
If the database was created in an earlier version of DaVinci Resolve, you might have to upgrade the database, and you may see a prompt to do that. You will also need to give a name to this database connection once you are back to the Connect tab of the New Database dialogue.Ĭlick Add, and the database is now connected. (In your case, it seems you would want to connect to a folder named "Resolve," which contains "Resolve Projects") You would want to select the folder I_MADE_THIS and then click the Open button in the Select Directory window. Users//Movies/ I_MADE_THIS/Resolve Projects/Users/guest/Projects/test01/Project.db In this example, I have a disk database folder structure fully contained within the folder named "I_MADE_THIS": Make sure you are in a Disk Database mode and use the Click to Select Directory field to navigate to a folder containing the entire disk database folder structure and select it. Consider making a copy of the entire folder structure.Īfter that, use the New Database button in the Project manager, which opens a New Database dialogue on a Connect Tab. If you are on a macOS, make sure that all of this is on the internal or constantly connected storage device that is not formatted as exFAT (HFS+ or APFS are preferred)ģ. To say the same thing differently - the folder that contains a folder named "Resolve Projects" cannot have any other folder on the same level.Ģ. The disk database folder structure must be in its own folder. Long answer - what you have is a Resolve disk database folder structure, essentially a disk database.Īll you need to do is connect to this folder structure at an appropriate entry point, assuming it is in a location accessible to the DaVinci Resolve application.ġ. A short answer - most likely, that's a yes.
