Agree here, cloning disks on linux haven't worked for me in 20 years,
particularly doing anything like raid, encryption, or lvm. Start over and
just get a base os working.
OS is fairly irrelevant outside of sysctl's and services loading from etc,
but meshing between major revisions or distributions here is problematic at
best. Clean build is best.
I've imported my homedir's lock stock and barrel across versions and
distributions, to some varying success over the years, but I always run
into weirdness that leads me to largely blow out my home directory in doing
so too. If I nuke my system to go to another, I largely manually rebuild
it each time. I also try to re-document anything new, as invariably I'm
doing something with new hardware, mobo, secure-boot, and just general
distro weirdness, so it's often worthwhile to do so for next time, or at
least some good start to remembering what I did to make something work.
Again, clean is best. Chrome has profile imports, most messaging means
too, rest I'm not adverse to rebuilding from logins to things I need. I
get weird issues across even google profile imports, but it's much harder
to nuke that and start over, sadly enough.
Ubuntu hasn't upgraded cleanly for me between any revision since 10.04, so
I just presume I'm rebuilding it during an upgrade one way or another, and
often end up doing some major mods due to ubuntu blowing up an upgrade
horribly. I tend to now look at it as an opportunity for improvement
procedurally, but manual rebuilds afford me some "do-overs" I do not
discourage...
Why I run Arch now with rolling upgrades - I've not had to "start over" in
years now, even with major kernel, graphics, and DE changes. Ubuntu on my
XPS has been a general disaster since upgrading from 16.04 on it which
worked mostly, then going 18.04, even upgrading to 18.10 it's still a
basketcase. Wayland replacement seems mostly the root cause. Feels like
when they shat Unity upon the public randomly.
My goal is to get arch working on the xps too. So far, I haven't had such
luck sadly, so still stuck with ubuntu for it at least for now.
-mb
On Mon, Feb 25, 2019 at 9:30 AM Andrew McRobb <
andrewmcrobb@gmail.com>
wrote:
> IHMO, you are better off doing a fresh install to save yourself the
> headaches and time. Especially if you have SSD drives. Just 7zip your home
> directory, and use the many ways of transferring files today to the new
> computer. USB, Google Drive, rysnc, netcat, DVD.
>
> On Mon, Feb 25, 2019 at 3:37 PM Bob Elzer <bob.elzer@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> first thing I would try is to clone the disks and stick them in the new
>> computer and see if it boots.
>>
>> it would help if you could give the specs of the old and new computers
>> what motherboards, how many disk's, memory and video cards
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Feb 24, 2019, 9:03 PM Stephen Elliott <tnflyfisher@live.com
>> wrote:
>>
>>> How do I migrate the full Ubuntu 18.04 os, setup, and data to a new
>>> computer?
>>>
>>>
>>>
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