Johnn Tan wrote: > Matt Bottrell wrote: > >> I'm constantly surprised how many people wish to 'upgrade'. >> >> Historically I've been updating my Linux distro when Redhat still was >> shipped in nappies. I've learnt pretty early on the following: > > > [...] > >> 4. Choose to install fresh (not upgrade), and format the existing >> partitions /, /usr, /tmp and /var.... whilst you probably wish to >> keep /usr/local and /home. > > > Matt: I agree with you, fresh installs are my preferred "upgrade" path. > > But I was just curious what to do in a remote server situation? I > manage about a dozen boxes remotely. They are running CentOS3.3 right > now. When CentOS4 becomes final, I would like to upgrade. But not sure > if there's a way to do it "fresh" since I'm not at the machines > physically. > > Along the same lines, does RedHat themselves have an official position > about upgrades from RHEL3 to RHEL4? > > johnn > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.caosity.org/mailman/listinfo/centos On my production systems I only do fresh installs when moving from something like RHEL 3 -> 4. Also I don't upgrade a machine unless I have to due to end of life or a requirement for a feature offered in the new version. The many years of support and security patches is what drew me to RHEL and CentOS on my servers. -- Aaron Havens Network Technician Computing and Telecommunications Northeastern State University 610 N. Grand Suite 318 Tahlequah, OK 74464 http://netnotes.nsuok.edu/~havensa/ 918-456-5511 Ext. 5813