Timothy Murphy wrote: : Dean S. Messing wrote: : : > : but there are a several advantages in the opposite direction too. : > : > I don't know of any, other than speed, but ... : : One obvious advantage of an upgrade is that if you try a fresh install, : and it fails, you may be left without an operating system. True if one does not take precautions. As I said before, I _always_ move the filesystems on {/, /usr, /var, /tmp} to a single spare partition, configure a boot floppy with an MBR to boot this, and test, before beginning a new install. Another reason I do this is that it always takes me a long time to tweek the new system to where I want it---firewall, ssh configs, and a hundred other little things. Since it is my work machine I am usually upgrading, I need to boot the old system to get any work done. It helps to have a heavily partitioned file space (which I have). Dean -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list