On Sun, Jan 9, 2011 at 5:31 PM, Kai Schaetzl <maillists@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I want to replace an existing 32bit with a 64bit installation (Centos 5). > There's an existing LVM with lots of partitions. Most are used for Xen > guests. The system itself uses only one of them plus a separate /boot > partition that is not on LVM. > What's the best course of action here? Should I do the reinstall with > kickstart or better manually and reuse the existing filesystem? As I > understand once LVM gets loaded it should find the volumes by itself, but > will it be able to use the same naming scheme for instance? Or do I have > to do some additional stuff, anyway? Backup your existing configuration, especially /etc and /home, and /var/ configurations, and re-install from scratch. Swapping kernel and glibc dependencies live is very tricky, almost as tricky as switching from i386 to sparc or ppc, and likely to break in the niidst of the process, even with the backwards compatibility of i386 components under x86_64 libraries. You'd otherwise have to boot with an x85_64 kernel and glibc and operatte inside a chroot cage, andn that's just bloody tricky to be sure you got it right to replace components like glibc inside of. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos