On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 5:18 PM, Michael Checca <mche...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Thu, 21 Jul 2011 17:14:48 -0400, Chris Brennan <xa...@xaerolimit.net>
> wrote:
>
>
>> To borrow your own phrase .... nuke and pave. Moving between
>> architectures is probably a very very bad idea :D (upgrade wise). While
>> not a guru, but a power user, this is something I would only attempt to
>> do in a VM and then, only to prove it can't be done. Sanely. But this is
>> just my $0.02 :D
>>
>>
> I agree.Plus, you get a brand new Debian install :)
>

Agreed. But I am running sid anyway, so I'm already surfing the bleeding
edge.


> Before starting your fresh install, it would probably be a good idea to
> backup your /etc and /home dirs to cut down on the amount of re-configuring
> you need to do.


Yeah, I have a backuppc installation, so everything is already backed up...I
am a little leery of dropping an old /etc onto a new install. I guess with
sid it won't matter as much...


> Also, use dpkg --get-selections and dpkg --set-selections to make sure you
> have the same packages installed.
>

I always do this, in fact, I keep a stable of package lists (workstation,
laptop, wiki, firewall, etc) just for this specific purpose. Doing this,
restoring /home and  cherry picking from /etc, I can usually replicate a box
in a couple of hours.

I was just hoping for an undocumented way of doing it as an upgrade...

Thanks,
--b

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