On 12/5/2020 7:32 PM, Jerry Mellon wrote:
Thanks John.
I’m not brave enough to try that yet. I will just backup. Do I need to re
format or will the install take care of that?
No, the Debian installer (d-i) will per default take care of that for you.
Here's what I would suggest:
- Backup what
Darac wrote:
>On 04/12/2020 11:25, Steve McIntyre wrote:
>> We finally have a cross-grading option in Debian that takes away a lot
>> of the pain:
>>
>> https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/debian-crossgrader
>>
>> but it's definitely not something I'd recommend for a novice yet...
>
>Wow that's a real
> Wow that's a really nice tool. I am somewhat boggling, though, at the
> idea in the Instructions[1] of crossgrading from arm64 to amd64. What
> manner of machine can interpret both of those instruction sets?!
While the idea of cross-grading was mostly developed in the context of
going from i386
Hello,
On Fri, Dec 04, 2020 at 04:05:18PM +, Darac Marjal wrote:
> I am somewhat boggling, though, at the idea in the Instructions[1]
> of crossgrading from arm64 to amd64. What manner of machine can
> interpret both of those instruction sets?!
A virtual machine, hence qemu! :)
Cheers,
Andy
> A word of warning for anyone else who wishes to try this: while running
> an amd64 kernel on an i386 architecture installation is supported by
> Debian, it may not be supported by whatever third-party applications
> you're running. Some applications use the kernel's reported architecture
> to de
On Fri, Dec 04, 2020 at 10:25:49AM -0500, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> FWIW, I recently needed to run a amd64 binary on my i386 system.
> Rather than make a full install I just added the few needed amd64 packages.
>
> I.e. something like
>
> dpkg --add-architecture amd64
> apt update
> apt
On 04/12/2020 11:25, Steve McIntyre wrote:
> Andrei wrote:
>> -=-=-=-=-=-
>>
>> On Jo, 03 dec 20, 20:17:25, John Hasler wrote:
>>> Jerry Mellon wrote:
I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
> I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
> release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
> version for intel on the system.
> Do I have to backup the data I have in my $HOME directory to load after
> loading the 64bit version or can I in someway just
On Thu, Dec 03, 2020 at 07:13:11PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:
On 12/3/20 2:39 PM, Jerry Mellon wrote:
Hi,
I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
version for intel on the system.
Why?
Because th
Andrei wrote:
>-=-=-=-=-=-
>
>On Jo, 03 dec 20, 20:17:25, John Hasler wrote:
>> Jerry Mellon wrote:
>> > I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
>> > release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
>> > version for intel on the system.
>>
>> > Do I have
On Jo, 03 dec 20, 20:17:25, John Hasler wrote:
> Jerry Mellon wrote:
> > I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
> > release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
> > version for intel on the system.
>
> > Do I have to backup the data I have in my $HO
On Jo, 03 dec 20, 19:13:11, David Christensen wrote:
> On 12/3/20 2:39 PM, Jerry Mellon wrote:
> > Hi,
> > I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
> > release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
> > version for intel on the system.
>
> Why?
Becaus
On 12/3/2020 11:39 PM, Jerry Mellon wrote:
Hi,
I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
version for intel on the system.
Do I have to backup the data I have in my $HOME directory to load after
loading the
On 12/3/20 2:39 PM, Jerry Mellon wrote:
Hi,
I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
version for intel on the system.
Why?
Do I have to backup the data I have in my $HOME directory
You should backup
Jerry Mellon wrote:
> I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
> release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
> version for intel on the system.
> Do I have to backup the data I have in my $HOME directory to load after
> loading the 64bit version...
On Fri, 4 Dec 2020 at 09:39, Jerry Mellon wrote:
> Hi,
> I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
> release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
> version for intel on the system.
> Do I have to backup the data I have in my $HOME directory to load a
Hello,
install 64bit over 32 is a bit tricky.
If you have a separate /home partion you do not need to backup your data
but it is always recommented.
When you have a backup of your data I would recomment to use LVM and
create lv's not to large, they can grow online.
LVM is a more flexeble way to
Hi,
I am new to linux and made the mistake of loading the i386 Debian
release 10 onto my 64bit intel system. I now want to put the 64bit
version for intel on the system.
Do I have to backup the data I have in my $HOME directory to load after
loading the 64bit version or can I in someway just load
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