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Migration in Inventor 2008


Introduction
Migration processing is substantially improved in Inventor 2008. This white paper describes the improvement and how it affects your
adoption of Inventor 2008.

Migration In Earlier Inventor Versions


Migration behavior in Autodesk Inventor 2009 is unchanged from Autodesk Inventor 2008. The following information describes Inventor
2008 behavior, and is also appropriate to Inventor 2009. Because Migration is a complicated process, it is easiest to explain the
improvements in Inventor 2008 by describing how things worked in earlier Inventor releases.

Migration is the processing Inventor does when it opens a file last saved by an earlier version of Inventor. More exactly, migration is the
extra processing over and above the normal open processing. Prior to Inventor 2008, migration was expensive in both performance and
capacity terms. Opening an assembly consisting entirely of Inventor 10 files in Inventor 11 took longer and consumed more memory
than opening that same assembly once it was saved in version 11 format. Typical migration costs varied from file to file, but would
generally double the time of opening a file.

If you open a file last saved by an earlier version of Inventor, migration always takes place. When adopting a new release of Inventor,
you have a choice whether to perform implicit or explicit migration.

In implicit migration, you work with your old files normally without running through any special process. The files remain in the old form
until you decide to change them (for example, you change the design information). As you change these files and save them back to
disk, they are stored in the latest Inventor format and migration is no longer necessary when they are re-opened.

In explicit migration, the enterprise goes through a special process where the old data is resaved using the new version of Inventor.
This explicit migration is generally done by the CAD Manager prior to making the new version of Inventor available to all the engineers.
Autodesk provides the Task Scheduler to help automate explicit migration.

Prior to Inventor 2008, the migration cost was so high during opening a file that implicit migration was not very attractive and Inventor
users with substantial amounts of data used to take the explicit migration route. It was more efficient to run through the one-time cost of
explicit migration than to continually pay the migration cost on opening old files. Although the Task Scheduler helped in the process,
explicit migration made adoption of a new Inventor release expensive because all the files had to be migrated before engineers could
start working with them.

Once files are saved using a new version of Inventor, they cannot be read by an earlier version of Inventor. This means that once
explicit migration happens, everyone working with these files must use the new version of Inventor. Explicit migration tends to force an
enterprise to adopt a very controlled, synchronized roll-out of a new release.

Migration in Inventor 2008


Migration in Inventor 2008 is no longer an expensive process provided the files are saved in version 11 (or later) form. In the tests
Autodesk did with such files, the migration cost is generally negligible. Typical migration cost is generally less than 10% of the time of a
non-migrating open, though this cost can vary from file to file.

If the files are saved in version 10 (or earlier) form, migration remains an expensive process.

For users adopting Inventor 2008, we recommend you do not perform explicit migration if the files are in version 11 (or later) form.
Work normally and let migration happen implicitly. You can still perform explicit migration if you really want to, although there is no
compelling need to do so. If you want to perform explicit migration, its best to use the Task Scheduler, but you can also use the new File
> Migrate command inside Inventor.

For files saved in version 10 (or earlier) form, the decision to migrate explicitly or implicitly is essentially the same in Inventor 2008 as in
earlier releases. Small amounts of data are probably better migrated implicitly, but if you frequently open large designs saved in version
10 (or earlier) form it is probably better to perform explicit migration using the Task Scheduler.

Because explicit migration is not necessary, it is easier for an enterprise to adopt a new release more flexibly.

Determining the Version of Inventor That Last Saved a File


To decide whether to explicitly or implicitly migrate your data, you must know the version of Inventor last used to save that file.

The easiest way to determine this is to open the Design Assistant (click Start > All Programs > Autodesk > Autodesk Inventor 2008 >
Design Assistant 2008), and then open the design file. You may have to use File > Projects before using File >Open. The appropriate
property is called Last Update With (this actually means Last Saved Using) and can use View > Customize and View >Details before
seeing the value of this field in Design Assistant.

In a large assembly, some files may have been saved using different versions of Inventor.

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Application Options and Migration


An Application Option (Save options, Prompt to save for migration) can be checked. When you close a file that migrated on open, it
asks if you want to save it. If set, this tends to encourage you to save files that migrated on open, even though you havent logically
changed them (for example, you made no design change).

By default, this option is off and we recommend that you leave it off.

Note: This Application Option is not used if you perform explicit migration using the Task Scheduler or through the File > Migrate
command.

(The behavior of this application option is unchanged in Inventor 2008).

Limitations
As stated previously, once a file is saved using a particular version of Inventor (for example, Inventor 2008), that file cannot be read by
an earlier version of Inventor (for example, Inventor 11). Be careful when saving a file that underwent migration (Inventor always warns
you when you do a save). You can also ensure a file is not saved in this state accidentally by write-protecting the file.

(This save behavior is unchanged in Inventor 2008).

Copyright 2010 Autodesk, Inc. All rights reserved.

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