Mitel Forums - The Unofficial Source
Mitel Forums => Mitel MiVoice Business/MCD/3300 => Topic started by: pradeepgali on January 28, 2014, 05:22:03 PM
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Hi, I am trying to upgrade Mitel 330 from V6.0 to V6.0 SP2. As part of that i have downloaded the .exe. file from mitel website. Using the software installer software software, i selected 3300 FTP and navigated to software location on my PC. When i click Next, i am gtting an error message saying"No compatible version found".
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The exe is a self-extracting file. Did you run the exe to extract the software load, and then point the Software installer tool to the extraction folder?
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Wait... you can just drop the files on your PC and in any directory and tell the 3300 to act as the "FTP server" by just setting the path in the installer??? You mean I don't need to use Filezilla and "External File Server" configuration? Am I confused and a out of date here, or ???
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I think you can just point to the location of the extracted files. Never do it but believe you can.
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Wait... you can just drop the files on your PC and in any directory and tell the 3300 to act as the "FTP server" by just setting the path in the installer??? You mean I don't need to use Filezilla and "External File Server" configuration? Am I confused and a out of date here, or ???
Yeah...don't remember when it was added to the Software Installer tool, but I/we've always done it the traditional FTP server way. Done the extracted files way once...was a complete offsite upgrade over vpn, and I was convinced that something wasn't going to go right. But it worked perfectly.
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Here's how I do it.
I have a folder under the root call inetpub. If you have MS ISS running on your PC I think you'll have it too.
Under \inetpub I create my software version directories.
c:\inetpub\6.0sp1
c:\inetpub\6.0sp2
Now I've turned off ISS on my PC because I like filezilla a whole lot more betterer.
Then in Filezilla I set up a user for each version of software.
I have user 6.0sp1 and 6.0sp2 (etc).
The passwords match the user name.
For each user I point to the matching "shared" folder.
Now when I use the SI tool, I just put the user name and password and it pulls the correct software version.
Ralph
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I think you can just point to the location of the extracted files. Never do it but believe you can.
Yep, this is definitely possible and I think it goes back to 3300 release 8 or 9. I just upgraded a few hundred nodes from 9.0 to MCD 4, and had to use this option instead of my normal FTP server for a few sites that had flaky network links to the FTP server. Worked like a champ. Also handy if you just plain don't have an FTP location to load the software to, as mentioned you just run the installation .exe and point SI to the folder that you installed the software at, regardless if it's an FTP root folder or not.
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Thanks for all your comments. Extracting the .exe file and pointing the software installer tool to the extracted files works. Thanks all.
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Guess we really do learn something everyday... I will have to try this next time!
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I have only ever done it that since since it first came out....hate messing with FTP in general if I can avoid it. :P
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I have only ever done it that since since it first came out....hate messing with FTP in general if I can avoid it. :P
I have done it long enough that I don't care either way, I find it quite simple...
Also, FTP is handy for other things... We setup an "account" on our corporate FTP server for each Mitel 3300, and schedule automatic backups in the 3300 to it on a monthly basis, saved my butt a time or two.
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Just to confuse people, they changed this awhile back.
It used to extract to the inetpub\ftproot folder but no longer.
Just change the install destination folder to that and you'll be fine. (Myself, keep forgetting it, then scream!)
You can also use the FTP on the controller, but don't!
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Just to confuse people, they changed this awhile back.
It used to extract to the inetpub\ftproot folder but no longer.
Just change the install destination folder to that and you'll be fine. (Myself, keep forgetting it, then scream!)
You can also use the FTP on the controller, but don't!
As long as the machine you're running the installation package on has an active FTP server running, it should install it into the ftp root folder.
I'm curious as to why you say don't use the FTP on the controller? I've found that method to be actually more reliable than loading from an external FTP server, though it takes longer to do the transfer of the new software to the inactive partition (2-3 hours instead of 1-1.5 in my experience, your results will vary).
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As long as the machine you're running the installation package on has an active FTP server running, it should install it into the ftp root folder.
Should read: "As long as the machine you're running the installation package on has an active WINDOWS FTP server running, it should install it into the ftp root folder" if it doesn't, it will install the software by default in the regular program directory under a separate folder based on the release version number.
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As long as the machine you're running the installation package on has an active FTP server running, it should install it into the ftp root folder.
Should read: "As long as the machine you're running the installation package on has an active WINDOWS FTP server running, it should install it into the ftp root folder" if it doesn't, it will install the software by default in the regular program directory under a separate folder based on the release version number.
Good point. I like to use FileZilla on my laptops instead of Windows IIS, that way I can have multiple releases available for transfer to a 3300, and decide which release I load based on the username/password.
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I like to use FileZilla on my laptops instead of Windows IIS, that way I can have multiple releases available for transfer to a 3300, and decide which release I load based on the username/password.]I like to use FileZilla on my laptops instead of Windows IIS, that way I can have multiple releases available for transfer to a 3300, and decide which release I load based on the username/password.
I forget who showed me that trick but that's exactly why I use filezilla. It's easier that IIS too.
Ralph
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I like to use FileZilla on my laptops instead of Windows IIS, that way I can have multiple releases available for transfer to a 3300, and decide which release I load based on the username/password. (http://I like to use FileZilla on my laptops instead of Windows IIS, that way I can have multiple releases available for transfer to a 3300, and decide which release I load based on the username/password.)
I forget who showed me that trick but that's exactly why I use filezilla. It's easier that IIS too.
Ralph
(Grins and nods) :-)
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk
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I have Windows FTP running and it still installs in Program files or C:\. It used to install in ftproot.
Of course if you are familiar with managing FTP you can use multiple directories with different loads and just change the ftp folder to the one you are working on.
As to the built in FTP!
I was happy to see that option and did my last upgrade that way.
Guess what? Things are not the way I thought they are.
I assumed that the installation files are going to be transferred to the system first, then run from there without my computer. Wrong!
The FTP on the system uses the directory on my machine. It makes it slower to load. I was upgrading a three member cluster at the same time, running three FTP servers on the three systems, and they waited for each other to pull the files.
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One of the things in favour of a third party FTP program like Filezilla is that the program doesn't change much. Quite a bit of difference in using IIS on XP versus W7. Not even sure if or how IIS works in Windows 8. Haven't tried it yet.