SharePoint Online Importer
Introduction
The Microsoft SharePoint Online Importer allows migrating documents, folders, list items and lists/libraries to SharePoint Online offering following features:
Import documents to Microsoft SharePoint Online Document Library items
Import URL / Link documents
Import folders to Microsoft SharePoint Online Document Library items
Import list items to Microsoft SharePoint Online Document Library items
Import lists/libraries to Microsoft SharePoint Online Sites
Set values for any columns in SharePoint Online, including user defined columns
Set values for SharePoint Online specific internal field values
Create documents, folders and list items using standard SharePoint Online content types or custom content types
Set permissions for individual documents, folders, list items and lists/libraries
Set the folder path and create folders if they don’t exist
Apply Content Types automatically to lists/libraries if they are not applied yet
Delta migration
Import versions (minor or major, automatic enabling of versioning in the targeted document library)
Import files with a size up to 15 GB
Set Microsoft Information Protection (MIP) Sensitivity Labels on content files prior to uploading them to SPO
The SharePoint Importer is implemented mainly as a Job Server component but comes with a separate component for setting SharePoint Online specific internal field values, which can be installed optionally and if necessary.
Starting with migration-center version 3.13 Update 2 the SharePoint Online importer only supports app-only principal authentication. It is not possible to use user name / password authentication with this and later versions. Please consider this before you upgrade your existing installation.
The SharePoint Importer is implemented mainly as a Job Server component but comes with a separate component for setting SharePoint Online specific internal field values, which can be installed optionally and if necessary.
SharePoint Online Importers can be created, configured, started and monitored through migration-center Client, while the corresponding processes are executed by migration-center Job Server and the migration-center SharePoint Online Importer respectively.
The term importer is used in migration-center for describing a component which imports processed data from migration-center to another system.
Scanners and importers work as jobs that can be run at any time and can even be executed repeatedly. For every run a detailed history and log file are created. Multiple scanner and import jobs can be created or run at a time, each being defined by a unique name, a set of configuration parameters and a description (optional).
Installation
To install the main product components, consult the migration-center Installation Guide document.
The migration-center SharePoint Importer requires installing an additional, separate component besides the main product components. This additional component is able to set system values (such as creation date, modified date, author and editor) as well as taxonomy values for your objects. It is designed to run as a Windows service and needs the .NET Framework 4.7.2 installed on your computer, which is running this service as well as the migration-center Job Server.
The app-only principal authentication used by the importer calls the following HTTPS endpoints. Please ensure that the job server machine has access to those endpoints:
<tenant name>.sharepoint.com:443
accounts.accesscontrol.windows.net:443
This component must be installed on all machines where the migration-center server components is installed.
To install this additional component, it is necessary to run an installation file, which is located within the
SharePoint component folder of your migration-center Job Server installation location, which is by default C:\Program Files (x86)\fme AG\migration-center Server Components <Version>\lib\mc-sharepoint-online-importer\CSOM_Service\install. This folder contains the file install.bat, which must be executed with administrative privileges.
After the service is installed you will need to start it manually for the first time, after that the service is configured to start automatically as soon as the computers operating system is loaded.
In case it is necessary to uninstall this component, the file uninstall.bat must be executed.
Configuration
The migration-center SharePoint Online Importer can import objects generated by any of the available (and compatible) scanners. Most scanners can store the data they extract from the source systems they access in either a local path, or a UNC network path.
As is the case with all importers, they need to able to access the files extracted by a scanner in order to import.
See the respective scanner’s user guide for more information on configuration parameters if necessary.
Preparation for app-only principal authentication
The importer supports only app-principal authentication for connecting to SharePoint Online. The app-principal authentication comes in two flavors: Azure AD app-only principal authentication and SharePoint app-only principal authentication.
Azure AD app-only authentication requires full control access for the migration-center application on your SharePoint Online tenant. This includes full control on ALL site collections of your tenant.
If you want to restrict the access of the migration-center application to certain site collections or sites, you can use SharePoint app-only authentication.
Azure AD app-only principal authentication
Running multiple Job Servers for importing into SharePoint must be done with great care, and each of the Job Servers must NOT import in the same library at the same time. If this occurs, because the job will change library settings concurrently, the versioning of the objects being imported in that library will not be correct.
The migration-center SharePoint Online Batch Importer supports Azure AD app-only authentication. This is the authentication method for background processes accessing SharePoint Online recommended by Microsoft. When using SharePoint Online you can define applications in Azure AD and these applications can be granted permissions to your SharePoint Online tenant.
Please follow these steps in order to setup your migration-center application in your Azure AD.
The information in this chapter is based on the following Microsoft guidelines: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/dev/solution-guidance/security-apponly-azuread
Step 1: Create a self-signed certificate for your migration-center Azure AD application
In Azure AD when doing App-Only you typically use a certificate to request access: anyone having the certificate and its private key can use the app and the permissions granted to the app. The below steps walk you through the setup of this model.
You are now ready to configure the Azure AD Application for invoking SharePoint Online with an App-Only access token. To do that, you must create and configure a self-signed X.509 certificate, which will be used to authenticate your migration-center Application against Azure AD, while requesting the App-Only access token. First you must create the self-signed X.509 Certificate, which can be created using the makecert.exe tool that is available in the Windows SDK or through a provided PowerShell script which does not have a dependency to makecert. Using the PowerShell script is the preferred method and is explained in this chapter.
It's important that you run the below scripts with Administrator privileges.
To create a self-signed certificate with this script, which you can find in the <job server folder>\lib\mc-spo-batch-importer\scripts folder:
.\Create-SelfSignedCertificate.ps1 -CommonName "MyCompanyName" -StartDate 2020-07-01 -EndDate 2022-06-30
The dates are provided in ISO date format: YYYY-MM-dd
You will be asked to give a password to encrypt your private key, and both the .PFX file and .CER file will be exported to the current folder.
Save the password of the private key as you’ll need it later.
Step 2: Register the migration-center Azure AD application
Next step is registering an Azure AD application in the Azure Active Directory tenant that is linked to your Office 365 tenant. To do that, open the Office 365 Admin Center (https://admin.microsoft.com) using the account of a user member of the Tenant Global Admins group. Click on the "Azure Active Directory" link that is available under the "Admin centers" group in the left-side tree view of the Office 365 Admin Center. In the new browser's tab that will be opened you will find the Microsoft Azure portal (https://portal.azure.com/). If it is the first time that you access the Azure portal with your account, you will have to register a new Azure subscription, providing some information and a credit card for any payment need. But don't worry, in order to play with Azure AD and to register an Office 365 Application you will not pay anything. In fact, those are free capabilities. Once having access to the Azure portal, select the "Azure Active Directory" section and choose the option "App registrations". See the next figure for further details.
Once the application has been created copy the "Application (client) ID" as you’ll need it later.
Step 3: Configure necessary permissions for the migration-center application
Now click on "API permissions" in the left menu bar and click on the "Add a permission" button. A new blade will appear. Here you choose the permissions that are required by migration-center. Choose i.e.:
Microsoft APIs
SharePoint
Application permissions
Sites
Sites.FullControl.All
TermStore
TermStore.Read.All
User
User.Read.All
Graph
Application permissions
Sites
Sites.FullControl.All
Click on the blue "Add permissions" button at the bottom to add the permissions to your application. The "Application permissions" are those granted to the migration-center application when running as App Only.
Step 4: Uploading the self-signed certificate
Next step is “connecting” the certificate you created earlier to the application. Click on "Certificates & secrets" in the left menu bar. Click on the "Upload certificate" button, select the .CER file you generated earlier and click on "Add" to upload it.
Step 5: Grand admin consent
The “Sites.FullControl.All” application permission requires admin consent in a tenant before it can be used. In order to do this, click on "API permissions" in the left menu again. At the bottom you will see a section "Grand consent". Click on the "Grand admin consent for" button and confirm the action by clicking on the "Yes" button that appears at the top.
Final step: Setting the necessary parameters in the importer
In order to use Azure AD app-only principal authentication with the SharePoint Online Batch importer you need to fill in the following importer parameters with the information you gathered in the steps above:
SharePoint app-only principal authentication
SharePoint app-only authentication allows you to grant fine granular access permissions on your SharePoint Online tenant for the migration-center application.
The information in this chapter is based on the following guidelines from Microsoft:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/dev/solution-guidance/security-apponly-azuread https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/dev/solution-guidance/security-apponly-azureacs https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/dev/sp-add-ins/add-in-permissions-in-sharepoint
Step 1: Create a self-signed certificate for your migration-center Azure AD application
In Azure AD when doing App-Only you typically use a certificate to request access: anyone having the certificate and its private key can use the app and the permissions granted to the app. The below steps walk you through the setup of this model.
You are now ready to configure the Azure AD Application for invoking SharePoint Online with an App-Only access token. To do that, you must create and configure a self-signed X.509 certificate, which will be used to authenticate your migration-center Application against Azure AD, while requesting the App-Only access token. First you must create the self-signed X.509 Certificate, which can be created by using the makecert.exe tool that is available in the Windows SDK or through a provided PowerShell script which does not have a dependency to makecert. Using the PowerShell script is the preferred method and is explained in this chapter.
It's important that you run the below scripts with Administrator privileges.
To create a self-signed certificate with this script, which you can find in the <job server folder>\lib\mc-spo-batch-importer\scripts folder:
.\Create-SelfSignedCertificate.ps1 -CommonName "MyCompanyName" -StartDate 2020-07-01 -EndDate 2022-06-30
The dates are provided in ISO date format: YYYY-MM-dd
You will be asked to give a password to encrypt your private key, and both the .PFX file and .CER file will be exported to the current folder.
Save the password of the private key as you’ll need it later.
Step 2: Register the migration-center Azure AD application
Next step is registering an Azure AD application in the Azure Active Directory tenant that is linked to your Office 365 tenant. To do that, open the Office 365 Admin Center (https://admin.microsoft.com) using the account of a user member of the Tenant Global Admins group. Click on the "Azure Active Directory" link that is available under the "Admin centers" group in the left-side tree view of the Office 365 Admin Center. In the new browser's tab that will be opened you will find the Microsoft Azure portal (https://portal.azure.com/). If it is the first time that you access the Azure portal with your account, you will have to register a new Azure subscription, providing some information and a credit card for any payment need. But don't worry, in order to play with Azure AD and to register an Office 365 Application you will not pay anything. In fact, those are free capabilities. Once having access to the Azure portal, select the "Azure Active Directory" section and choose the option "App registrations". See the next figure for further details.
In the "App registrations" tab you will find the list of Azure AD applications registered in your tenant. Click the "New registration" button in the upper left part of the blade. Next, provide a name for your application, e.g. “migration-center” and click on "Register" at the bottom of the blade.
Once the application has been created copy the "Application (client) ID" as you’ll need it later.
Step 3: Uploading the self-signed certificate and generate secret key
Next step is “connecting” the certificate you created earlier to the application. Click on "Certificates & secrets" in the left menu bar. Click on the "Upload certificate" button, select the .CER file you generated earlier and click on "Add" to upload it.
After that, you need to create a secret key. Click on “New client secret” to generate a new secret key. Give it an appropriate description, e.g. “migration-center” and choose an expiration period that matches your migration project time frame. Click on “Add” to create the key.
Store the retrieved information (client id and client secret) since you'll need this later! Please safeguard the created client id/secret combination as would it be your administrator account. Using this client id/secret one can read/update all data in your SharePoint Online environment!
Step 4: Granting permissions to the app-only principal
Next step is granting permissions to the newly created principal in SharePoint Online.
If you want to grant tenant scoped permissions this granting can only be done via the “appinv.aspx” page on the tenant administration site. If your tenant URL is https://contoso-admin.sharepoint.com, you can reach this site via https://contoso-admin.sharepoint.com/_layouts/15/appinv.aspx.
If you want to grant site collection scoped permissions, open the “appinv.aspx” on the specific site collection, e.g. https://contoso.sharepoint.com/sites/mysite/_layouts/15/appinv.aspx.
Once the page is loaded add your client id and look up the created principal by pressing the "Lookup" button:
Please enter “www.migration-center.com” in field “App Domain” and “https://www.migration-center.com” in field “Redirect URL”.
To grant permissions, you'll need to provide the permission XML that describes the needed permissions. The migration-center application will always need the “FullControl” permission. Use the following permission XML for granting tenant scoped permissions:
<AppPermissionRequests AllowAppOnlyPolicy="true">
<AppPermissionRequest Scope="http://sharepoint/content/tenant" Right="FullControl" />
<AppPermissionRequest Scope="http://sharepoint/taxonomy" Right="Read" />
</AppPermissionRequests>
Use this permission XML for granting site collection scoped permissions:
<AppPermissionRequests AllowAppOnlyPolicy="true">
<AppPermissionRequest Scope="http://sharepoint/content/sitecollection" Right="FullControl" />
<AppPermissionRequest Scope="http://sharepoint/taxonomy" Right="Read" />
</AppPermissionRequests>
When you click on “Create” you'll be presented with a permission consent dialog. Press “Trust It” to grant the permissions:
Please safeguard the created client id/secret combination as would it be your administrator account. Using this client id/secret one can read/update all data in your SharePoint Online environment!
Final step: Setting the necessary parameters in the importer
In order to use SharePoint app-only principal authentication with the SharePoint Online importer you need to fill in the following importer parameters with the information you gathered in the steps above:
Preparation for applying Microsoft Information Protection sensitivity labels
Starting with v3.15 Update 1, our SharePoint Online classic importer supports applying Microsoft Information Protection (MIP) sensitivity labels on the content files before they get uploaded to SharePoint Online. To learn more about sensitivity labels, please see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/compliance/sensitivity-labels?view=o365-worldwide.
Register an Azure AD app
The MIP software development kit provided by Microsoft that we use to apply the sensitivity labels on the content files requires you to register an application in your Azure AD. You could use the same app as in Azure AD app-only principal authentication or setup a separate application as described here: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/information-protection/develop/setup-configure-mip#register-a-client-application-with-azure-active-directory
You need to create a client secret for your registered application and configure the following access permissions:
Install VC++ Runtime
The Microsoft MIP SDK also needs the VC++ runtime installed on the job server machine to work properly. You might get a LoadLibrary failed for: [C:\fme AG\migration-center Server Components 3.15\lib\mc-sharepointonline-importer\MIPService\x86\mip_dotnet.dll]
error if the VC++ runtime is missing and you want to apply sensitivity labels on your documents.
For your convenience, we provide the VC++ runtime installers in the lib\mc-sharepointonline-importer\MIPService\VC_Redistributables
folder of your MC job server installation. Which variant to install (i.e. x86 or x64) depends on your .NET configuration. Usually you should install the x86 VC++ runtime (even on a x64 system). If that does not work, you should install the x64 variant.
Create the configuration file for the importer
The SharePoint Online classic importer requires you to provide several configuration parameters in a XML configuration file. You can find a template configuration file (template-service.config
) in the lib\mc-sharepointonline-importer
folder of your migration-center job server installation.
Create a copy of the template file, fill in the required information from your Azure AD app that you had created in the previous step, and enter the full path to your config file in the mipServiceConfigFile
parameter of your SharePoint Online importer. The result should look similar to the following:
We provide a Java based command line tool for encryption, which you must use to encrypt the Azure.App.Secret value before you put it in the configuration file. To encrypt the secret, proceed as follows:
Open a command line window on the job server machine.
Switch to the
migration-center Server Components <version>\lib\mc-core
folder, e.g.migration-center Server Components 3.16\lib\mc-core
Run the following command:
java -cp mc-common-<version>.jar de.fme.mc.common.encryption.CmdTool
The tool will ask for the text to encrypt. Enter or paste the secret value and press enter.
The tool will output the encrypted text. Copy and paste it into the configuration file.
Limitations and known issues
Due to restrictions in SharePoint, documents cannot be moved from one Library to another using migration-center once they have been imported. This applies to Version and Update objects.
Moving folders is only supported within the same site, i.e. the importer parameter "siteName" and the system attribute "site" must have the same values for the initial and any update import runs.
Even though some other systems such as Documentum allow editing of older versions, either by replacing metadata, or creating branches, this is not supported by SharePoint. If you have updates to intermediate versions to a version tree that is already imported, the importer will return an error upon trying to import them. The only way to import them is to reset the original version tree and re-import it in the same run with the updates.
Running multiple Job Servers for importing into SharePoint must be done with great care, and each of the Job Servers must NOT import in the same library at the same time. If this occurs, because the job will change library settings concurrently, the versioning of the objects being imported in that library will not be correct.
The SharePoint Online system has some limitations regarding file names, folder names, and file size. Our SharePoint Online importer will perform the following validations before a file gets imported to SharePoint Online (in order to fail fast and avoid unnecessary uploads):
Max. length of a file name: 400 characters
Max. length of a folder name: 400 characters
Invalid leading chars for file or folder name: SPACE
Invalid trailing chars for file or folder name: SPACE, PERIOD
Invalid file or folder names: "AUX", "PRN", "NUL", "CON", "COM0", "COM1", "COM2", "COM3", "COM4", "COM5", "COM6", "COM7", "COM8", "COM9", "LPT0", "LPT1", "LPT2", "LPT3", "LPT4", "LPT5", "LPT6", "LPT7", "LPT8", "LPT9"
The following characters are not allowed in file or folder names: " * : < > ? / \ |
Max. length of a file path: 400 characters
Max. size of a file: 15 GB
Max. size of an attachment: 250 MB
SharePoint Importer Properties
To create a new SharePoint Online Importer, create a new importer and select SharePoint Online from the Adapter Type drop-down. Once the adapter type has been selected, the Parameters list will be populated with the parameters specific to the selected adapter type. Mandatory parameters are marked with an *.
The Properties of an existing importer can be accessed after creating the importer by double-clicking the importer in the list or selecting the Properties button/menu item from the toolbar/context menu. A description is always displayed at the bottom of the window for the selected parameter.
Multiple importers can be created for importing to different target locations, provided each importer has a unique name.
Common importer parameters
SharePoint Importer parameters
The configuration parameters available for the SharePoint Importer are described below:
Content Integrity Check
Starting from migration-center 3.5 the SharePoint Online importer has the option of checking the integrity of each document’s content after it has been imported. This will be done if the “checkContentIntegrity” parameter is checked and it will verify only documents that have a generated checksum in the Source Attributes.
Currently the only supported checksum algorithm is MD5 with HEX encoding.
For certain types of documents such as Office documents and also .MSG documents, “Document Information Panel” is activated and SharePoint changes the content slightly upon upload. This will cause the integrity check to fail for those documents and there is no workaround so far, other than importing without the content integrity check or finding a way to disable this feature directly in SharePoint.
Working with the migration-center SharePoint object type
Migration Sets
Documents
Documents targeted at a Microsoft SharePoint Online Document library will have to be added to a migration set. This migration set must be configured to accept objects of type <source object type>ToSPOnline(document).
Create a new migration set and set the <source object type>ToSPOnline(document) in the Type drop-down. This is set in the -Migration Set Properties- window which appears when creating a new migration set. The type of object can no longer be changed after a migration set has been created.
The migration set is now set to work with SharePoint Online documents.
Links
The same procedure as for documents also applies to links about to be imported to SharePoint Online. For links the object type to select for a migration set would be <source object type>ToSPOnline(link).
Folders
The same procedure as for documents also applies to folders about to be imported to SharePoint Online. For folders the object type to select for a migration set would be <source object type>ToSPOnline(folder).
Lists
The same procedure as for documents also applies to lists or libraries about to be imported to SharePoint Online. For lists or libraries, the object type to select for a migration set would be <source object type>ToSPOnline(list).
The migration-center SharePoint Online Importer supports only the creation of lists or library!
List Items
The same procedure as for documents also applies to list items about to be imported to SharePoint Online. For list items the object type to select for a migration set would be <source object type>ToSPOnline(listItem).
Transformation rules
Documents
<source object type>ToSPOnline(document) type objects have a number of predefined rules listed under Rules for system attributes in the -Transformation Rules- window. These rules are described in the table below.
Other rules can be defined by the user to set various SharePoint column values, such as Name, Title, checkin_comment to name a few of the more frequently used. Any SharePoint column which exists in the document library targeted by the contentType rule can be set by creating a rule and associating it with the corresponding column in the associations tab.
Links
SharePoint Online supports documents with the file format ".url". We call these documents "link documents" since they do not have real content but just point to another document in SharePoint Online or to an external web site. The importer will create the necessary content of the link documents on the fly and save them in the default temporary files folder of the OS. Thus, the importer will ignore the content of any source object that is imported as a link document because it will import the generated link content instead.
Links have slightly different rules than documents. The exact system rules applicable to links are listed below.
Folders
Folders have different rules than documents. The exact system rules applicable to folders are listed below.
List Items
List items have different rules as documents. The exact system rules applicable to list items are listed below.
Lists
Lists have different rules as documents. The exact system rules applicable to lists are listed below.
Object Type definitions
Documents, Folders and List Items
In order to associate transformation rules with SharePoint Online columns, a migration-center object type definition for the respective content type needs to be created. Object type definitions are created in the migration-center client. To create an object type definition, go to Manage/Object Types and create or import a new object type definition. In case your content type contains two or more columns with the same display name, you need to specify the columns internal names as attribute names.
Working with object type definitions and defining attributes is a core product functionality and is described in detail in the Client User Guide.
A Microsoft SharePoint Online content type corresponds to a migration-center object type definition. For the Microsoft SharePoint Online adapter, an object type definition can be specified in four ways, depending on whether a particular SharePoint Online content type is to be used or not or multiple but different content types using the same name across site collections:
My Content Type describes explicitly a SharePoint Online content Type named My Content Type defined either in the SharePoint document library or at Site Collection level
@My Document Library describes the SharePoint Online document library named My Document Library using only columns, which are defined explicitly in the SharePoint Online document library My Document Library
My Content Type;#Any Custom Value describes a SharePoint Online content type named My Content Type. Everything after the delimiter ;# will be cut off on importing
@My Document Library;#Any Custom Value describes the SharePoint Online document library named My Document library using only columns, which are defined explicitly in the SharePoint Online document library My Document Library. Everything after the delimiter ;# will be cut off on importing.
The migration-center SharePoint Online importer is able to modify the following SharePoint Online specific internal field values for documents, list items and folders: Created By, Modified By, Created and Modified. To set these internal field values it is necessary to create attributes named Author, Editor, Created and Modified and associate them in the transformation rules appropriately.
Lists
Importing lists or libraries into SharePoint Online is a little bit different than for documents, folders or list items, since the migration-center SharePoint Online Importer sets Microsoft defined attributes, which are not visible to the user. In order to set those attributes, it is necessary to create object type definitions for each type of list template (see List of possible list templates). The SharePoint Online Adapter is able to set any possible attribute of a list. See List of possible list attributes for more information about possible attributes.
Object Values
File Reader
The SharePoint Online Importer is able to read values from files. This might be necessary if the length of a string might exceed the maximum length of an oracle database column, which is 4,096 bytes.
To tell the SharePoint Online Importer reading Strings from a text file, the filepath of the file, containing the value must be placed within the markup <@MCFILE>filepath</@MCFILE>.
The File Reader does not read values from files for the following attributes: Check-In Comment, Author, Editor, Creation Date, Modified Date.
Example:
Assuming you have a file at path \\scanlocation\temp\1\4a9daccf-5ace-4237-856c-76f3bd3e3165.txt you must type the following String in a rule:
<@MCFILE>\\scanlocation\temp\1\4a9daccf-5ace-4237-856c-76f3bd3e3165.txt</@MCFILE>
On Import the SharePoint Online Importer extracts the contents of this file and adds them to the associated target attribute.
Filename
The SharePoint Online Importer is able to modify the filename of a file, which is imported to SharePoint Online. To set the filename, you must create a target attribute named Name in the object type definition. You can associate any filename (without an extension) for a document. The importer automatically picks the extension of the original file or the file specified in rule mc_content_location. If the extension needs to be changed as well, use the system rule fileExtension in order to specify a new file extension. You can also change only the extension of a filename by setting fileExtension and not setting a new filename in the Name attribute.
Example:
Original content location: \\Fileshare\Migration\Scan\566789\content.dat
Check-In Comment
The SharePoint Online Importer is able to set the check-in comment for documents. To set the check-in comment, you must create a target attribute named checkin_comment in the object type definition. You can associate any string to set the check-in comment
Author
The SharePoint Online Importer is able to set the author for list items, folders and documents. To set the author, you must create a target attribute named author in the object type definition. The value of this attribute must be the loginname of the user, who shall be set as author.
Editor
The SharePoint Online Importer is able to set the editor for list items, folders and documents. To set the editor, you must create a target attribute named editor in the object type definition. The value of this attribute must be the loginname of the user, who shall be set as editor.
Creation Date
The SharePoint Online Importer is able to set the creation date for list items, folders and documents. To set the creation date, you must create a target attribute named created in the object type definition. The value of this attribute must be any valid date.
Modified Date
The SharePoint Online Importer can set the modified date for list items, folders and documents. To set the modified date, you must create a target attribute named modified in the object type definition. The value of this attribute must be any valid date.
Lookup values
The SharePoint Online Importer can set lookup values. If you want to set a lookup value, you can either set the ID of the related item or the title. If you set the title of the document and there is more than one item with the same title in the lookup list, the SharePoint Importer marks your import object as an error, because the lookup item could not be identified unequivocally.
The importer will treat any numeric value provided as the ID of the lookup value. In case you want to look up the value by title and the title is numeric, please surround the numeric value with " characters. The importer will automatically remove any " characters in the provided value before trying to match it with the title of the lookup field.
URL values
The SharePoint Online Importer can set URL values. You can define a friendly name as well as the actual URL of the link by concatenating the friendly name with ;# and the actual URL.
Example: migration-center;#http://www.migration-center.com
Taxonomy values
The SharePoint Importer can set taxonomy values and Migration Center provides two ways to do it. The first possibility is to use the name of the Taxonomy Service Application, a term group name, a term set name and the actual term. Those four values must be concatenated like the following representation:
TaxonomyServiceApplicationName>TermGroupName>TermSetName>TermName
Example: Taxonomy_+poj2l53kslma4==>Group1>TermSet 1>Value
The second possibility is to use the unique identifier of the term within curly brackets {}.
Example: {2e9b53f9-04fe-4abd-bc33-e1410b1a062a}
Multiple values can be set also but the attribute has to be set as a Multi-value Repeating attribute.
In case you receive an error on setting taxonomy values make sure the TaxonomyServiceApplicationName is up to date and valid since Microsoft changes the identifier at certain times.
Performance
The performance of the import process is heavily impacted by some specific features, namely autoAdjustVersioning, autoAdjustAttachments, autoAddContentTypes, autoCreateFolders, setting taxonomy values, and setting system attributes like Author, Editor, Created, and Modified.
In case you are importing an update for a major version the increase can get up to three times compared to a normal document import. Combining all the above-mentioned features over the same document can increase the time for up to four times. Take this into consideration when planning an import as the time might vary based on the above described features.
You will achieve the highest import performance if you perform the appropriate configuration of your SharePoint Online system before you start the import and disabled the above-mentioned features in the SharePoint Online importer.
History, Reports, Logs
A complete history is available for any SharePoint Online Importer job from the respective items’ –History- window. It is accessible through the [History] button/menu entry on the toolbar/context menu. The -History- window displays a list of all runs for the selected job together with additional information, such as the number of processed objects, the start and ending time and the status.
Double clicking an entry or clicking the Open button on the toolbar opens the log file created by that run. The log file contains more information about the run of the selected job:
Version information of the migration-center Server Components the job was run with
The parameters the job was run with
Execution Summary that contains the total number of objects processed, the number of documents and folders scanned or imported, the count of warnings and errors that occurred during runtime.
Log files generated by the SharePoint Online Importer can be found in the Server Components installation folder of the machine where the job was run, e.g. …\fme AG\migration-center Server Components <Version>\logs
The amount of information written to the log files depends on the setting specified in the ‘loggingLevel’ start parameter for the respective job.
Appendix
List of possible list templates
List of possible list attributes
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