Mark writes:
> "> That will never happen."
>
> And some serious reason?
/usr/sbin/sysupgrade is 218 lines short _with_ comments and I for
one like it that way.
It's difficult to screw up by using it and easy to figure out what
it did if you do.
> It was a great idea indeed. :/
So was dividing t
On 2023-11-18 15:57 +01, m...@emailgroups.net wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 18, 2023, at 11:57, Mark wrote:
>> "> That will never happen."
>>
>> And some serious reason?
>>
>> It was a great idea indeed. :/
>
> They don't go out of their way to assist with foot shooting.
Oh, we like foot guns as much as
On Sat, Nov 18, 2023, at 11:57, Mark wrote:
> "> That will never happen."
>
> And some serious reason?
>
> It was a great idea indeed. :/
They don't go out of their way to assist with foot shooting.
The files under /usr take up about 8 GB and I've installed gnome
and what not.
Just get a bigge
"> That will never happen."
And some serious reason?
It was a great idea indeed. :/
Theo de Raadt , 17 Kas 2023 Cum, 18:20 tarihinde şunu
yazdı:
> Odd Martin Baanrud wrote:
>
> > Perhaps sysupgrade should be enhanced, so one could either choose which
> sets should be upgraded, or even beter,
Mihai Popescu :
> Make it Rust or GTK based, but please include the support for http, it
> is more convenient to do it remotely using www.
Do OpenBSD running seriously on Ruby, Python, etc, etc and then we discuss
about www that appears the only think we can still like to run over it,
and sorry f
> I still have gsysupgrade lying around somewhere. It's a gtk app. I never
> made a port for it because I got sidetracked rewriting it to use qt.
> It isn't written in rust? The shame.
Make it Rust or GTK based, but please include the support for http, it
is more convenient to do it remotely usi
Florian Obser wrote:
> On 2023-11-17 16:06 +01, Odd Martin Baanrud wrote:
> > Hello Jan,
> >
> > Thanks for the tip.
> > The upgrade went smoothly.
> > I ran “sysupgrade -n”, deleted the game set and the X sets and rebooted.
> >
> > Perhaps sysupgrade should be enhanced, so one could either choo
Odd Martin Baanrud wrote:
> Perhaps sysupgrade should be enhanced, so one could either choose which sets
> should be upgraded, or even beter, the tool could figure out which sets are
> installed, and upgrade just those.
That will never happen.
On 2023-11-17 16:06 +01, Odd Martin Baanrud wrote:
> Hello Jan,
>
> Thanks for the tip.
> The upgrade went smoothly.
> I ran “sysupgrade -n”, deleted the game set and the X sets and rebooted.
>
> Perhaps sysupgrade should be enhanced, so one could either choose
> which sets should be upgraded, or
Hello Jan,
Thanks for the tip.
The upgrade went smoothly.
I ran “sysupgrade -n”, deleted the game set and the X sets and rebooted.
Perhaps sysupgrade should be enhanced, so one could either choose which sets
should be upgraded, or even beter, the tool could figure out which sets are
installed,
IF you have a good reason to not let sysupgrade do a full install
(space? on my RPI that's the case), you can simply
sysupgrade -sfn
rm /home/_sysupgrade/x*
reboot
On 11/16/23 20:25, Odd Martin Baanrud wrote:
Hello,
I’m planning to upgrade my router from 7.3 to 7.4 using sysupgrade, but I’ve
one concern.
Some time ago, I upgraded a RPi4 from 7.2 to 7.3, and X got installed, even
though it wasn’t before the upgrade.
I thaught sysupgrade only upgraded the
Hello,
I’m planning to upgrade my router from 7.3 to 7.4 using sysupgrade, but I’ve
one concern.
Some time ago, I upgraded a RPi4 from 7.2 to 7.3, and X got installed, even
though it wasn’t before the upgrade.
I thaught sysupgrade only upgraded the installed sets.
How does it work on 7.3?
On my
13 matches
Mail list logo