Re: long term support release

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Horst H. von Brand wrote:

Upgrade to next Fedora. Gets easier each time around. A bit of foresight
when installing originally helps much here.

Precisely.  The update or upgrades are essentially very simple to
handle when you've got a sane partitioning scheme setup.

I _really_ have to believe that you haven't run fedora over any span
of time across a variety of hardware

I'm running Red Hat since Red Hat 3 or so, and then Fedora from 1. On an
rather wide variety of machines (Alpha, SPARC and SPARC64, i386 to i686,
x86_64, single/double/8x processor, ...). All the way as machines in a
computer lab, day-to-day workstation, and servers.

And yes, upgrading used to be a pain, but is is getting easier all the time.

I'm not convinced this is a predictable trend. You are pretty much at the mercy of kernel development, which I thought was more reasonable back in its days of having an experimental branch for the wild changes that get thrown directly into fedora these days.

                                    with an assortment of additional
software installed.

That I learned not to do in the RH 4-5 timeframe, especially not "self
compiled from source". What limited stuff I have locally is packaged as
self-built RPMs that I can update easily.

That doesn't matter a lot unless you are rolling it out across a lot of similar machines. And you can't just avoid locally built stuff - it may be the whole purpose of the machine. The hard part is finding the components you need to build in the first place that work together and with your new environment and you run into dependencies in strange places. For example, there's a forgotten machine under a desk somewhere in a Swiss office, set up by someone else years ago that no longer works there that has a CIPE vpn into the LAN in our office near Chicago. If I upgrade the machine in our office to something current (instead of RH 7.3 with a 4+ year uptime...), where am I going to find a working CIPE? Or for a simpler scenario, consider something that needs a few dozen perl modules that aren't in an RPM repository and may not all work together out of CPAN the day you need them. Even if you built RPMs the last time around, you probably want updated versions and in fact may need them to work with the rest of the system.

--
   Les Mikesell
     lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx


--
fedora-devel-list mailing list
fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Index of Archives]     [Fedora Announce]     [Fedora Kernel]     [Fedora Testing]     [Fedora Formulas]     [Fedora PHP Devel]     [Kernel Development]     [Fedora Legacy]     [Fedora Maintainers]     [Fedora Desktop]     [PAM]     [Red Hat Development]     [Gimp]     [Yosemite News]
  Powered by Linux