when you upgrade an OS, do you clean install or upgrade?

clean install: you make a backup, nuke the computer, install a fresh upgraded copy of the distro you want from a live usb, copy your data again to the computer.

upgrade: you wait ‘till the distro’ developers release an upgrade you can directly install from your soon to be old distro, you use a command like sudo do-release-upgrade

and why do you upgrade like that?

Cysioland,
@Cysioland@lemmygrad.ml avatar

Upgrade. Don’t wanna mess with restoring/preserving data and configs.

possiblylinux127,

It depends. For Fedora I just do a in place upgrade. However once in a blue moon I do a reinstall.

LeFantome,

I upgrade in place more than once a week ( rolling release ).

Sam_Bass,

Xp to 7 was upgrade. 7 to 10 was clean

laurelraven,

11 to Mint 21.2 was, obviously, clean

Sam_Bass, (edited )

The few times i tried linux i used ubuntu. And each time a newer iteration was published a complete wipe and format was done for the new one

D61,

make a backup

Pffftt… coward.

/s

pearsaltchocolatebar,

It’s not a clean install if you’re backing shit up!

Also, I just map my home directories to my NAS so I don’t have to worry about backups.

shirro,

I usually roll on desktop/laptop and upgrade on headless. Just seems most practical.

Zucca,

https://sopuli.xyz/pictrs/image/9d76b984-7539-47d2-9d83-3fc0f98c2b39.webp

Rolling with Gentoo here. Reinstall is not performed even when complete hardware upgrade has been done.

Nibodhika,

Well, I also use a rolling release distro, my disk died last week so I had to reinstall, so technically FULL hardware update might require a reinstall (safer than copying the root folder from one disk to another since the old one was bad), but yeah, before that I’ve replaced almost every piece of that laptop without a reinstall, even switched from Nvidia to AMD.

Zucca,

Well, yeah. Hard drive failure can force a reinstall. And with laptops there isn’t usually another place for a hard drive, from where to restore the system.

Nibodhika,

Brainfart, I said laptop meant desktop, obviously didn’t change the GPU on a laptop.

princessnorah,
@princessnorah@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Framework has entered the chat

pop,

Wait for a bugfix release after a major release. Then upgrade.

need moar bugs fixed, just to be safe

shrugal,

Fedora, I usually wait 1-2 weeks for the last bugs to be found+fixed and extensions to catch up, and then just upgrade in-place. Haven’t had a major upgrade problem for years now, it’s mostly as smooth as any other offline update. And I don’t feel like I have to reinstall the OS every few years on Linux either.

avidamoeba,
@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca avatar

Upgrade. Have been upgrading my main machine since 2014.

axb,
@axb@lemmy.ml avatar

I almost always prefer clean installation when possible, while making sure to backup important content from highly accessed folders like Desktop, Downloads and Documents (on Windows), for example.

caseyweederman,

It just feels nice! Nice and fresh.

ik5pvx,

Clean install on a new computer. Then upgrades until the computer gets retired. Debian at home, Ubuntu server at work.

I like playing with distros and other OSes in VMs, if the thing doesn’t have a well defined upgrade procedure it gets ditched pretty soon.

Dariusmiles2123,

I upgrade Fedora from one version to another as doing a clean install would be a lot of work. Maybe I’m just too much of a rookie, but I don’t see the advantages of a clean install.

Even if I installed Fedora on a new computer, I’d just use my clonezilla backup if possible. But I haven’t tried it so I don’t know if this would work.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Wait for the distro to officially release an upgrade path. Only do a fresh install if it doesn’t work.

On Windows however whenever I would get a new pc in which I was prepping for staff(I worked in IT) the first thing I’d do after unboxing it is a wipe of the factory Windows install and do a clean install with the latest ISO from Microsoft.

No bloatware, network managers, anti virus etc nonsense. We had all of our own stuff for that which applied via Group Policy anyway.

lengau,

I’ve got a desktop that got a dirty install of KDE Neon when the repositories first got put up (before there were isos). Been in-place upgrading it ever since.

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