* Nenhum_de_Nos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2008-01-02 17:49]:
> On Dec 27, 2007 11:17 AM, new_guy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I would like to install OpenBSD *once* and keep it patched and secured for
> > many years there after (5 - 7 years) in a production environment. Would it
> > be feasible to get a snapshot today and follow -current for many years w/o
> > having to reinstall? Basically, this approach would skip -stable and
> > -release and always be -current. I understand the implications of being
> > current and that things might change and break and may need re-configuring
> > on occasion. I'm OK with that... I just don't want to reinstall a -release
> > every year... although I'll still buy CDs as they are released to support
> > the project.
> 
> I have quite the same problem. my OBSD routers are usually old PII
> boxes and doing this kind of upgrade on them is not trivial. other, I
> have some remote routers I cant do this, so They run FBSD. I'd rather
> use OBSD on my routers, but this thing of not been able to make 4.1
> become 4.2 without a cdrom (as is recommended) makes me use OBSD only
> in the closest routers. i'm not here to make comparissons from OSes,
> or to make trouble. I just felt that would be good to say that if
> anytime in OBSD this upgrade was possible it would be a great feature
> (well, at least for me an the new_guy :) )

inline updates (i. e. without boot media) work just fine. the risk is a 
little higher, thus we don't recommend that method - which doesn't 
prevent you from doing it that way (I do)

-- 
Henning Brauer, [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
BS Web Services, http://bsws.de
Full-Service ISP - Secure Hosting, Mail and DNS Services
Dedicated Servers, Rootservers, Application Hosting - Hamburg & Amsterdam

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