the site collections inside that database. Make sure that you do not add new site collections until you have restored all the content databases.

Tip

Each site collection in a content database has a GUID that is registered in the configuration database and associated with the site collection. Therefore, you cannot add the same site collection two times to the farm, even in separate web applications. Although you can successfully attach the database in this situation, you will be unable to browse to the site collection. > If you must have a copy of a site collection in the same farm, first attach the database that contains the site collection to a separate farm, and then use the Backup-SPSite and Restore-SPSite PowerShell cmdlets to copy the site collection to the other farm. The backup and restore process creates a new GUID for the site collection. For more information about these cmdlets, see Backup-SPSite and Restore-SPSite.

For My Sites, attach the content database that contains the My Site host before attaching databases that contain the My Sites.

By default, when you created the web applications in the new SharePoint Server 2019 environment, a content database was created for each web application. You can ignore these default databases until after you have attached your SharePoint Server 2016 databases, and then you can delete the default databases.

Important

If you are moving the content databases across domains or forests or to another environment that has different service accounts, make sure that the permissions for the service accounts are still correct before you attach the databases.

Note

One frequent cause of failures during upgrade is that the environment is missing customized features, solutions, or other elements. Be sure that all custom elements from the SharePoint Server 2016 environment are installed on your servers in the SharePoint Server 2019 environment before you start the upgrade process. Use the Test-SPContentDatabase cmdlet to identify custom elements that your sites might be missing.

To attach a content database to a web application by using PowerShell

  1. You must use the Mount-SPContentDatabase cmdlet to attach a content database to a web application. Using the SharePoint Central Administration pages to attach a content database is not supported for upgrading.

    If you want to delay the sites upgrade, you can use the SkipSiteUpgrade parameter of the Mount-SPContentDatabase cmdlet.

    Note

    Using the Mount-SPContentDatabase cmdlet to attach a content database is the recommended behavior and option for upgrading databases and site collections in SharePoint Server 2016.

    Ensure that the account that you use to attach the databases is a member of the db_owner fixed database role for the content databases that you want to upgrade.

    Verify that you have the following memberships:

  • securityadmin fixed server role on the SQL Server instance.

  • db_owner fixed database role on all databases that are to be updated.

  • Administrators group on the server on which you are running the PowerShell cmdlets.

    An administrator can use the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet to grant permissions to use SharePoint Server 2019 cmdlets.

    Note

    If you do not have permissions, contact your Setup administrator or SQL Server administrator to request permissions. For additional information about PowerShell permissions, see Add-SPShellAdmin.

  1. Start the SharePoint 2019 Management Shell.

  2. At the PowerShell command prompt, type the following command and then press ENTER:

Mount-SPContentDatabase -Name DatabaseName -DatabaseServer ServerName -WebApplication URL
Where:
  • DatabaseName is the name of the database that you want to upgrade.

  • ServerName is server on which the database is stored.

  • URL is the URL for the web application that will host the sites.

For more information, see Mount-SPContentDatabase. After the databases are upgraded, the site collections are automatically upgraded. For additional information on how to upgrade a site collection, see Upgrade a site collection to SharePoint Server 2019.

Verify upgrade for the first database

After you attach a database, you can use the Upgrade Status page in Central Administration to check the status of upgrade on your databases. After the upgrade process is complete, you can review the upgrade log file to see whether upgrade produced issues. You can use a PowerShell cmdlet to check the upgrade status for all the content databases. For more information about verifying and troubleshooting upgrade, see Verify database upgrades in SharePoint Server 2019.

To view the Upgrade Status page

  • Verify that the user account that is performing this procedure is a member of the db_owner fixed database role for the databases.

  • In Central Administration, click Upgrade and Migration, and then click Check upgrade status.

To view the upgrade log file

  • The upgrade error log file and the upgrade log file are located at %COMMONPROGRAMFILES%\Microsoft Shared\web server extensions\16\LOGS. The upgrade log file contains more detailed information than the upgrade error log. Be sure to check the summary at the bottom of the log files for information about the overall status and a count of the warnings and errors in the file.

    The logs are text files named in the following format:

    • Upgrade-YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS-SSS-error.log

    • Upgrade-YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS-SSS.log

    Where

    • YYYYMMDD is the date

    • HHMMSS-SSS is the time (hours in 24-hour clock format, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds)

    An example for an upgrade error log is Upgrade-20120105-132126-374-error.log, and an example for an upgrade log is Upgrade-20120105-132126-374.log.

    Note

    The format of the upgrade log for SharePoint Server 2016 is based on the same structure as ULS. > The upgrade log file includes the name of the content database being upgraded.

To view upgrade status for all databases by using PowerShell

  1. Verify that you have the following memberships:
  • securityadmin fixed server role on the SQL Server instance.

  • db_owner fixed database role on all databases that are to be updated.

  • Administrators group on the server on which you are running the PowerShell cmdlets.

    An administrator can use the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet to grant permissions to use SharePoint Server 2019 cmdlets.

    Note

    If you do not have permissions, contact your Setup administrator or SQL Server administrator to request permissions. For additional information about PowerShell permissions, see Add-SPShellAdmin.

  1. Start the SharePoint 2019 Management Shell.

  2. At the PowerShell command prompt, type the following command:

Get-SPContentDatabase | ft Name, NeedsUpgradeIncludeChildren

This cmdlet returns a table-style list of databases in your farm and indicates whether the database needs an upgrade to SharePoint Server 2019.

Attach the remaining databases

After you restore the first content database and verify success, you can continue to restore and upgrade other databases. You can perform parallel database attach upgrades to upgrade more than one database at a time. Use separate Microsoft PowerShell command prompt to run multiple upgrades. It is recommended that you separate the start time for each new database upgrade session by several minutes to prevent issues with temporary locks set for the web application during attachment. Otherwise you might receive an error on the upgrade session. The wait time to clear temporary locks varies depending on the number of site collections, or the speed of the database server hardware.

Verify upgrade for additional databases

After you upgrade all additional databases, view the Upgrade Status page to monitor progress and verify that the upgrade process is complete. Review the log file to identify any other issues.

Next steps

After you upgrade the databases, you might want to perform additional steps to make sure that your farm is ready for use. For example:

  • Migrate user accounts to claims authentication, if it is necessary.

    By default, new web applications in SharePoint Server 2019 use claims authentication. If you were using classic authentication in the previous environment, you must migrate the users to claims authentication.

  • Update links that are used in any upgraded InfoPath form templates.

    For a database-attach upgrade, you exported and imported all InfoPath form templates in your environment when you created the new environment. After upgrade, you can now update the links that are used in those upgraded form templates to point to the correct URLs by using a Microsoft PowerShell cmdlet.

    InfoPath is available in SharePoint Server only.

  • Perform a full crawl

    For more information, see Start, pause, resume, or stop a crawl in SharePoint Server.

  • Back up your farm

    For more information, see Back up farms in SharePoint Server.

Phase Description
123 steps This is the fourth phase in the process to upgrade SharePoint Server 2016 data and sites to SharePoint Server 2019.
For an overview of the whole process, see Overview of the upgrade process to SharePoint Server 2019.