There are multiple factors which can affect the performance of your migration.
ShareGate Desktop works right between your migration source and your migration destination. What this means is that performance issues could be coming for either of these environments, as well as your workstation itself. It is essential to troubleshoot all possible performance issues properly.
See Microsoft's article on migration speed for more information.
Index
- Assess your Environments
- Check the Active Directory
- Your Workstation
- Possible Network Issues
- Running Insane Mode to Microsoft 365
Assess your Environments
Looking at the SharePoint environments themselves is always the first step to assessing performance issues.
- Is your SharePoint Health Analyzer flagging critical issues? If so, these must be addressed before proceeding with your migration.
- Do you have a lot of documents in the destination's recycle bins? Having a lot of documents in your Microsoft 365 recycle bins can affect the performance.
- Are there any bottlenecks on your servers? This can be assessed by looking at CPU, the number of cores, memory, and queue lengths on the Disk.
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Should you be using the Server Extension? Installing the Server Extension on your WFE server can add speed and additional functionality when performing your migration. This component is not needed when migrating to Microsoft 365, which uses Azure Import.
Note: The server extension is not required in Microsoft 365, but it is highly recommended to install it in your source or destination if you're doing any kind of migration to or from an on-premise SharePoint server. This will help package your information and can even reduce the strain on Microsoft 365, thus reducing the potential for throttling.
Check the Active Directory
ShareGate Desktop relies on SharePoint's Active Directory when running a migration from an on-premises environment.
- Is your Active Directory server slow? ShareGate Desktop needs to perform many calls to the directory in order to properly allocate users at the destination and assign the correct roles and permissions, so this could affect speed considerably.
Your Workstation
The workstation you are running ShareGate Desktop on plays a large part in how your in-app options should be set to optimize Migration performance.
- Are you set to High performance? Though this may always seem best, if your server cannot handle the high volume of requests, this setting will actually slow things down. Try a few levels out to find the one that works for you.
- Are there any bottleneck on your servers? This can be assessed by looking at CPU, the number of cores, memory, and queue lengths on the Disk.
- Do you have the right number of CPU cores? ShareGate Desktop works optimally with 4 cores (64 concurrent threads).
- Are you trying to run multiple migrations at once? Even if using PowerShell, this is not a good idea. You will always achieve better performance running one migration at a time. If this is not possible, running your migrations on multiple workstations is recommended.
Possible Network Issues
Network congestion can be be a source of performance woes as well.
- Do you have the upstream bandwidth to perform a migration in the time you are aiming for? This is less of an issue on-premises when using a LAN, but can be an issue when migrating to Microsoft 365 (since the migration runs via the internet). For instance, migrating a 1 GB file on a 5/1 MBPS ADSL will take more time than running the same migration on a 1 GBPS line.
- Do you think other network issues might be at play? You can check for elevated CPU/RAM usage (if you are using a Proxy, check the Proxy network), perform a network ping test between your workstation and WFE, verify your VPN for latency, use a debugging tool such as Fiddler, or finally run Diagnostic Mode during the migration to have our Support personnel analyse (this is only recommended once other issues have been ruled out).
Running Insane Mode to Microsoft 365
When running a migration using Insane Mode to Microsoft 365, ShareGate Desktop uses Microsoft's Microsoft 365 Import API to migrate in the fastest speed possible. However the API can have issues and bottlenecks on its end.
- Are you importing a large amount of data (over a terabyte)? You need to contact Microsoft 365 Support ahead of time to provision your Content Database.
- Are you using a custom Azure Storage Account instead of the default? Since your Global Admin Center is located in a specific Azure data center, it is possible that your custom storage is located in a separate geographic location - prompting delays. Unless you need long-term access to you Manifest Package, it is always better to use the default Azure Storage Account.
- Did you consider encryption? Migrations to Microsoft 365 use AES encryption to keep your data secure. This slows down the migration performance, but it is of course a highly necessary part of the process.
- Are you having bandwidth issues? You can consider creating an Azure Express Route for faster connection.
Comments
2 comments
According to Microsoft you need to create a support request if you are importing more than 100TB of data. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepointmigration/sharepoint-online-and-onedrive-migration-speed#large-migrations-over-100tb
Hi Khalid,
Thank you for your input. That is a very valid point for larger migration.
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