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eWEEK Labs has been testing Fedora 10, the latest version of the community-supported Linux-based operating system that serves as a technology proving ground for future Red Hat software products. Here is a rundown on upgrading from Fedora 9 to the current version using the distribution's handy preupgrade tool.
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- eWEEK Labs Walk-Through: Upgrading to Fedora 10
by eWEEK Labs - In-Place Upgrades
Fedora picked up the capacity for conducting in-place upgrades (without the hit-or-miss results of previous in-place upgrade workarounds) during the Fedora 9 release. The 9-to-10 upgrade marked our first exposure to the tool. - Pick Your Poison
The preupgrade tool, which we installed by typing "yum install preupgrade" into a terminal, offered us the option of moving to Version 10 or to Red Hat's rolling development release, Rawhide. - Upgrade Your System
The upgrade tool began by fetching a set of new packages from Fedora's online software repositories. - Reboot Now
With the needed packages downloaded, we were ready to reboot and continue the upgrade process. - Limbo Mode
Unlike the Ubuntu in-place upgrade process, Fedora's upgrader does most of its installation work in a sort of system-limbo mode. - Installing Upgrades
Our basic Fedora 9 installation required 792 package updates to become Fedora 10. - Welcome to Fedora 10
With our package updates behind us, we had ourselves a shiny new Fedora 10 installationwith a giant raft of additional updates to install. We'd like to see the system roll this step into the initial upgrade process. - PackageKit and PolicyKit
The best thing about PackageKit, at this point, is its integration with the PolicyKit permissions management framework that ships with Fedora 10.
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