1

I have an instance in AWS hosting a Neo4j DB. The version im using is 2.3.1. I backed it up using "neo4j-backup". I then zipped the files and uploaded to an external storage. I wanted to restore the DB to another instance I have using the same version (2.3.1), so I copied the files to the same folder the 1st instance is using.

When I run the neo4j console command it states:

ERROR Neo4j cannot be started, because the database files require upgrading and upgrades are disabled in configuration. Please set 'allow_store_upgrade' to 'true' in your configuration file and try again.

Of course the "allow_store_upgrade" is commented out, Do I have to do the upgrade when restoring? How can I find the DB version?

1 Answer 1

0

If you're using the same version you shouldn't need to comment it out. Though I don't think it would harm anything if you do (especially if you still have that backup somewhere else).

You should be able to find the version of Neo4j in the CHANGES.txt / README.txt files. It should also output the version in data/graph.db/messages.log when you start up the server. Also if you go to the web console (at http://localhost:7474 by default) it will show you the version.

3
  • Thanks, but... When I don't comment out the upgrade I get the following error: Caused by: org.neo4j.kernel.impl.storemigration.StoreUpgrader$UnexpectedUpgradingStoreVersionException: '/home/ubuntu/db/neostore.nodestore.db' has a store version number that we cannot upgrade from. Expected 'v0.A.3' but file is version ' '. So it does not let me even upgrade the DB.. the DB that is backed up is 2.3.1 (checked the messages.log of the original DB).
    – Gal Gibli
    Jan 3, 2016 at 8:25
  • Sorry, I found the issue. I was working on the Staging servers and they contain 2.3.1 but forgot that the Production is still 2.2.5.
    – Gal Gibli
    Jan 3, 2016 at 9:54
  • Awesome, glad you figured it out ;) Jan 3, 2016 at 12:59

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.