Age makes you more cautious.
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Age makes you more cautious. I used to carry Debian CD's with me & do all my upgrades while in flight without electricity or Internet — just to test myself I could hack my way out of a screwed up GRUB or problematic #Linux build.
I'm taking my spouse's laptop all the way from #Debian buster to trixie this morning (going through bullseye to bookworm first), & I'm actually nervous. I *think* it's just because it's my spouse's machine.
Ironic thing is upgrades are so much safer these days.
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Age makes you more cautious. I used to carry Debian CD's with me & do all my upgrades while in flight without electricity or Internet — just to test myself I could hack my way out of a screwed up GRUB or problematic #Linux build.
I'm taking my spouse's laptop all the way from #Debian buster to trixie this morning (going through bullseye to bookworm first), & I'm actually nervous. I *think* it's just because it's my spouse's machine.
Ironic thing is upgrades are so much safer these days.
@bkuhn Glad to see that you have updated your #Debian system. Btw, I see you first upgraded to Bookworm from Bullseye. Bullseye (2021) already reached EOL more than a year ago. Although it is still supported by Extended-LTS team as "oldoldstable".
Are you dealing with large project team and hence couldn't update in past two years. As Debian says it is fine to continue oldoldstable in such cases.
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@bkuhn Glad to see that you have updated your #Debian system. Btw, I see you first upgraded to Bookworm from Bullseye. Bullseye (2021) already reached EOL more than a year ago. Although it is still supported by Extended-LTS team as "oldoldstable".
Are you dealing with large project team and hence couldn't update in past two years. As Debian says it is fine to continue oldoldstable in such cases.
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@bkuhn @nik @Pandya afaik no, Debian upgrade processes are robust, but only if you don't skip upgrades: things that are used to migrate stuff forwards aren't always available in more recent versions of the packages.
and to be sure, I'd also take care to reboot between each step, just to be sure that the most recent version of systemd or similar stuff is compatible with the kernel that is running when it gets installed.