Johnny Hughes wrote:
> I have run upgrades on several test VMs and they did upgrade, but I
> don't think I would upgrade anything in production in place. And this
> is not just advise I would give for CentOS .. I would also not upgrade
> anything in place (Not Windows from XP to Win7 to Win8 .. n
On 10/27/2014 09:08 PM, Ted Miller wrote:
> On 10/27/2014 10:35 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
>> Ted Miller wrote:
>>
>>> I have not tried an upgrade, but it sounds like they put the work into
>>> making server upgrades easier, but did not (or could not) make it as
>>> easy
>>> for desktop installation
On 10/27/2014 10:35 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Ted Miller wrote:
I have not tried an upgrade, but it sounds like they put the work into
making server upgrades easier, but did not (or could not) make it as easy
for desktop installations. Most people paying license fees are covering
servers.
I
On 10/27/2014 10:31 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Ted Miller wrote:
I have gotten in the habit of either creating or leaving unused some space
on any disk that might be used as a boot disk, rather than committing all
the space to LVM. That way I have something to work with if I need "yet
another"
Ted Miller wrote:
> I have not tried an upgrade, but it sounds like they put the work into
> making server upgrades easier, but did not (or could not) make it as easy
> for desktop installations. Most people paying license fees are covering
> servers.
I got the impression that the CentOSUpgradeT
Ted Miller wrote:
> I have gotten in the habit of either creating or leaving unused some space
> on any disk that might be used as a boot disk, rather than committing all
> the space to LVM. That way I have something to work with if I need "yet
> another" boot partition.
A bit ignorant of me, bu
On 10/26/2014 09:24 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Ted Miller wrote:
I would like to upgrade a CentOS-6.5 home server
to CentOS-7 on a new partition.
What is the simplest way to achieve this?
1. It requires a custom disk layout, but is not particularly hard.
2. AFAIK, you can share your SWAP part
Timothy Murphy wrote:
> 3. Curiously, I see I already have a file /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
> on my CentOS-6.5 system,
> though /etc/grub.conf points to /boot/grub/grub.conf .
> Did I create the grub2 file while experimenting with the system,
> or is it provided by CentOS-6.5 to simplify upgrading?
I
Ted Miller wrote:
>> I would like to upgrade a CentOS-6.5 home server
>> to CentOS-7 on a new partition.
>> What is the simplest way to achieve this?
> 1. It requires a custom disk layout, but is not particularly hard.
> 2. AFAIK, you can share your SWAP partition between the two installations.
>
On 10/25/2014 09:40 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
I would like to upgrade a CentOS-6.5 home server
to CentOS-7 on a new partition.
What is the simplest way to achieve this?
I would like to be able to boot into either version of CentOS
until I am sure the new version is running OK.
Incidentally, I t
I would like to upgrade a CentOS-6.5 home server
to CentOS-7 on a new partition.
What is the simplest way to achieve this?
I would like to be able to boot into either version of CentOS
until I am sure the new version is running OK.
Incidentally, I think most people today must have enough space
on
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