Hi I’m relatively new to Linux. There’s talk about updating, say from Fedora 37 to 38.
Is this something that needs to happen manually? If I solely update through the updater software, I’m not getting the whole “38”?
I understand that, of course, I won’t see updates on the installer or I won’t use a new supported partition type unless I install it again.
Apart from that, what’s missing? Some software won’t be updated? The kernel?
Thank you all!
Yes, sort of. It needs to be initiated manually, but you should get an update notification, and the actual upgrade itself is automatic once you initiate it. Clicking on the notification will take you to the Software app > Updates section, from where you can do the upgrade.
No, you will get the whole 38 (what makes you think you won’t?). Everything will get updated. The key thing to remember is to update all other applications/kernel etc and restart your system first, before you do the actual OS upgrade. This is documented here: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/quick-docs/upgrading-fedora-new-release/#_upgrading_to_the_next_fedora_workstation_release
Some folks recommend disabling third-party repos before you do the actual upgrade, like copr, RPMFusion etc, but personally I haven’t had any issues leaving them enabled - as long as you install all applicable updates and reboot prior to the upgrade, you should be fine.
If you want more control over the process though, you can always upgrade manually using
dnf
. Although there’s not much benefit doing to this via the commandline (except for power users/admins who need the control/visibility), it’s worth reading the post-upgrade tasks section to run some cleanup tasks (not a 100% sure if the GUI updater tool does this).This is everything I was looking for, thank you so much!
I’m not sure, I think the emphasis on news about distro update around the web. It makes me confused as to what’s so important about that, but I now understand perfectly. I thought it worked a bit more like a rolling distro and I now understand what a rolling distro is :)