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View Full Version : upgrading from beta to final release


MALDATA
11th October 2008, 09:31 PM
Quick question...

I downloaded and installed fedora 10 beta on my laptop to test it out, since I use fedora 8 on my work computer and it's coming up on the end of its lifetime. The install of F10 has gone so smoothly that I'd hate to have to reinstall when the final release comes out. Will updating automatically take me up to the final release? Or will I have to do a fresh install of the final release? I suspect the updates take care of it, but I want to make sure because it takes so much effort to get everything set up and I'd like to do this just once.

Thanks

nick.stumpos
11th October 2008, 09:35 PM
Im sure it possible, i havent done it myself so i cant verify this. I wouldn't recommend it though. keep in mind that the beta is a beta release and as such has lots of debug code enabled, and pieces of software not yet considered ready for release. this software may not update as smoothly as an upgrade from say even 9 to 10, which even in that case i would recommend a reinstall over an upgrade

mjmwired
12th October 2008, 12:41 AM

Yes this will work fine. Keep updating it via 'yum update'.
Once F10 final is released, the repository setup should automatically switch from rawhide (devel repo) to F10 final repo.

kevmif
12th October 2008, 02:34 AM
I still prefer to download a fresh copy and reinstall... you never know what makes it into rawhide. Most of the packages are not even signed :(

NoEffex
12th October 2008, 02:51 AM
If you're going to go ahead and keep rawhide, do you mind pming me telling me when networkmanager is updated? It doesn't like to work with the older fedora, and since I noticed it was still for fedora 9, well, yeah.

mjmwired
12th October 2008, 03:08 AM
I still prefer to download a fresh copy and reinstall... you never know what makes it into rawhide. Most of the packages are not even signed :(

If you stick with rawhide through the beta process all the way to the release, the updated RPM's you will have installed on your computer will be the *exact* same RPM's that will be on your fresh download.

The only difference will be how the installer runs since the Beta Anaconda installer will be updated by the time it makes it to final release.

kevmif
12th October 2008, 03:29 AM
If you stick with rawhide through the beta process all the way to the release, the updated RPM's you will have installed on your computer will be the *exact* same RPM's that will be on your fresh download.

The only difference will be how the installer runs since the Beta Anaconda installer will be updated by the time it makes it to final release.

Yes you are most probably correct..... however I still prefer to do the reinstall anyway.

Also because the beta normally gets installed on a smaller testing partition. I have it installed at the moment, but due to certain issues I have been having i've had to boot back to F9 for now. Once I am happy with F10 stability I will back up all of my data and reinstall onto my production partition. The old install will be left there and eventually wiped when I want to test something else.

Best way of doing it IMHO.

mjmwired
12th October 2008, 03:46 AM
Yes you are most probably correct..... however I still prefer to do the reinstall anyway.

Also because the beta normally gets installed on a smaller testing partition. I have it installed at the moment, but due to certain issues I have been having i've had to boot back to F9 for now. Once I am happy with F10 stability I will back up all of my data and reinstall onto my production partition. The old install will be left there and eventually wiped when I want to test something else.

Best way of doing it IMHO.

You are more than welcome to do it however it suits your needs, but I would not want someone to unnecessarily waste time downloading and re-installing based merely on opinion.

I used this Beta->Final method when Fedora9 was released so I know it works.
https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-list/2008-October/msg00217.html

kevmif
12th October 2008, 04:46 AM
Yes true I used it also, and did a reinstall a few weeks later so it does work perfectly fine.