On Sun, 2025-08-24 at 12:39 +0930, Tim via users wrote:
> On Fri, 2025-08-22 at 11:54 +0100, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> > The number one rule of backups: if it's not automated then it's a
> > problem, not a solution. I use Borg (via Borgmatic) in a nightly script
> > to backup what I care about.
> > 
> > I've never lost data in this setup, but of course YMMV. Nothing would
> > ever be touched during a system update, and of course I have my /home
> > on a different drive from /root.
> 
> 
> If I had cash to spare, I bought a spare hard drive.  It was always
> handy to have one ready.  And you'd occasionally acquire one from a
> friend who dumped their ewaste on you, because "you can probably make
> some use of some of the parts."  Quite often their system was only
> messed up by Windows, the hardware was fine.  Though mostly the only
> parts worth saving where the case screws.
> 
> And I tended to do system updates (e.g. move from Fedora 33 to 34) by
> unplugging the old drive, installing a new system onto a spare drive. 
> Getting it working, experimented around with it in a safe environment
> where no file was important.  Reinstall if I fouled it up, though I
> think I only did that once in the Windows days.  Then I'd plug the old
> drive in, and import the old data.  Unplug the old drive, and have it
> on the shelf as the next spare.
> 
> That was my simple and safe way to upgrade.

I just use the recommended dist-upgrade option in dnf. It has never
failed me. I do of course have backups Just In Case. That's what
they're for.

poc
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