Preserve structure
Keep spaces, hierarchies, navigation and page relationships understandable after the move.
- Space and page hierarchy mapping
- Navigation and landing page planning
- Related content and category structure
Move content from Confluence, SharePoint, MediaWiki, file-based documentation or legacy systems into XWiki while preserving usability, structure and long-term maintainability.
We help organizations plan and execute migrations that go beyond copying pages: hierarchy, attachments, links, permissions, metadata, macros, templates and redirects all need to be considered.
Documentation platforms usually contain years of accumulated knowledge, links, attachments, permissions, templates and habits. A successful migration should preserve what matters while improving how the knowledge is organized and maintained in XWiki.
Keep spaces, hierarchies, navigation and page relationships understandable after the move.
Reduce disruption by handling links, attachments, redirects, permissions and known content dependencies.
Use the migration as an opportunity to clean up content, introduce metadata and prepare better structures.
Each source system has different export formats, content models and limitations. The migration approach depends on the quality of the source data, the expected XWiki structure and the amount of transformation needed.
Migration of pages, spaces, attachments, links and content that may include macros or Confluence-specific formatting.
Migration planning for document libraries, wiki-like content, intranet pages and knowledge structures.
Migration of wiki pages, links, categories, attachments and content that may require syntax or structure conversion.
Migration from file shares, exported documentation, PDFs, Word files or folder-based knowledge repositories.
Extraction and restructuring of content from older internal tools, portals or custom documentation systems.
Consolidation of content from multiple sources into a more coherent XWiki knowledge platform.
A good migration starts with understanding how the source content is used today and how it should work in XWiki after the move. The objective is not only to transfer data, but to create a usable knowledge platform that people can navigate, search and maintain.
Migrations are best handled iteratively: assess the source, run a sample migration, validate the result, adjust the transformation rules and then proceed with a controlled migration plan.
The exact migration scope depends on the source system and the quality of the exported content. A migration engagement can include both technical conversion and practical information architecture work.
Page content, syntax, formatting, links, images, attachments and other reusable knowledge assets.
Spaces, page hierarchy, navigation, naming rules, landing pages and organization of knowledge areas.
Review and mapping of access rights where the source system contains meaningful permission rules.
Tags, categories, templates, XWiki classes or structured data to improve long-term maintainability.
Not every element from the source system maps perfectly to XWiki. The migration plan should distinguish between what can be converted automatically, what needs manual cleanup and what should be redesigned.
Source-specific macros, embeds, widgets or dynamic content may require conversion, replacement or redesign.
Internal links, external references, old URLs and bookmarks should be reviewed to reduce broken navigation.
Content organization, titles, metadata and navigation affect how easily users find migrated knowledge.
A technically successful migration still needs clear navigation, familiar entry points and user guidance.
Important spaces and high-value content should be reviewed after migration to catch conversion issues.
Timing, source freeze, final migration, redirects and communication should be planned before go-live.
Migration work often connects with custom development, support and upgrade planning.
Custom applications, workflows, dashboards, integrations and structured knowledge solutions built on top of XWiki.
View development servicesOngoing technical care for production environments after the migration is completed.
View support servicesSend a short description of the source system, approximate content volume, export options and the type of XWiki structure you want to achieve. A sample export or representative content area is often enough to start.
Discuss a migration