This site will have limited functionality while we undergo maintenance to improve your experience. If an article doesn't solve your issue and you want to ask a question, we have our support community waiting to help you at @FirefoxSupport on Twitter and/r/firefox on Reddit.

Etsi tuesta

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Lue lisää

Profile Made With 32-bit Thunderbird On A Detachable Hard Drive Is Not Directly Useable On 64-bit Versions

  • 1 vastaus
  • 0 henkilöllä on sama ongelma
  • 17 näyttöä
  • Viimeisin kirjoittaja Raymond Pilch

more options

I keep my profile on a detachable USD hard drive so I can use Thunderbird on my laptop when I travel just as I do on my desktop. Thunderbird on both of these computers is the 32-bit version and kept up to date (version 115.6.1). I know how to point Thunderbird to use the profile on the USB drive via the profiles.ini configuration. Recently, I bought a new desktop computer and downloaded Thunderbird from the download web page. UNBEKNOWNST TO ME it downloaded the 64-bit version without giving me a notice or a choice. I edited the profile.ini file to point to the profile on the USB drive and it did not work well. The calendars were disabled, no mail folders appeared and no email accounts appeared. My contacts were OK. So, I shut down the new desktop and I put the USB drive in my old desktop, ran the 32-bit Thunderbird and it now looked as dysfunctional as it did on 64-bit Thunderbird. Ooof. Dead in the water.

Fortunately I had a 2-month old backup and restored that profile after renaming the damaged profile folder on the USB hard drive. I then copied over the mail folders from the damaged folder to the restored profile folder so I would have all the latest mail. I also copied over any files in the main folder of the damaged profile that had not been changed by the 64-bit program on the new desktop computer. Fortunately, when I ran 32-bit Thunderbird, all my email from the last 2 months was there. Some recent calendar entries were missing and I had to redo the POP protocol for one of my 5 email accounts I manage with Thunderbird as I did a couple weeks ago. Yay! I immediately backed up the USB hard drive.

So, any clue why this happened? I am planning to make a test on the new desktop. I uninstalled the 64-bit version and installed the 32-bit version. I am going to restore the 32-bit profile folder from the backup to a USB stick with just the profile folder to see if it works as it does on my old desktop and laptop by just editing profile.ini (and installs.ini) as it is on those two systems.

I keep my profile on a detachable USD hard drive so I can use Thunderbird on my laptop when I travel just as I do on my desktop. Thunderbird on both of these computers is the 32-bit version and kept up to date (version 115.6.1). I know how to point Thunderbird to use the profile on the USB drive via the profiles.ini configuration. Recently, I bought a new desktop computer and downloaded Thunderbird from the download web page. UNBEKNOWNST TO ME it downloaded the 64-bit version without giving me a notice or a choice. I edited the profile.ini file to point to the profile on the USB drive and it did not work well. The calendars were disabled, no mail folders appeared and no email accounts appeared. My contacts were OK. So, I shut down the new desktop and I put the USB drive in my old desktop, ran the 32-bit Thunderbird and it now looked as dysfunctional as it did on 64-bit Thunderbird. Ooof. Dead in the water. Fortunately I had a 2-month old backup and restored that profile after renaming the damaged profile folder on the USB hard drive. I then copied over the mail folders from the damaged folder to the restored profile folder so I would have all the latest mail. I also copied over any files in the main folder of the damaged profile that had not been changed by the 64-bit program on the new desktop computer. Fortunately, when I ran 32-bit Thunderbird, all my email from the last 2 months was there. Some recent calendar entries were missing and I had to redo the POP protocol for one of my 5 email accounts I manage with Thunderbird as I did a couple weeks ago. Yay! I immediately backed up the USB hard drive. So, any clue why this happened? I am planning to make a test on the new desktop. I uninstalled the 64-bit version and installed the 32-bit version. I am going to restore the 32-bit profile folder from the backup to a USB stick with just the profile folder to see if it works as it does on my old desktop and laptop by just editing profile.ini (and installs.ini) as it is on those two systems.

Valittu ratkaisu

Update: I made a copy of my Thunderbird profile from the detachable USB hard drive on a second detachable USD hard drive, adjusted the profile.ini and the installs.ini files in the Roaming\Thunderbird folder to point to the folder on the second USB drive and it works perfectly on the 32-bit version of Thunderbird on my new desktop computer (Windows 11). My two other computers run Windows 7.

My conclusion is that profiles are not fully compatible between the 32-bit version and the 64-bit version.

I am puzzled, but happy the issue is resolved for me. This took nearly 2 days of hard work, not to mention the anguish. So, now I can manage my email on the new desktop computer and when I go on the road I can detach the drive and plug it into the laptop as always.

What doesn't kill you makes you stronger (or so the song goes).

Lue tämä vastaus kontekstissaan 👍 0

Kaikki vastaukset (1)

more options

Valittu ratkaisu

Update: I made a copy of my Thunderbird profile from the detachable USB hard drive on a second detachable USD hard drive, adjusted the profile.ini and the installs.ini files in the Roaming\Thunderbird folder to point to the folder on the second USB drive and it works perfectly on the 32-bit version of Thunderbird on my new desktop computer (Windows 11). My two other computers run Windows 7.

My conclusion is that profiles are not fully compatible between the 32-bit version and the 64-bit version.

I am puzzled, but happy the issue is resolved for me. This took nearly 2 days of hard work, not to mention the anguish. So, now I can manage my email on the new desktop computer and when I go on the road I can detach the drive and plug it into the laptop as always.

What doesn't kill you makes you stronger (or so the song goes).