-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 jdd wrote:
Ulrich Windl wrote:
On 30 Mar 2006 at 10:20, Pascal Bleser wrote:
Ulrich Windl wrote: ...
YaST -> System Update Actually, I never found out what that is supposed to do. It seems you cannot upgrade (e.g. 9.2 -> 9.3) using that. So should it be a kind of YOU using the Sure you can. But you have to remove the 9.2 installation source first, then add the 9.3 installation source, then do system upgrade.
Should be copied to the help text Yast is displaying ;-)
AFAIK system _upgrade_ cannot be done like this, needs a kernel change, so must be done with the install/update procedure
That's what the "system update" option in yast2 is for. It's for that and for nothing else ;) "needs a kernel change"... and your point is ... ? If you upgrade from, say, 10.0 to 10.1, you'll have an upgrade of the kernel package (unless you've installed KOTD ;)). And even if you don't, I think "system upgrade" forces a reinstallation of the kernel package anyway (AFAICT).
always the update/upgrade confusion?
I agree, it would better be called "system upgrade" instead of "system update". "update" implies it is meant for staying on the same SUSE version but updating every package to the latest available version. You can achieve that with yast2's "system update" as well, but that's not what it is meant for, and... it will force the reinstallation of the kernel. Doing it the proper way is a pain in yast2 btw: select categories, go to "zzz", and choose "update all" (or something like that). That's not very intuitive. But maybe it's something most people shouldn't do anyway, also because the SUSE Linux RPMs that are on the HTTP/FTP servers have higher release numbers than the ones on the media (although they're the same packages), so you'll probably end up downloading 1GB of files with 80% just keeping the same effective version/release. Of course, only if you have added a HTTP/FTP repository of SUSE Linux to your list of installation sources ;) Let's hope for a better engine with Zen/libzypp, because frankly, when compared to smart or apt-rpm, YaST2's package management engine is pretty weak. I mean, smart _never_ has to ask how to resolve a conflict, it just does exactly what you tell it to do (but at the expense of using a _lot_ of memory, as it has to have all the necessary repository metadata in memory to be so... smart ;)). cheers - -- -o) Pascal Bleser http://linux01.gwdg.de/~pbleser/ /\\ <pascal.bleser@skynet.be> <guru@unixtech.be> _\_v The more things change, the more they stay insane. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFELNvGr3NMWliFcXcRAkYFAJwMqcph4u3syl8DPrrvVkwnrmNr+QCfeku/ kdH/N8wzJvDeoqk6GR7NiP8= =wWbI -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----