I never use the "Upgrade" feature of the Redhat distribution. If I need
to upgrade, I do a complete rebuild of the system. 

The reason I have found this to be the most practical approach, is
several:

1. guarantee no conflicts between applications compiled under previous
libc versions

2. guarantee no conflicts between application software and other
operating system support packages

3. recompile applications so they are optimized under the new system and
take advantages of new features

If you do an "upgrade" instead of a rebuild, you run the risk of your
applications not working anymore or experiencing performance problems
that are hard to track down.

On Mon, 2003-07-14 at 10:19, Alexis Vasquez wrote:
> Used to have dual booting    RHL7.3/W98 
> the window$ get damage, so I reinstalled.
> now lilo doens't boot.   I guess with rescue mode I
> can fix this, but I would like change to RH8.0/w2k
> 
> Q.  If I upgrade linux without changing partitions
> size  could this compromise what I have.
> 
> concern about the filesystem type..
> 
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-- 
Michael Martinez
Linux System Administrator 
ISTM/CSREES/USDA


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