On 8/10/2013 7:25 PM, Gregory Seidman wrote: > I have a low-cost (i.e. old and refurbished) server at home, but it's > showing indications of impending hardware failure (e.g. the on-board NIC > was being reset automatically every 2 seconds for a while because it was > hanging). As a result, I have purchased a new (old and refurbished) > machine. The difference is that this one has an x86-64 whereas the old one > is 32-bit.
> Ideally, I'd like to move the HD from the old one to the new one, boot, and > tell it to upgrade all the packages for the new architecture. Ask yourself this question: Is the juice worth the squeeze? In your case the answer is almost certainly NO. Thus I recommend you simply plug the drive into the new machine and soldier on, saving yourself the time and potential headaches of such an upgrade. There is no discernible performance difference between the two with your workloads. You'll gain nothing from moving to 64 bit but for an irrational warm fuzzy feeling knowing you have it. Like many, I suspect that having a 64 bit capable CPU is simply an overwhelming itch you feel compelled to scratch. Resist that urge, swap the drive, be happy. -- Stan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/52073d59.4010...@hardwarefreak.com