Hi everybody!
Comparing LTS 22.04.3 and 23.10, I saw that LTS is a little bit behind
most recent software releases. 23.10. is more up-to-date, but they say, support will end in April or so.
To be on the safe side, the installation should then be updated.
So, my question - When doing a "distro-upgrade" or how this is called,
i.e. overwriting an existing OS with the newest version:
Does the installer look which packages are installed and replaces them
with the related ones from the new OS, or is this like a complete re-
install from scratch, and the user has to look which packages to install?
And, yes, I know this should be a newbie question...:-)
Thanks!
Best regards,
Markus
Hi everybody!
Comparing LTS 22.04.3 and 23.10, I saw that LTS is a little bit behind
most recent software releases. 23.10. is more up-to-date, but they say, support will end in April or so.
To be on the safe side, the installation should then be updated.
So, my question - When doing a "distro-upgrade" or how this is called,
i.e. overwriting an existing OS with the newest version:
Does the installer look which packages are installed and replaces them
with the related ones from the new OS, or is this like a complete re-
install from scratch, and the user has to look which packages to install?
And, yes, I know this should be a newbie question...:-)
Thanks!
Best regards,
Markus
Hi everybody!
Comparing LTS 22.04.3 and 23.10, I saw that LTS is a little bit behind
most recent software releases. 23.10. is more up-to-date, but they say, support will end in April or so.
To be on the safe side, the installation should then be updated.
So, my question - When doing a "distro-upgrade" or how this is called,
i.e. overwriting an existing OS with the newest version:
Does the installer look which packages are installed and replaces them
with the related ones from the new OS, or is this like a complete re-
install from scratch, and the user has to look which packages to install?
And, yes, I know this should be a newbie question...:-)
Thanks!
Best regards,
Markus
Comparing LTS 22.04.3 and 23.10, I saw that LTS is a little bit
behind most recent software releases. 23.10. is more up-to-date, but
they say, support will end in April or so.
To be on the safe side, the installation should then be updated.
Hi everybody!
Comparing LTS 22.04.3 and 23.10, I saw that LTS is a little bit behind
most recent software releases. 23.10. is more up-to-date, but they say, support will end in April or so.
To be on the safe side, the installation should then be updated.
So, my question - When doing a "distro-upgrade" or how this is called,
i.e. overwriting an existing OS with the newest version:
Does the installer look which packages are installed and replaces them
with the related ones from the new OS, or is this like a complete re-
install from scratch, and the user has to look which packages to install?
And, yes, I know this should be a newbie question...:-)
Thanks!
Best regards,
Markus
LTS gives you 5 years of support for the software in "main" repo.
For all others, different support lifecycle exists.
Marco Moock <[email protected]> writes:
LTS gives you 5 years of support for the software in "main" repo.
For all others, different support lifecycle exists.
It's actually ten years now, at least on x86-64. I was hoping I could
utilize this on my Raspberry Pi box but it's not available on ARM. at
least so far. There are a few hoops to jump through for this but it's
still free support.
Comparing LTS 22.04.3 and 23.10, I saw that LTS is a little bit behind
most recent software releases. 23.10. is more up-to-date, but they say, support will end in April or so.
To be on the safe side, the installation should then be updated.
So, my question - When doing a "distro-upgrade" or how this is called,
i.e. overwriting an existing OS with the newest version:
Does the installer look which packages are installed and replaces them
with the related ones from the new OS, or is this like a complete re-
install from scratch, and the user has to look which packages to install?
It's actually ten years now, at least on x86-64.
Do note that version numbers don't mean everything -- the Ubuntu
security team will backport any security patches as necessary WITHOUT changing version numbers (as much as possible).
On 11/9/2023 4:48 AM, Anssi Saari wrote:
Marco Moock <[email protected]> writes:
LTS gives you 5 years of support for the software in "main" repo.
For all others, different support lifecycle exists.
It's actually ten years now, at least on x86-64. I was hoping I could
utilize this on my Raspberry Pi box but it's not available on ARM. at
least so far. There are a few hoops to jump through for this but it's
still free support.
That's a Canonical business plan.
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