On 2019-10-01 12:57, MAILIST wrote:
Your answer has nothing to do with the original question which is related to upgrade method and not condition for reinstalling without loosing data.
After 40 years of upgrading many different operating systems, Windows (from 3.1 to 10), CentOS 6 to 8, Ubuntu, Fedora, Red Hat, AT&T Unix, VAX VMS; I have never observed an upgrade from one major version to the next to work. The last one I tried using their "upgrade process" was Ubuntu 18 to 19. Didn't work.
I routinely upgrade FreeBSD. Last time it was 11.3 to 12.0. Always smooth. Maybe I'm just lucky...
Valeri
When a new major version of any o/s is released, I have found it best to save what application data I can, delete all partitions on the target boot disk, and then install from scratch.
I learned years ago to keep application data out of system directories, ideally on a separate drive that can be mounted on the new installation. Yes, you do loose your settings, but that's why it would be wise to stick with the defaults, if possible. Yes, the database is always in a system directory by default, so that's why you do a dump before the upgrade. My "cheat-sheet" of things to do during an upgrade is about 10 pages long.
If you do have to restore from a backup, be sure you do not restore any system directories (like /etc/fstab). I made this mistake, once!
System admins must learn to bite the bullet on this part of their job.
Todd Merriman _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos