I guess doing all partial backups is fine from CD boot. As you mention,
what I occasionally do is a full backup, and then take the floppy over
to windows, copy the .lrps to the old CD image, and burn a new CD. More
reliable boot, if configuration is stable.

Yes, b shorwall avoids the hassle of "which number" a package is.
Thx,
Rick

-----Original Message-----
From: Charles Steinkuehler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 27, 2004 2:34 PM
To: Tibbs, Richard
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [leaf-user] Upgrading packages (was Shorewall 1.4 -> 2.0.9)

Tibbs, Richard wrote:

> Thanks, Charles.. This worked like a charm.
> I wondered what the partial backup was for.
> 
> Also, I have in-line below what I did -- with a few extra things like
> umount and replace the XFER with the NEW FW disk. And a question
whether
> the second tar should be -xzvf or -xavf, as you wrote it? (looks like
> you hit a instead of z)

Yes, the 'a' was a typo and should have been a 'z'.

As to the instructions, your additions look good.  Note that you can use

package names instead of numbers in the backup menus, which makes 
documentation easier (and is typically easier for me to enter...I can
type 
the max. 8 character package name faster than I can find the backup menu

number with all the packages I load :), ie:

   b shorwall

...instead of:

   b 9

> Also, my configuration is boot Bering 1.2 from CD, with packages
backed
> up to a msdos 1.44 mb floppy.  So, easy to transfer the new
> shorewall-2.0.9.lrp from a windoze box  (for those still enslaved, as
am
> I).
> But the partial backup feature has been preserved since Dachstein.

If you're booting off of CD, you should be doing partial backups to your

floppy, so upgrading is simply a matter of replacing the CD and
re-booting.

If you don't want to burn a new CD, you can use a similar procedure to
what 
was described and do a FULL backup to the configration disk (handy for 
smaller packages, but you'd probably want to burn a new CD for larger 
packages like ssh).  If you do this, just make sure you never do a
partial 
backup, or you'll revert back to the older version on the CD (although
your 
config files will not be lost), so burning a new CD image is the safest
bet.

-- 
Charles Steinkuehler
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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