On Sb, 04 iun 11, 05:46:56, teddi...@tmo.blackberry.net wrote: > > Ron Johnson Said: > > The M2V has an AM2 socket, and all such chips are 64-bit capable, so > both 2.6.39-1-686-pae and 2.6.39-1-amd64 *should* work. > > (I think you'd get a different error if the kernel was incompatible with > the CPU.) > > ----
[re-wrapped to 72 characters] > The first thing I noticed about these two Kernels was the one is an > amd64, the second is a i686-PAE which means it's a 32 bit with larger > than 4GB Memory Support. Yes > My spin off question is this, can a user install a 32bit system (i686) > and then choose to move to a 64bit system and perform a rolling update > as such? It can be, and has been done before, but... > I know that fundamentally, a 64 bit system consist of a 64bit Kernel > and the core libraries (libc, gcc, etc.) Are 64bit, I am to understand > that 32bit libs are present for backwards compatibility, but I'm not > sure if those libraries are different from the ones in a 32bit only > system. The Debian amd64 port is as "pure" as possible. 32bit libraries are only installed in very few cases and mostly for non-free software (skype is for me the big culprit here). However, there is work in progress on true multiarch[1] support, where it will be possible to mix packages as needed. It *might* be ready until wheezy is released. [1] AFAIU other distros have bi-arch support, where some combinations of ports are possible. Debian wants to go further :) > So my question boils down to if you can rolling update from 32bit to a > 64bit system? If so what all would be involved? And does it boil down > to being possible, but so intense as to negate the purpose, e.g. Just > plain easier/better to wipe and start fresh. Yes, at the moment it's so complicated to do a cross-grading that it's not worth it (I just wiped and reinstalled yesterday to move back from amd64 to i386). Regards, Andrei -- Offtopic discussions among Debian users and developers: http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/d-community-offtopic
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