I know this is a rather particular problem, but maybe it is feasible to implement this.
Is your feature request related to a problem? Please describe.
Our organization has a Nextcloud instance hosted by IONOS. But we weren't happy with it and got fiber in our rooms, so we decided to switch back to a locally hosted installation.
The data migration went smoothly, but we cannot export the Decks and import it to the next locally hosted installation because Deck does not support this in its version for Nextcloud 31 (Deck App version: 1.15.x).
Unfortunately, IONOS cannot provide us any information on when they will upgrade to Nextcloud 32. So we have the situation that everything is migrated to our new Nextcloud installation but the Decks.
Describe the solution you'd like
A backport of the JSON export functionality to Deck App 1.15. So we could import the decks in our Nextcloud 32 installation.
Describe alternatives you've considered
Manually migration of the decks. But this would be a lot of manual labor.
Additional context
There is none.
Greetings
Jens
I know this is a rather particular problem, but maybe it is feasible to implement this.
Is your feature request related to a problem? Please describe.
Our organization has a Nextcloud instance hosted by IONOS. But we weren't happy with it and got fiber in our rooms, so we decided to switch back to a locally hosted installation.
The data migration went smoothly, but we cannot export the Decks and import it to the next locally hosted installation because Deck does not support this in its version for Nextcloud 31 (Deck App version: 1.15.x).
Unfortunately, IONOS cannot provide us any information on when they will upgrade to Nextcloud 32. So we have the situation that everything is migrated to our new Nextcloud installation but the Decks.
Describe the solution you'd like
A backport of the JSON export functionality to Deck App 1.15. So we could import the decks in our Nextcloud 32 installation.
Describe alternatives you've considered
Manually migration of the decks. But this would be a lot of manual labor.
Additional context
There is none.
Greetings
Jens