Glom 1.16 was the first with the backup feature. It also has an export feature. You should definitely try to use that to keep a copy of your database. It might work.
Murray On Fri, 2015-07-31 at 06:35 -0700, Muley wrote: > It's the newest version that'll run on my hardware. I'm going to > build a new computer, but was hoping to wait until winter, as I have > other work piling up. > > On 07/31/2015 06:12 AM, Murray Cumming wrote: > > > The backup and restore feature should let you go from one version to the > > next, usually to a newer version, despite the incompatibility between > > PostgreSQL versions. But I've never tried to make older versions open > > files from newer versions. > > > > Ubuntu 10.04 is incredibly old. I can't imagine why you would use it. > > > > Murray > > > > On Thu, 2015-07-30 at 14:23 -0700, Muley wrote: > > > I have been running Glom on Fedora 14, which has, I believe, glom > > > 1.16. > > > > > > I've swiched to Ubuntu 10.04, which has 1.14 installed. > > > > > > My previously created database files ( under 1.16) won't open on > > > Ubuntu. > > > > > > Will higher versions of glom run on Ubuntu 10.04? Or, is there an > > > alternative solution? > > > > > > Don't want to have to re-create my data bases, and need access to them > > > post haste. > > > > > > Muley > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > > glom-devel-list mailing list > > > glom-devel-list@gnome.org > > > https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/glom-devel-list > -- Murray Cumming murr...@murrayc.com www.murrayc.com _______________________________________________ glom-devel-list mailing list glom-devel-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/glom-devel-list