---- [email protected] wrote: > Steve wrote at about 13:06:18 -0400 on Saturday, April 27, 2013: > > It's time for an upgrade. I've been putting this off for a long time but > my motherboard died and has been replaced so now is as good a time as any. > > I'm currently running Fedora 12 for which I have a full backup. > > I'm going to go to CentOS 6.4. > > > > Any "gotyas" to be aware of? > > Any similar experiences anyone would care to share? > > I hoping it will be as simple as install CentOS, setup BackupPC, and > restore my home directories. > > > > Thanks, > > Steve > > One of these days I will be doing the same thing... I am running > Fedora 12 on an ancient P4 system (almost 11 years old)... I got sick > of the every 6 month Fedora update where it would take the first month > or two just to get it all stable... so I plan to switch to the latest > Centos. > > I would love to hear about your experiences -- good, bad, and > gotchas... > I had the same as you - F12 on a P4 system. F13 increased the required boot partition size and I didn't feel like reinstalling at the time. Then Fedora went off the rails with their GNOME3 experiment which put me off completely. Finally though, the caps gave ot on my motherboard so I bought a new motherboard, processor and memory. I also had to get a new optical drive since the new motherboard had no IDE interface.
Anyhow the installation of CentOS 6.4 went very smoothly. The only issue is that the networking doesn't start automatically. I have to press a button in the top menu bar. I'll look into that later. I am having some issues setting up backuppc. First of all, backuppc is not in the standard Centos repoitories. I found a web page (don't have the URL at the moment) that described installing backupc on Centos 6.3 and got it installed. I set up apache from my old notes but right now I can't get my browser to go to backuppc admin page. It's not authenticating even though I know I have the user and password correct. I didn't get to spend too much time on it so I'm not panicing yet. Steve. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Try New Relic Now & We'll Send You this Cool Shirt New Relic is the only SaaS-based application performance monitoring service that delivers powerful full stack analytics. Optimize and monitor your browser, app, & servers with just a few lines of code. Try New Relic and get this awesome Nerd Life shirt! http://p.sf.net/sfu/newrelic_d2d_apr _______________________________________________ BackupPC-users mailing list [email protected] List: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki: http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/
