> On Jun 3, 2017, at 3:10 PM, Mark Saad <nones...@longcount.org> wrote: > > > >> On Jun 3, 2017, at 2:24 PM, Adam Vande More <amvandem...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> On Sat, Jun 3, 2017 at 12:19 PM, Howard Leadmon <how...@leadmon.net> wrote: >>> Thanks for the update, I had the feeling the issue was from it being to >>> old. I have a question, not sure if you know, but I will toss it out. >>> As I mentioned I update using svn for both src and ports, and I am curious >>> to know if I can actually bring my src tree up to the most current 10.x >>> stable, recompile, and install and have it all run? > > So here is my take on the update . For starters if you are using a stock > binary 9.3-RELEASE you can use freebsd-update to go 9.3 -> 10.1 , 10.1 -> > 10.3 , 10.3 -> 11.0 . In theory freebsd-update should allow for 9.x -> 10.x > but there was some breakage in the 10's FreeBSD updates that prevented this . > > If you decided to do a source build you can go 9.x to 10.3 w/o much.
I meant to say trouble but I accidentally hit send . Another option is to download the binary sets from ftp.freebsd.org ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/amd64/11.0-RELEASE/ Now with some care you can backup your 9 kernel to kernel.old and untar the kernel tar to /boot . Then reboot in single user . Backup your etc and extract the base tar and then using etcupdate for fixing etc or manually fix it with your backup . Then reboot and fix the ports using pkg -f install pkg && pkg upgrade . However if you haven't done this before it can be error prone if . Also you can look into boot environments for zfs but if memory serves me right it's not fully baked into 9.x and it may not work right . > >>> >>> In the past with much older versions, I know file system changes and such >>> make it pretty hard to jump major revisions, >>> so have a little bit of fear about jumping from 9.x to 10.x, and possibly >>> even to 11.x if that is now stable. I am using ZFS, so I guess that would >>> be one thing that is outside the norm, but should be part of the base >>> kernels now anyway. >>> >>> Any input on upgrading would be most appreciated... Honestly 11 has been very stable . There are issues but nothing that has wanted me to roll back to 10 . I am using 10.3-STABLE from about a year ago for my routers and 11.0-STABLE from April for general use and it's been good and crash free. Knock on wood . One thing to remember is upgrading the zpool and zfs version/ feature flags . Al la zfs upgrade pool0/foo . This is a one time job ; with no way to go back . So save this for last after your box has settled down and you are comfortable. >> >> I don't know what you know I guess, but it should work following these >> instructions: >> >> https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/makeworld.html >> >> or these: >> >> https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/updating-upgrading.html >> >> or these: >> >> https://www.freebsd.org/releases/11.0R/installation.html >> >> It is probably wise to make a backup and do a test first. >> >> -- >> Adam --- Mark Saad | nones...@longcount.org _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"