I would write a console application for this.
Open the root Web and iterate through its sub webs. Do the work needed for each page, by opening the WebPartManager.
Here are some pseudo code to get you started.
string SourceUrl = "http://ThisWeb";
using (SPSite sourceSite = new SPSite(SourceURL))
{
using (SPWeb sourceWeb = sourceSite.OpenWeb(SourceURL))
{
IterateSubWebsProd(sourceWeb):
}
}
private void IterateSubWebsProd(SPWeb sourceWeb)
{
// This is the migration function
DoThingyWithThisWeb(sourceWeb);
foreach (SPWeb subWeb in sourceWeb.Webs)
{
IterateSubWebsProd(subWeb);
subWeb.Dispose();
}
}
private void DoThingyWithThisWeb(SPWeb sourceWeb)
{
PublishingPage currentPage = null;
string currentPageName = "<something>";
// Find the pages that you want to modify, with a CAML query for example
SPQuery query = new SPQuery();
query.Query = string.Format("" +
"<Where>" +
"<Eq>" +
"<FieldRef Name='FileLeafRef' />" +
"<Value Type='File'>{0}</Value>" +
"</Eq>" +
"</Where>" +
"", currentPageName);
// This codesnippet is from a Publishing web example
PublishingWeb publishingWeb = PublishingWeb.GetPublishingWeb(sourceWeb);
PublishingPageCollection pageColl = publishingWeb.GetPublishingPages(query);
if (pageColl.Count > 0)
{
currentPage = pageColl[0];
}
using (SPLimitedWebPartManager wpMan = currentPage.ListItem.File.GetLimitedWebPartManager(System.Web.UI.WebControls.WebParts.PersonalizationScope.Shared))
{
foreach (WebPart wp in wpMan.WebParts)
{
if (wp.GetType().Equals(typeof(Microsoft.SharePoint.WebPartPages.ContentEditorWebPart)))
{
Microsoft.SharePoint.WebPartPages.ContentEditorWebPart thisWebPart = wp as Microsoft.SharePoint.WebPartPages.ContentEditorWebPart;
// This is just dummy code, here you will do your content migration
XmlDocument xmlDoc = new XmlDocument();
XmlElement xmlElement = xmlDoc.CreateElement("RootElement");
xmlElement.InnerText = sourceItem[SourceField].ToString();
thisWebPart.Content = xmlElement;
wpMan.SaveChanges(thisWebPart);
}
}
}
}
