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I am wondering if this is possible without losing what I have on my home partition? I'm currently running 32bit and want to see if 64bit is something that will work for me but don't want to set up a separate partition for arch64.
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Just don't format the /home partition when you install.
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Amazingly, I was just wondering about this same idea...
My question's a bit different, though...
Since I just found out my computer's processor is 64-bit...what's the difference between the 32-bit and 64-bit installs of ArchLinux? Could I just replace the current one with the 64-bit kernel, and leave the programs and such intact? Or should I back up the configs and full-install again?
I type ~7 times faster than I think. Apologies all around.
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Could I just replace the current one with the 64-bit kernel, and leave the programs and such intact? Or should I back up the configs and full-install again?
Can I upgrade/switch my system from i686 to x86_64 without reinstalling?
No. However, you can start the system with the Arch64 install CD, mount the disk, backup anything you may want to keep that isn't a 32-bit binary (e.g: /home & /etc), and install.
Last edited by creslin (2008-11-12 20:26:03)
ARCH|awesome3.0 powered by Pentium M 750 | 512MB DDR2-533 | Radeon X300 M
The journey is the reward.
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Thank you. I shall follow the instructions thoroughly, then berate myself accordingly for missing it.
I type ~7 times faster than I think. Apologies all around.
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