Chris Bennett [chrisbenn...@bennettconstruction.us] wrote: > On Thu, Feb 06, 2014 at 11:56:05AM -0600, L. V. Lammert wrote: > > On Thu, 6 Feb 2014, Chris Cappuccio wrote: > > > > > What I'm recommending isn't really an upgrade so much as using the old > > > box to bootstrap a newest snapshot. As long as the bootblocks are still > > > compatible, you can do it. > > > > > Why? A clean build on a new machine would be the best solution in that > > case, .. then reconfigure with data from the old box/disk. > > > > Also, it is not good to recommend snapshots - most users do not need that > > level of complexity. CDs are a much better alternative, and give something > > back to the project. You DO purchase more than one set of CDs for every > > release, right? > > > > Lee > > > > I DO NOT recommend going straight to -current, twice I have made that > jump on my remote server only to find that the packages for something > important suddenly don't work even though my -current box at home > worked OK. >
It might help to report package problems. The current snapshots are now very close to what you are going to see in the 5.5 release. > Buy a CD. Do a fresh install. And since a special moment with lock > showing up is soon to happen, then upgrading that to -current should > work fine. But yes upgrade to 5.5 -current afterwards. > This is probably the time where most people would recommend against that since it is essentially a complete reinstall of all items to upgrade from pre-5.5 to 5.5 due to time_t ABI change. > Or wait a little and put -current at home/office and test and then > install if OK. > > It never hurts to be careful. And backup everything before you turn off > those disks since they are old. Old disks keep running but often can't > restart from a stop. Yeah keep backups any of this crazy stuff will drive you nuts when you fuck up all your data and can't figure out how to fix it. Chris