Caldera OpenLinux 2.4 vs Redhat

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Author: Robert N. Eaton
Date:  
Subject: Caldera OpenLinux 2.4 vs Redhat
Victor Odhner wrote:

> So, what you're saying here is that there's no non-destructive way
> to upgrade a new distribution?
>
> Since nobody answered my troll a couple of weeks ago about relative
> merits of various distributions, I downloaded a new RH system and am
> preparing to overwrite my two-year-old SUSE setup.
>
> I TGZ'd my home directory and a few other things of interest and
> saved 'em to my Win98 partition, figuring I don't have anything else
> to hold onto anyway.
>
> But don't these Linux distros have any sort of an 'upgrade' and/or
> 'competitive upgrade' option? I've heard advice to avoid Microsoft
> upgrades when possible due to accumulations of junk in the registry.
> But I'd think one could build a Linux installer a little smarter,
> since Linux apps aren't so mystically entwined with the system.
>
> I am having second thoughts about RH with the recent raves about
> Caldera. I have a plug'n'play 10/100 network card (D-Link installed
> by Cox@Home), Creative SoundBlaster 16, and Creative ModemBlaster
> V90 modem. If there's a distro that gives better odds for a PnP
> setup, I could be sold on it. I notice Yggdrasil (sp?) also boasts
> about strong PnP performance.
>
> Vic
>
> On Wed, 12 Apr 2000, Kevin Buettner wrote:
>
> > Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 09:44:19 -0700
> > From: Kevin Buettner <>
> > Reply-To:
> > To:
> > Subject: Re: Caldera OpenLinux 2.4 vs Redhat
> >
> > On Apr 12, 9:47am, Charles Lubin wrote:
> >
> > > I would like to install Caldera 2.4 over RH, my question is; Can I do just
> > > that, install Caldera over RH, or do I need to remove RH before installing
> > > the new OS, and should that be the case how do I remove RH?
> >
> > There's no need to remove the current OS. When you do your new install,
> > just have it make a new file system on the partitions that you want
> > to overwrite. (Remaking the filesystem will effectively erase the old
> > OS.)
> >
> > Kevin
> >
> > --
> > Kevin Buettner
> > ,
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Plug-discuss mailing list -
> > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss
> >
>
> _______________________________________________
> Plug-discuss mailing list -
> http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss


I don't know if it works only with Caldera, but Caldera eDesktop 2.4 installed
itself alongside
Caldera Open Linux 2.3, on an unused partition. If I'm quick at boot time, I
can select
either version of Caldera or Win95. If I dont select within 10 seconds it
defaults to Caldera
eDesktop 2.4. This is the Caldera boot screen, not Boot Magic.

Bob Eaton




From Cyndi" < Fri Apr 14 19:13:56 2000
From: Cyndi" < (Cyndi)
Date: Fri, 14 Apr 2000 12:13:56 -0700
Subject: optimum partitioning / file directory setup .
References: <>
Message-ID: <000a01bfa645$94f4f920$4d19fad1@fredlogo>

The hardware is assembled for my Linux crash box. Now I just have to
reconfigure the Linux installation. Being a relatively inexperienced
Newbie, I'm unfamiliar with how and where to put my file/directories and
partitions.

I have a 1.2megbyte harddrive and an older 730 Mb harddrive to use for the
linux OS. The 1.2mb drive is the fastest and newest of the two drives. I
will be installing SuSE Linux 6.2 distribution and will host my website on
this box using a DSL connection.

How much room in each partition do I need for Apache, Samba ,etc?

Everything I've read says to put /usr , /var, /opt in different partitions.
How should I partition these harddrives and what files /directories
placements would optimize my linux install on these disks?

Thanks
FRED