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</style></head><body style="">I try to keep all of my machines current with package updates (dist-upgrade), but am more hesitant to upgrade to newer versions. In fact, I rarely actually upgrade the release version, instead opting for a fresh install on a new machine, migrating the data, testing, then turning off the old one. I'm not a big fan of doing a release upgrade ... too many things change and well it just doesn't feel "clean."<br><br>Also, by keeping all of my servers on LTS releases (currently 10.04), the number of package updates is minimized.<br><br>I have some servers still running 8.04 simply because it works and I don't need any new features, etc.<br><div></div><br><br><div class="signature" style="margin-bottom:11px;"></div><hr style="border:0;height:1px;color:#999;background-color:#999;width:100%;margin:0 0 9px 0;padding:0;"><b>From</b>: Jeremy Bicha <jbicha@ubuntu.com><br><b>Cc</b>: Edubuntu Users Group <edubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com><br><b>Sent</b>: Thursday, October 27, 2011 at 9:01 pm<br><b>Subject</b>: Re: To Update or Not?<br><br>On 27 October 2011 20:43, Joseph Bishay <joseph.bishay@gmail.com> wrote:
<br>> So I came across this article and wondered if it applied to Edubuntu:
<br>>
<br>> http://www.zdnet.com/blog/diy-it/why-ive-finally-had-it-with-my-linux-server-and-im-moving-back-to-windows/245
<br>>
<br>> The gist of the rant is that Linux servers are rather unstable because
<br>> any upgrade can kill the server, and therefore you should NOT be
<br>> updating your machine once it's running perfectly.
<br>>
<br>> I get a notice about different packages having available upgrades on
<br>> our production LTSP server at least once a week and for the most part
<br>> I always do so -- is this going to suddenly result in a
<br>> similiarly-described situation? Should I turn off all updates?
<br>
<br>You should probably read the counterpoint by the ZDNet Linux editor:
<br>http://www.zdnet.com/blog/open-source/linux-servers-work-just-fine/9793
<br>
<br>Yes, if you don't know what you're doing, you can break your system
<br>pretty badly. And worse, if you don't know how to recover or don't
<br>have good backups, you can easily get yourself in a world of trouble.
<br>Updates to stable releases do get a week of testing before being
<br>pushed from -proposed to -updates. But you definitely should test full
<br>upgrades (like from 11.04 to 11.10) before deploying as hardware
<br>support unfortunately varies from release to release.
<br>
<br>I strongly recommend that you not disable security updates and I
<br>recommend reading the changelog entries (if using Update Manager,
<br>click Description of Update). Non-security updates are supposed to fix
<br>bugs so they should be more beneficial than harmful but I suppose it
<br>depends on how risk-averse you are.
<br>
<br>Jeremy Bicha
<br>
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