On 2014/12/18 01:47 AM, dep wrote:
hey there, good people . . .
this is a pretty lame question; fortunately, i'm old enough that
lame doesn't bother me all that much anymore.
it's been awhile since i burned a kernel, built open office from
source, or built kde -- the way we used to, say, 15 years ago (i
even once wrote a piece about whether it took longer to compile
all of kde than it did to drive from connecticut to key west --
http://www.linuxplanet.com/linuxplanet/opinions/3420/1 ).
so now there's a new version of the real, useful kde, now known as
tde. i'm on ubuntu 12.04LTS. time to do a general upgrade.
what i'm seeking is advice as to the easiest, least-annoying way
to upgrade both operating system and tde -- i'm using 3.5.13.2 --
without breaking, well, anything. i've kept the same
configurations for ages. i like them. many took days to sort out
and i forgot how i did them.
so. anyone here have a decent recipe for upgrading the whole thing
all at once, rebooting, and having what i have, only better?
Hi there,
I am currently testing upgrading on Debian/Wheezy (ok, it's not Ubuntu
12.04 but a reasonable relative) so to find an easy and painless way
to upgrade from 3.5.13.2 to R14.0.0. Once I complete testing, I will
upgrade the installation instructions on the wiki and report back to
the ML. Testing is somehow slow due to the limited bandwidth for
package downloading, so you may as well way a little more until I
complete the test.
Based on reports from another user (Mike Bird - thanks Mike!), this
seems to be the easiest way so far (at least in Debian/Wheezy):
apt-get update
apt-get install tde-trinity
apt-get dist-upgrade
Cheers
Michele
I must say: If the user during the previous installation carefully selected
packages to be installed, the proposed procedure causes installation of large
amount of different packages that were previously not installed!
If the user wants to "really upgrade" only what had installed previously, I
recommend the classic upgrade procedure:
apt-get update
aptitude dist-upgrade
I emphasize: For "really upgrade" use aptitude instead of apt-get, to avoid
conflict during the upgrade. Alternatively, you can also use the extra
option --without-recommends to avoid unwanted installation of recommended
packages.
--
Slávek