On 06/07/2015 05:29 PM, Kay Schenk wrote: > On 06/07/2015 03:25 PM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote: <<<>>> >> Yes it does replace your home directory. When I do a fresh >> install, I back up my home directory on a usb drive and then copy >> it back after the install. I think you can also 'muck' with the >> partitioning, but I have always taken a more conservative route. >> >> Good Luck!!! >> >> Greg > > Thanks for the quick response! I don't like it but thank you! :) . then you should give some thought to creating a partition for /home. such gives you ability to mount the partition as /home and not have to worry about losing, backing up /home. that is, you should keep /home backed up, but with it as it's own partition, you do not have to restore /home into a new install. like that better? :-) -- peace out. If Bill Gates got a dime for every time Windows crashes... ...oh, wait. He does. THAT explains it! in a world with out fences, who needs gates. CentOS GNU/Linux 6.6 tc,hago. g . _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos