Am Do, den 29.04.2004 schrieb Arjan van de Ven um 12:34:
> Well, if anaconda can handle the process when it is run from the
CDRom,
> would it be possible to make it do its job from a running system ?
the really hard nut to crack is that from the cdrom, anaconda runs the
*new* kernel, while in a live upgrade by definition you run the *old*
kernel. Debian can do this because they still ship a 2.2 kernel :)
Just a stupid thought, but couldn't that be solved by using a 2.6 kernel
running in user-space?
Overall I too would like to update my system to the newest, by simply
doing an apt-get dist-upgrade (or something similar). But I see that the
work involved in coding that simply isn't worth it. Especially, because
you would still need to reboot anyway.-Of course, if you could get
things to update without rebooting you would have a serious argument
against every other distro and of course winxxxx. But imho that should
be impossible (Changing the kernel in a running system that is.)
-Thomas-