• Our team is looking to connect with folks who use email services provided by Plesk, or a premium service. If you'd like to be part of the discovery process and share your experiences, we invite you to complete this short screening survey. If your responses match the persona we are looking for, you'll receive a link to schedule a call at your convenience. We look forward to hearing from you!
  • We are looking for U.S.-based freelancer or agency working with SEO or WordPress for a quick 30-min interviews to gather feedback on XOVI, a successful German SEO tool we’re looking to launch in the U.S.
    If you qualify and participate, you’ll receive a $30 Amazon gift card as a thank-you. Please apply here. Thanks for helping shape a better SEO product for agencies!
  • The BIND DNS server has already been deprecated and removed from Plesk for Windows.
    If a Plesk for Windows server is still using BIND, the upgrade to Plesk Obsidian 18.0.70 will be unavailable until the administrator switches the DNS server to Microsoft DNS. We strongly recommend transitioning to Microsoft DNS within the next 6 weeks, before the Plesk 18.0.70 release.
  • The Horde component is removed from Plesk Installer. We recommend switching to another webmail software supported in Plesk.

Plesk upgrade with OS upgrade

galaxy

Regular Pleskian
In order to get multiple PHP versions, I need to upgrade my CentOS 5 to CentOS 6.
I have plesk 12.0.18 and want to go to the latest 12.5.30.

So should I upgrade in place on the CentOS 5 server, then do a transfer/migration, or should I just install a fresh 12.5.30 on the CentOS 6 container, then do a transfer/migration from the 12.0.18 to the new 12.5.30?
 
I've just created a CentOS 7 container and will install on that. Are there any issues with CentOS?

Thanks Lloyd...
 
Hi galaxy,
No, none that I've come across (yet).
Just remember CentOS 7 installs MariaDB by default, and the service name is changed...

# service mariadb status

Any issues just post back.
Regards

Lloyd
 
Looking for a recommendation...
I've had to build a new system, put OpenVZ on it, put a CentOS 7 container on it, got plesk installed.
I'm going to test the migration on Monday. If all looks well, I'll bring the system to the data center and do it live.

Since I'm behind a firewall, the public IP's on the container go nowhere. So that's safe. I can keep all the IP's exactly the same (except for the internal addresses).
I have a requirement to keep the public IP's the same as they are in production. Some customers hard-coded their "dedicated" ip's into their apps and systems at offices, so I can't afford to lose customers over that.
I see two approaches to this. I can do this live *twice*, first with temporary IP's, then again to the final container with the originals after the original is taken offline.
Or what would happen if during a down-time I have the same public IP's on both containers and do the transfer/migration? Would that be better? Possibly putting in iptables rules to block the public IP's in VE0? Or temporarily setting the OpenVZ "NEIGHBOUR_DEVS=all" to "detect" or just commenting it out until the migration is finished?

I see the latter as being less work (only one transfer), but using the former would keep things alive but possibly confuse any applications using the static IP's.
 
Back
Top