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Re: Upgrade issue with Debian 9 -> 10



On 7/5/22 04:36, Miroslav Skoric wrote:
On 7/3/22 7:51 PM, David Christensen wrote:
On 7/3/22 02:31, Miroslav Skoric wrote:

Yesterday I attempted to upgrade Compaq Presario CQ56 laptop to buster. I followed instructions in 'Chapter 4. Upgrades from Debian 9 (stretch)', so all went well with a minimal upgrade (apt-get upgrade). When it finished, I went to the main part of the upgrade (apt full-upgrade). It ran well until some 40-45% and then started complaining about lack of disk space.

The KISS approach is to check in your system configuration files to a version control system, back up your data, take an image of the OS drive, remove the OS drive, insert a blank OS drive, do a fresh install, check out the old system configuration files to a side directory, configure the new OS instance, restore your data, and validate everything.

Seems as a drastic solution :-)
Will try to cure this one, and if things go wrong I can always do a fresh install.


For me, Debian is tool that I *use* for both personal and professional work. I have no need or desire to learn the internals of Debian beyond how to configure and operate the services and applications I need. Other people depend upon myself and my systems. Unplanned downtime and data loss are unacceptable. My goal is professional system administration of all of the networks and systems I maintain.


When I broke my systems years ago (Linux and otherwise), I used to try and "find the needle in the haystack". This took an unpredictable amount of time with unpredictable results. I had little confidence in the process or in the outcome. So, I choose to invest my learning in configuration management, disaster preparedness, and development/ operations. I bought books, courses, additional computers, spare parts, hardware and software tools, etc.. I wrote shell and Perl scripts to facilitate system administration chores, including those I outlined above. This has proven to be a much better approach. The last time I broke my daily driver, it was fully operational again within a few hours.


Put another way, my computers were once pets; now they are cattle:

    https://html.duckduckgo.com/html?q=cattle%20vs.%20pets


David


p.s.  Do a fresh install of Debian 11.


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