I updated from latest 9.1 to 9.2 and I lost a folder of all my project images, a folder with js and CSS files? Not sure if anything else until it does not work. (Dev environment) Strangely some sub folder content was saved?
peculiar and frustrating.
I came to the forum looking for help for a similar problem. I spent 3 hours last night after upgrading to 9.2 adding some forms, and code to some events, and tonight when I start up Scriptcase to continue, everything I did last night is gone. In fact, I’m missing folders in this project now because my deployment last night has 225 folders and Scriptcase is now showing I only have 178…
When I look at the last “Generation” date column in the project that I deployed last night, it shows 4/30/2017??? Sounds to me like it may be looking at an older version’s database? Help please.
When I look in D:\Program Files\NetMake\v9\wwwroot\scriptcase\app all my projects are there with the correct directories too.
I do have the deployment package from last night that has all 225 folders, and I did do a backup before I upgraded to 9.2 (before the 3 hours of work). What are my options?
Sorry, don’t mean to hijack your thread ajc1502, but sounds like we have similar issues.
I didn’t want to try to restore anything without some advice tonight in fear it would overwrite something, and I certainly didn’t want to generate anything. So I closed out the browser in frustration, but as I prepared to shut down my Windows 10 machine, it occurred to me that it took a while to pop up the login page this evening when I opened up Scriptcase. So for kicks, I opened up Scriptcase again and it popped open immediately. I logged in as usual and now everything is back - even all the new stuff from last night… I have no idea what happened but if anyone figures it out, I’d like to know so I can clean up old versions of the software to ensure that doesn’t happen again.
I hope it works like that for you @ajc1502
Hi Just seen this reply, I have ended up rebuilding, glad you had a result though.
I should try popping out to the pub rather than dive straight in