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3. Introduction

3.2. Why would anyone want to do that?

Good question! If it can possibly be avoided, don't do it! (That's the single most important recommendation in this whole guide!!!) When this guide was first written, not many people had hard disks big enough to accomodate two whole Linux installations; these days, that's by no means uncommon. If you possibly can, build your new system in a separate partition (or group of partitions), keeping the old one intact till you're satisfied that the new one is just the way you want it. If you can avoid destroying the old system to make room for the new, by all means avoid it! But there are times when you may have no choice.

(These examples are a bit dated, but they serve to illustrate my point:)

For example, I installed a 4Gb hard disk and then found out that Slackware 2.0 vintage linux didn't know a hard disk could have more than 2Gb, and it got horribly confused. So I had to upgrade to the then-current Slackware 2.3. That upgrade was a gruelling experience, and it's part of the reason I'm writing these notes. I did just about everything wrong, and only good luck and the fact that I had another running linux box beside me saved me from disaster.

As another example, I found that I just couldn't succeed in building a working a.out linux kernel in the 1.3 series, using an out-of-the-box Slackware 2.3 installation (another machine, not the one I botched before). I took the plunge, bought Slackware 3.0 on CDROM and converted to ELF. This time the reinstallation went better, thanks in part to the previous bitter experience, and it served as the source of most of the ideas I'm offering you here.


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