eschvoca
November 12th, 2008, 05:00 AM
Hi,
I want to install Ubuntu 8.10 in a way that I can revert back to my old installation without using a lot of disk space. Currently I use 3 partitions:
/sda1 -> / # root1 (previous Ubuntu version)
/sda2 -> /mnt/sda2 # root2 (next Ubuntu version = 8.10)
/sda3 -> /home # home
Usually when I upgrade I re-use my old home directory and do a fresh install into the other root. If the install works out poorly I switch back to the old root and most things are good except that my home directory has been upgraded to the newer Ubuntu and when I go back to the older version I may run into problems. (And yes I do a backup before the process to help me downgrade it back but the process is not optimal.)
So my new hope is to use unionfs on /home so I can make my Ubuntu 8.04 read-only and put a unionfs mount on top. I don't know if Ubuntu 8.10 can do this on the install (or how to do it). Also, if the upgrade goes successful I want to make my /home read-write and merge my unionfs layer back into it and then no longer use unionfs.
Does anyone have instructions on how to do this? Is there a better way to achieve the same thing (without using lots of extra disk space for /home?
Thanks,
.e
I want to install Ubuntu 8.10 in a way that I can revert back to my old installation without using a lot of disk space. Currently I use 3 partitions:
/sda1 -> / # root1 (previous Ubuntu version)
/sda2 -> /mnt/sda2 # root2 (next Ubuntu version = 8.10)
/sda3 -> /home # home
Usually when I upgrade I re-use my old home directory and do a fresh install into the other root. If the install works out poorly I switch back to the old root and most things are good except that my home directory has been upgraded to the newer Ubuntu and when I go back to the older version I may run into problems. (And yes I do a backup before the process to help me downgrade it back but the process is not optimal.)
So my new hope is to use unionfs on /home so I can make my Ubuntu 8.04 read-only and put a unionfs mount on top. I don't know if Ubuntu 8.10 can do this on the install (or how to do it). Also, if the upgrade goes successful I want to make my /home read-write and merge my unionfs layer back into it and then no longer use unionfs.
Does anyone have instructions on how to do this? Is there a better way to achieve the same thing (without using lots of extra disk space for /home?
Thanks,
.e