Simon Andrews wrote: > I don't see the problem with forcing the use of these packages during an > upgrade regardless of what versions were on the original system. You'd > be left with a functional system Not really. Things like KDE config files processed by kconf_update, Firefox profiles, Amarok databases etc. will have been converted to the format expected by the new version, downgrading is not supported by upstream and the old version may thus not work or lose some settings. > and the tools you need to update to the latest versions of packages should > be functional. That part should hopefully be true. Still, I wonder if it's really a valid tradeoff. >> For future Fedora releases, there are 2 solutions: >> either we fix the DVD to use the repositories enabled on the installed >> system (updates etc.) like preupgrade now does (which also implies that >> it will have to refuse doing the upgrade if it can't connect to the >> network) or we drop support for upgrading from the DVD entirely (we could >> hide it behind an "upgrade" boot option like RHEL does). > > So, just to be clear here. Anyone who either has no network connection > or whose network connection is too slow to support downloading > potentially hundreds of megs up updates isn't going to be able to > upgrade any more? Fedora effectively requires a fast network connection for the regular updates anyway. Of course the folks who need offline upgrades could use some hidden "upgrade" option and get to keep the pieces. Kevin Kofler -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list