Hello, first post, but long time reader....Right to the meat
I have systems with a really stripped down install of Stretch, no Apache, X11, NFS, snmp, exim4, rpc, and it runs great, no issues on my end. However, plenty of issues with the Cyber security guys, I must update to at least Bullseye or risk banishment from the network. So I have to make the 9 to 10 and 10 to 11 climb.
I know apt upgrade is only supposed to upgrade currently installed packages, but I call bullshit. When I do an update/upgrade from 9 to 10 all sorts of new crap gets installed, stuff that was not previously installed, most of that list from above. I am guessing this is a user error on my part. The other issue is that my 9 version was setup to fast boot, but that goes away when I update to 10. Is this expected? Did I have an ID-10-T moment when performing the upgrade?
My methodology is the tried and true. Make sure my version 9 is totally up to date, perform an apt update, apt upgrade and thats it. Is there some command line parameter I am missing to keep new packages from being installed? Is there some way to maintain fast boot or do I need to rework the image to fast boot again?
Best regards, and thanks in advance for any and all advice / suggestions.
James Kilroy
I have systems with a really stripped down install of Stretch, no Apache, X11, NFS, snmp, exim4, rpc, and it runs great, no issues on my end. However, plenty of issues with the Cyber security guys, I must update to at least Bullseye or risk banishment from the network. So I have to make the 9 to 10 and 10 to 11 climb.
I know apt upgrade is only supposed to upgrade currently installed packages, but I call bullshit. When I do an update/upgrade from 9 to 10 all sorts of new crap gets installed, stuff that was not previously installed, most of that list from above. I am guessing this is a user error on my part. The other issue is that my 9 version was setup to fast boot, but that goes away when I update to 10. Is this expected? Did I have an ID-10-T moment when performing the upgrade?
My methodology is the tried and true. Make sure my version 9 is totally up to date, perform an apt update, apt upgrade and thats it. Is there some command line parameter I am missing to keep new packages from being installed? Is there some way to maintain fast boot or do I need to rework the image to fast boot again?
Best regards, and thanks in advance for any and all advice / suggestions.
James Kilroy
Statistics: Posted by jt_kilroy — 2024-07-11 14:54 — Replies 0 — Views 3