Dedicated profile per Thunderbird installation

Thunderbird Thunderbird Ti ṣàfikún kẹ́hìn: 29% of users voted this helpful
Kò sẹ́ni tó ṣèraǹwọ́ láti túmọ̀ aròkọ yí rí. Bí o báti mọ bí ìsọdibílẹ̀ SUMO ṣe ń ṣiṣẹ́, bẹ̀rẹ̀ síní túmọ̀ báyì. Bí o bá fẹ́ kọ́ láti túmọ̀ aròkọ fún SUMO, jọ̀wọ́ bẹ̀rẹ̀ níbí.
This feature requires Thunderbird version 68 and above.

What are profiles?

Thunderbird saves information such as addresses, messages, passwords and user preferences in a set of files called a profile. This profile is stored in a location separate from the Thunderbird applicationprogram files. More information about Thunderbird profiles can be found here.

What profile changes were made in Thunderbird 68?

Some users have multiple program installations of Thunderbird on the same computer; for example, Thunderbird 38, Thunderbird 45, Thunderbird 52 and Thunderbird 60, each installed in a separate applicationprogram folder. In these older Thunderbird installations it was allowed to share the same profile by default.

However, with version 68 and newer versions a dedicated profile is used for each program installation of Thunderbird (including Nightly and Beta). This makes Thunderbird more stable when switching between installations on the same computer, and also allows you to run different installations of Thunderbird at the same time.

Tip: To see what Thunderbird version you're on, see Find what version of Thunderbird you are using.

You will not lose any personal data or customizations. Previous profile data is saved and associated with the first Thunderbird installation that was opened after this change. Details of why these changes were made is explained in the Firefox article Understanding in depth the profile per installation feature.

What are my options?

If you do nothing, your profile data will be different with each installation of Thunderbird.

Can I change which Thunderbird installation uses my previously shared profile?

Yes. You can use the Profile Manager for any installation to set a new default profile for that particular installation. Directions are available in the Profile Manager article. See also the Recover user data missing after Thunderbird update article.

What happens to my profile if I downgrade to a previous version of Thunderbird?

You should create a new profile to avoid corruption issues.

Starting with Thunderbird version 68, each Thunderbird installation requires a separate profile. Any previous profile data is saved and associated with the first Thunderbird installation opened after the change.

If you try to launch a Thunderbird installation with a profile that was last used in a newer version, you'll see a warning that using an older version of Thunderbird can corrupt profile data, such as:

TB68_Downgrade_Protection_Prompt

Click the Create New Profile button to start Thunderbird with a new profile.

When you downgrade Thunderbird and use a new profile, any profile that was used in the higher version is still available in the Profile Manager, for use in a more recent version of Thunderbird.

Note: Downgrade protection can be overridden by launching Thunderbird through the command line with the --allow-downgrade parameter.

I already use separate profiles for my different Thunderbird installations

If you have already manually created separate profiles for different installations, you will not notice the change.

Ṣé aròkọ yìí ṣèrànwọ́?

Jọ̀wọ́ dúró...

These fine people helped write this article:

Illustration of hands

Volunteer

Grow and share your expertise with others. Answer questions and improve our knowledge base.

Learn More