Thank you, it's a good idea. At work my home directory is not in a separate partition so it's not kept if I reinstall Ubuntu. Do you know how I can create a partition and move it to a separate partition?
Uri Even-Chen Mobile Phone: +972-50-9007559 E-mail: u...@speedy.net Speedy Net: http://www.speedy.net/ Speedy Composer: http://www.speedycomposer.com/ On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 3:46 PM, Ori Idan <o...@helicontech.co.il> wrote: > > On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 3:20 PM, Uri Even-Chen <u...@speedy.net> wrote: > >> Hi people, >> >> I work at my job with Ubuntu 12.04 and we run Django 1.4.12 locally with >> Python 2.7.3 and PostgreSQL. We want to upgrade Django from 1.4 to 1.6 and >> I also thought it would be a good idea to upgrade Python to 2.7.6 and maybe >> even 3, so I tried to upgrade Ubuntu to 14.04. But after I completed the >> upgrade, Django didn't work and I couldn't even run migrations (with >> South). I had to reinstall Ubuntu 12.04 and I lost all the files I had in >> my home directory (because I chose not to keep Ubuntu 14.04) except some >> files that I backed up. My questions are: >> >> 1. What do we need to do in order for Django to work with Ubuntu 14.04? >> 2. Why isn't it possible to reinstall Ubuntu 12.04 after upgrading to >> 14.04 and still keep all the files in my home directory, while not keeping >> all the other files (the operating system files)? >> > Why do you think it is not possible? I do it all the time. > I keep my home directory in a separate partition so when I upgrade (or > downgrade) the OS the home directory stays the same. > > -- > Ori Idan > >
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