Date: Thu, 20 May 2010 12:40:23 -0400 From: Mehmet Erol Sanliturk <m.e.sanliturk@gmail.com> To: Roger Vetterberg <roger@vetterberg.com> Cc: Dan Naumov <dan.naumov@gmail.com>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: How long do you go without upgrading FreeBSD to a newer release? Message-ID: <AANLkTintq3A5VNetCQq-d3RILUwoo9uGMfrVZkVGPoMf@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <4BF54704.20909@vetterberg.com> References: <AANLkTilslPj7GtFD_tbliyvm7_18qeJOYqDMEca_70fa@mail.gmail.com> <4BF54704.20909@vetterberg.com>
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On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 10:28 AM, Roger Vetterberg <roger@vetterberg.com>wrote: > On 2010-05-16 17:42, Dan Naumov wrote: > >> Hello folks >> >> [snip] > >> >> Do you liva by the "If it's not broken, don't fix it" mantra or do you >> religiously keep your OS installations up to date? >> >> >> - Sincerely, >> Dan Naumov >> > > Depends on the installation requirements. > > I know of two 2.2.8 installations on PII hardware still running like > champs, not a glitch in god knows how many years of 24/7 operation. None of > them are exposed externally so there are no security considerations. The > customers that runs them are still more then happy with their servers so I'm > actually a bit curious to see how long they will keep them running. > > I have a few other servers that are highly exposed. My mantra there is to > run _verified_ software. Not necessarily the latest, but software that has > no known bugs and has been well tested. > To religiously update everytime there is a new version and blame it on > security is stupid. How do you know that a brand new version of a software > does not contain a big gaping security hole unless it has been tested in the > wild yet? > > -- > > R > More than two years I am studying FreeBSD and some Linux distributions , mostly I am using Mandriva Linux ( attaching USB sticks mounts them automatically , and burning CD/DVD is very easy . No one of them require mount . ) . After very desperate experiences ( loss of collection of large amounts of downloaded documents and other files after upgrading the operating system either by automatic update , or approved update of installed components ) I have learned that upgrading an actively used operating system ( including Windows ) is plainly wrong . Now I am NOT upgrading any more any one ( I have turned Off automatic updates , and I am ignoring notices about availability upgrades ) . The best policy seems to be one of the following : (i) install onto a new computer , test it , and if it is working very well transfer data onto new system , and keep old system for a new release/update cycle . This step is most suitable for production systems exposed to outer world . (ii) attach a new hard disk to the computer , copy all of the present files to the new system , update it , test it , if it is successful , use previous hard disk for a new release/update cycle , (iii) back-up all of the data , and try update . Testing suitability may take a long time . In steps (ii) and (iii) , do not load new data during tests , because at the end , all of them may be destroyed . ( No one of the above steps are suitable for a proprietary , activation based operating system because they are not allowing so many computer and/or hard disk changes . ) Therefore , the problem is a "system analysis and design" process . Thank you very much . Mehmet Erol Sanliturk
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