top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

Why to upgrade Fedora when a new version is released?

+1 vote
401 views

Why should one upgrade Fedora whenever a new version is released? What are the main reasons?

posted Jul 12, 2013 by anonymous

Share this question
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button

2 Answers

+1 vote

Assuming you're on a version that still gets support, patches, and updates:

  1. If you've chosen Fedora, it's because you like living near the edge. Face it, it's fun. Things break, things get fixed, hurdles are jumped. It shows you are superior to people who use Windows or OS/X, even if you're the only one who appreciates that. If you don't like the Fedora life but like the Red Hat environment, switch to CentOS. Stable, strong, boring. :-)

  2. Skipping versions (e.g., using only odd-number versions) complicates the upgrade processes. It will *probably* work, but it's less certain than upgrading with each bump.

answer Jul 12, 2013 by anonymous
+1 vote

Today we have an upgrade tool that makes the upgrade process almost seamless. That is, as long as you upgrade every time. Miss a version, and you're in trouble. Miss two or three versions, and any major change will force you to do a complete, wipe-your-drive re-installation.

As to why it matters: software is always subject to updates. Some of this is required for security reasons. And any version of an operating system must come to the end of its life, or else you have no time to
invent anything new.

answer Jul 12, 2013 by anonymous
Similar Questions
0 votes

Where are all the kernel updates released to-date, along with source rpms, archived for Fedora?

+3 votes

So, I read the blurb that strongly advises against doing an iso-based fedup, and strongly encouraging a network-based fedup in order to yank in all the updates at once.

I have a bunch of machines to upgrade to both the workstation and server products. Having each one download everything it needs, is going to get real old.

In the past I simply rsync-ed the installation image. I have plenty of disk space on the LAN. Then I just fedup-ed everything from my rsynced image. This was almost the most efficient way to get everything updated.

Is there a single repository that I can keep rsync-ing regularly, and use it to upgrade my machines “ to both workstation and server products“ over a period of time?

+3 votes

I upgraded to fedora 20 from fedora 19 using fedup. Everything went well except for some weird issues with Thunderbird. The latter is now giving me a pile of weird permission errors and disk space errors. There is 250GB free space, so I know that is not the problem. Obviously this has something to do with the permissions on the thunderbird folder, but I do not have the knowledge to rectify the problem.

Please suggest how to proceed?

...