ArangoDB v3.13 is under development and not released yet. This documentation is not final and potentially incomplete.

Community Edition to Enterprise Edition Upgrade Procedure

While migrating from the Community to the Enterprise Edition is supported, installing directly the Enterprise package over the Community package is not supported. Please see below for the correct migration procedure.
Migrating from Enterprise to Community Edition is, in general, not supported. This is because the Community Edition does not include some features, such as SmartGraphs that, if used while the database was running under the Enterprise Edition, do not make easily possible the conversion of some database structures.

Upgrading from the Community to the Enterprise Edition requires uninstallation of the Community package (can be done in a way that the database data are preserved) and installation of the Enterprise package. The upgrade can be done in a logical or in-place way. Please refer to the Upgrade methods section for a general description of the two methods. Refer to the sections below for a detailed procedure.

The Enterprise Edition of ArangoDB requires a license to run the Enterprise Edition and activate its features. For more information about setting a license key, see License Management.

Procedure for a Logical Upgrade

  1. Use the tool arangodump to take a backup of your data stored by your Community Edition installation
  2. Uninstall the ArangoDB Community Edition package
  3. Install the ArangoDB Enterprise Edition package (and start your Single Instance or Cluster)
  4. Restore the backup using the tool arangorestore.

Procedure for an In-Place Upgrade

  1. Shutdown ArangoDB and make a copy of your data directory (e.g., in Linux, by using the cp command). If you are using a setup that involves several arangod processes (a cluster deployment), please make sure all arangod processes are stopped and all the data directories in use are copied in a safe location
  2. Uninstall the ArangoDB Community Edition package (make sure this is done in a way that your database is kept on your disk, e.g. on Debian systems do not use the purge option of dpkg)
  3. Install the ArangoDB Enterprise Edition package
  4. If you are moving from version A to version B, where B > A, start arangod on your data directory with the option --database.auto-upgrade (in addition to any other options you are currently using). The server will stop after a while (check the log file of arangod as it should contain relevant information about the upgrade). If you use a setup that involves several arangod processes (a cluster deployment), this step has to be repeated for all arangod processes
  5. Start ArangoDB Enterprise Edition (in the same way you were starting ArangoDB Community Edition)