Use this option and download Media Creation Tool if you want to create bootable USB media to perform a clean install on new or existing hardware. To get started you first need a license to install Windows 11 or have a Windows 10 device that qualifies for an upgrade to Windows 11.

Doing some searches on the web, it's not clear if there is an upgrade path from 2012R2 to 2022 Windows Server. From the link, I was wondering if there is an upgraded diagram, or if Microsoft has a recommendation on the path forward for this route? Is this upgrade not supported, and we should opt to then do a clean install?


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@Harm_Veenstra I appreciate the responses. My concern is that is there a official recommendation from Microsoft? Does Microsoft 'standby' that this upgrade path should work, or what I'm reading from other responses is that, it's better to do a clean install, or perform both routes just in case...

@Chrisntpsfor new domain controllers it's better just to spin up a new server 2022 and join it to the domain then make it a domain controller (DNS Server) I've removed all other roles from my domain controllers such as (DHCP, CERT, KMS, other roles) this way it's easier to upgrade domain controllers by adding a new DC already running the latest OS. if you haven't move the roles out of your DC I recommend you to first work on moving DHCP, KMS, Certificate of Authority or any roles you may be running on that DC aside from (DNS only) this role must stay in the DC imho.

Seems like Keyingo only sells the full version of Windows 11 Pro, not the upgrade from Home to Pro. If a computer already has Windows 11 Home pre-loaded, would the full version of Windows 11 Pro still work for me?@adgmiea

Now I know that during the upgrade, there is a very useful file setupact.log in c:\~windows.~bt which is 100MB+ in size that you can use to debug issues. If the upgrade fails, the log file is left there and you can find out why something happened.

But, I now noticed that if the upgrade was successful, that directory gets deleted and the log file disappears too. It's not visible if you display hidden and system files either. Does anyone know if there is a way to recover that log file from a computer that has successfully finished an upgrade, so I can follow what happened?

I'm currently testing out Windows 11 upgrades for an Enterprise environment and have run into a ton of issues. I discovered that our 3rd party anti-virus was causing conflicts, however even on clients with that removed I am seeing intermittent failures when attempting the upgrade from Windows 10 22H2 to Windows 11 23H2.

have you tried using the windows 11 upgrade assistant / Windows 11 Installation Assistant? 

I have seen this issue in the past and using the Windows 11 Installation Assistant fixed the issue a few times in my case.

Thank you for your suggestion. I have tried booting into a clean environment and then running the upgrade and that didn't seem to make a difference either. When I tried that though, I tried installing Windows 11 through the Upgrade Assistant and not an .ISO file. I have tried an .ISO install outside of a clean boot and that did not seem to make a difference either.

We are going through this exact situation right now. Our databases were on an older version of SQL, so we decided to move those first to SQL 2019. We are now building 2 new DDCs in each site and adding them to the existing 1912 LTSR environment. Once we verify everything is good, we'll remove the old 2012 R2 DDCs and run through the 2203 upgrade on the new 2019 DDCs.

I recently upgraded my PC desktop to Windows 11. Dropbox worked perfectly in Windows 10, and when I upgraded my laptop to 11, it was seamless. On the desktop, I can access Dropbox through the web, but updated files from my other computers do not show up as updated when I load them into their usual application on the desktop! (for example, I can "see" an updated Excel file in the Dropbox viewer, but when I try to open it up in Excel, I only get an older file.) I think the Dropbox app is not loaded in Windows 11, but when I attempt to install the download (both the regular and the extended), I get an error message that the files needed cannot be accessed. Is this the problem? If so, how do I fix it? The Microsoft Store only has something called Dropbox for S Mode (I don't have S Mode, as far as I know). Should I use that? This is both confusing and frustrating. Help!

Yes. I can open the web-based Dropbox, and it's up-to-date. The problem occurs when I try to either access a Dropbox file from one of my Office applications (Excel, Word), or open a file from the web-based Dropbox into the Office application (in which case it does not load up, or I get the non-updated file from before I upgraded to Windows 11).

HPE WSS2016 Standard Edition Upgrade Kit Q0F57A

Current or previous generation StoreEasy 1000 systems running either Windows Storage Server 2012 or Windows Storage Server 2012 R2 Standard Edition Operating System can

be upgraded to the Windows Storage Server 2016, Standard Edition Operating System by purchasing Q0F57A.

This upgrade kit contains the physical media containing the new OS image and a new Microsoft Certificate of Authenticity (COA) label that must be affixed to StoreEasy 1000

once the OS upgrade is complete. The new COA label is required to provide legal proof or purchase of the new OS.

NOTE: Because of the requirement to affix a new WSS2012 R2 or WSS2016 COA label to the product after upgrade, the OS upgrade image cannot be provided as a software download.

If ReFS is the only reason why you want to upgrade, I need to point out that ReFS is available in Windows Storage Server 2012 R2 as well. What is not available is an in-place file system change from NTFS to ReFS (neither is in 2016) and you will need to reformat your volumes with the new file system.

but isn't it true that i am stuck with an old version of ReFS (no dedup etc) on Windows 2012 R2?

I want to take advantage of these new features.


Thanks for pointing it out that a upgrade pack is available. I hoped i could just install it from our EA contract.

Can i just wipe the OS and install Windows 2016 1709 on it? i do not use the storage server features anyway.

this is absolutely true. You will only have the ReFS feature set available that is provided in the 2012 R2 release. If you need the latest feature set I guess there is no way around doing an upgrade. The shared upgrade pack should get you there.

Microsoft's free upgrade offer for Windows 10 / 11 ended July 29, 2016. The installation path to obtain the Windows 7 / 8 free upgrade is now removed as well. Upgrades to Windows 11 from Windows 10 are still free.

To upgrade to Windows 11, devices must meet the Windows 11 minimum system requirements. Some Windows 10 features aren't available in Windows 11. System requirements to experience some Windows 11 features and apps will exceed the Windows 11 minimum system requirements. Find Windows 11 specs, features, and computer requirements.

I installed pgAdmin 4 as part of the postgres installer for Windows. pgAdmin is now telling me there is a newer version (4.8, > 4.5 which I have). However, there is no built in upgrade functionality that I can see, and when I went to download and run the pgAdmin 4 installer to upgrade, it installed itself in the wrong place, leading to problems.

To anyone finding this post (like me), before uninstalling your current pgAdmin 4, be aware that there may be limits on compatible versions based on your version of PostgreSQL. Following the instructions by Claudio Corchez, I removed my existing pgAdmin 4 and downloaded the latest 6.15. When I attempted to install it, the installer informed me that this version was not compatible with my version of PostgreSQL 10.3. So, I headed back and downloaded 4.30, which is now running. Unfortunately, it warns me each time I run it that a newer version is available. I just need to upgrade my entire PostgreSQL installation.

I'm new to WSL2-Ubuntu. My computer already had preisntalled the 20.04 version, but I saw there's already the 22.04 version, so I was wondering if it was worthy to have the new one. If so, how can I upgrade it?

Eventually, you'll need to upgrade anyway. That "eventually" may be a long time down the road, since 20.04 will be supported for almost 3 more years, but you'll ultimately get 2 more years of support (from today) on 22.04 than you will on 20.04.

It's always easier to upgrade when you have fewer packages (especially anything from a PPA) on the system. Ubuntu upgrades are typically fairly painless, but the more you have installed, the more chance (even if still small) that something will require manual intervention on your part.

First, if you really haven't starting using it yet, and are willing to just "delete and reinstall", you can go ahead and directly install 22.04. At some point, I would expect that the "Ubuntu" in the Store will move to 22.04, but as mentioned in the linked post, you still won't be able to use it to "upgrade" an existing distribution. For that reason, at least for the moment, use the "Ubuntu 22.04" release in the Store:

Note: Several prior versions required that you remove the snapd package before upgrading. In several tests now on my own distributions, this no longer appears to be necessary for the 20.04 -> 22.04 upgrade. If you do get an error when upgrading, however, it might be useful to try sudo apt remove snapd and then try again.

I want to use a Windows ISO file of Windows 10 Pro 22H2 to perform an in-place upgrade install so the system is completely refreshed but my registry, settings, apps, profiles, and wifi passwords are conserved. The installation starts and goes to 90%-100% but never reboots. Instead it gives me an error stating that the Windows installation has failed, the error logs are empty, and safe boot, nor anything else I found online seem to fix the error. 0852c4b9a8

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