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Rich West wrote:
<blockquote cite="mid47F91516.9060104@wesmo.com" type="cite">
<pre wrap=""><a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:kanetse@gmail.com">kanetse@gmail.com</a> wrote:
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<pre wrap="">Since the ivtv driver still hasn't been fixed for capturing closed
captions with a PVR-250, I'm thinking of going back to an older kernel
where CC capture was still working properly. To settle on this, I
have chosen CentOS 5.1.
Is it possible for me to insert the CentOS DVD and just do an upgrade
installaion, or will I have to reformat my whole system to get CentOS
on there?
Anyone have experience with this?
Thanks!
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<pre wrap=""><!---->
I've had some experience moving from one arch to another (painful, but
very successful) and from one distro to another, and I have to tell you,
you will cause yourself a lot of headaches with attempting to "upgrade"
to CentOS 5.1 from Fedora 8. I have nothing against CentOS, but
remember that it is based upon RedHat Enterprise Linux 5.1 (highly
stable), which is typically behind the Fedora distro (more bleeding edge
= less stability) with regard to the versions of packages and such.
Effectively, you would be 'downgrading', which might cause all sorts of
headaches.
However, with that said, you would probably get the best feel for the
whole process if you downloaded a free copy of VMWare server, created
yourself a VM, copied your myth server install from your current server
to the VM, and went through the upgrade within the VM to see how far you
got. Weigh that experience against performing a clean CentOS install +
atrpms packages + mythtv configuration (back up the database and import
it to the new install). My bet is that you'll get things back up and
running faster by performing a clean install.
If you have it, I'd also recommend performing the clean install on
another disk so you can back out of the whole thing just by swapping
hard drives in the event that it doesn't go as well as you had hoped.
-Rich
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I always start with a fresh install when I upgrade, I usually make an
image of my existing root partition first and copy it to my video
partition. <br>
that way I don't have to worry about forgetting to back up any config
files or scripts. After, I can mount it as a loop device and copy them
over. <br>
<br>
- Richard<br>
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