On Thu, 20 May 2010, Mehmet Erol Sanliturk wrote:
(i) install onto a new computer , test it , and if it is working very well transfer data onto new system , and keep old system for a new release/update cycle . This step is most suitable for production systems exposed to outer world . (ii) attach a new hard disk to the computer , copy all of the present files to the new system , update it , test it , if it is successful , use previous hard disk for a new release/update cycle , (iii) back-up all of the data , and try update . Testing suitability may take a long time .In steps (ii) and (iii) , do not load new data during tests , because at the end , all of them may be destroyed . ( No one of the above steps are suitable for a proprietary , activation based operating system because they are not allowing so many computer and/or hard disk changes . ) Therefore , the problem is a "system analysis and design" process .
In my case, I have nagios setup to advise me when its been 60 days since last upgrade and perform an upgrade religiously when the alarm is sounded ... have had this policy for *years* now without regret ...
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