I finally took the plunge and upgraded a non-critical server (just runs my domain :) to woody the other day. After having read this list for several months, I was prepared for what I thought could be a challenge. It wasn't, really, but I do have a bit of feedback, and a couple of questions.
First of all, after updating sources.list, I used dselect for the main part of the upgrade. Then I did various bits of cleanup with apt-get. I was upgrading over an ssh connection, not on the console. * When installing the new libc6, I was asked if I wished to restart various inet servers, but debconf(?) wouldn't accept keyboard input. I had to ^Z to a shell, kill dselect, and restart it. Then it was fine. * dselect had only installed perl-base 5.6, no perl, perl-modules, or perl-doc. That caused various things not to work until I figured out what was going on. * Apache and its associated packages were removed. When dselect was finished, I had no webserver. Easily fixed, but why did that happen? * sendmail seemed to be ignored. I was still running 8.9.3 from potato after the upgrade. When I used apt-get to upgrade it, the new sendmail package had a logcheck file that conflicted with one supplied by logcheck itself. I had to resort to dpkg -i --force-overwrite. Was there a better way to handle that? On the whole, though, things went well. I'm quite happy. I've thought that Debian rocked ever since I started using it, and I think so now more than ever. I'd like to thank the list for giving me such a good background into the ins and outs of debian (particularly dpkg and company). I do plan to upgrade at least one more potato server to woody in the near future. Does anyone have any insight into the above glitches that might help smooth out future upgrades? Thanks, Aaron -- Aaron Hall : Mac OS X: Because making Unix user-friendly was [EMAIL PROTECTED] : easier than debugging Windows. (Go Apple!) Macintosh/UNIX Weenie, Network Flack, and...eh, whatever.