You're not supposed to run apt upgrade in Proxmox at all, it may even break your system. Use dist-upgrade.
https://pve.proxmox.com/pve-docs/chapter-sysadmin.html#system_software_updates
You're not supposed to run apt upgrade in Proxmox at all, it may even break your system. Use dist-upgrade.
https://pve.proxmox.com/pve-docs/chapter-sysadmin.html#system_software_updates
dist-upgrade and full-upgrade are essentially the same command but yeah, I won't be using apt upgrade again in the future! Like I said in my post, the joys of being self taught is that you learn by my making mistakes and that's part of the "fun" 🤣
Not essentially, exactly. One is a deprecated alias for the other.
Nah, the fun is learning form others mistakes. Thanks for a fun read :}
Just don’t use any command in proxmox. Proxmox is designed GUI first. It got an update button in the GUI. Only major releases could need tinkering in the terminal. But even changing repos is now possible in the GUI.
I've seen that the patches are only available in the debian-security repository. It's important to review your repo list in /etc/apt/sources.list.d.
Proxmox does not use the standard debian kernel.
from my own experience, apt dist-upgrade removes old kernels, apt upgrade still installed the new kernel, grub updated and booted into the new kernel.
all dist-upgrade did (for me) was delete the old kernels. which is something I would prefer not to do because it removes any ability to rollback should I absolutely need to.
Which distro? Debian for example always keeps two kernels: the curent one and the one in use before that, which is what I prefer, never had to rely on more than one backup kernel.
Debian. like the Debian.
currently running Trixie on my daily and bookworm on a couple servers which will be upgraded to Trixie soon.
@GreenKnight23 @oong3Eepa1ae1tahJozoosuu I've never seen that behavior in Debian. Is that some different type of configuration?
native config. nothing special.
@GreenKnight23 I don't see that behavior. Rebooting into a new kernel and then running dist-upgrade, it always _always_ keeps one older kernel around. Bookworm and trixie.
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