On Tue, 4 Jan 2011 10:30:33 -0600 S C Rigler <riglersc@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 9:35 AM, Arnold Krille <arnold@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The hours spent getting watching one system to > > upgrade while working with another where much better used then the hours > > spent > > setting up a new system with all the small quirks and settings to re-create > > my > > needed working environment. > > You didn't mention Fedora. I speak from experience, particularly from > upgrading FC8, and by "catastophic" I mean a failure that forces you to > scrap all efforts to complete the upgrade process and resort to a clean > installation. Usually the failure happens after you've wasted a > significant amount of time and is so frustrating that you will swear off > ever upgrading a Fedora release again especially if it is for more than 2 > major releases. FC8 has been end of life for 2 years and a lot has changed > since then so expect problems. I've been a RedHat user since RedHat 5 and while I have a few upgrade tales of woe, they're ancient history since I came up with a short list of best practices for doing them. I modified them a bit to take into account the new preupgrade process but it's all based on the same strategy - don't mess with the existing installation! The basic points are: * always keep /home on a different partition * use multiple / partitions * if doing an upgrade, clone the existing / partition to a new one, boot into that, then try the upgrade For a long time I used to have separate partitions for /, /var, /usr, /tmp and so on, which goes back to the days when UNIX-y systems performed better with the partitions broken out like that, but that's not been the case for years now. (Whew.) Now I keep the whole system under / with /home and /boot separate and it makes it a snap to be able to boot back into my old installation if I have to, or mount the old / to recover settings in /etc -- ====================================================================== Joe Hartley - UNIX/network Consultant - jh@xxxxxxxxxxxx Without deviation from the norm, "progress" is not possible. - FZappa _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user