$NetBSD: upgrade,v 1.7 1998/05/13 19:07:46 ross Exp $ The upgrade to NetBSD _VER is a binary upgrade; it can be quite difficult to advance to a later version by recompiling from source due primarily to interdependencies in the various components. Since upgrading involves replacing the boot blocks on your NetBSD partition, the kernel, and most of the system binaries, it has the potential to cause data loss. You are strongly advised to BACK UP ANY IMPORTANT DATA ON YOUR DISK, whether on the NetBSD partition or on another operating system's partition, before beginning the upgrade process. The upgrade is mainly a simple matter of unpacking the distribution tar archives on top of the previous distribution. You will need first to boot the new boot floppy or INSTALL kernel and use /usr/mdec/installboot to install new boot blocks. Then you may extract a new kernel and the distribution sets as described in section 4 of the installation instructions. After this point your machine is a complete NetBSD _VER system. However, that doesn't mean that you are finished with the upgrade process. You will probably want to update the set of device nodes you have in /dev. If you've changed the contents of /dev by hand, you will need to be careful about this, but if not, you can just cd into /dev, and run the command "sh ./MAKEDEV all". You must also deal with certain changes in the formats of some of the configuration files. The most notable change is that we now have an /etc/rc.conf file which describes most configuration options, but also the "options" given to many of the file systems in /etc/fstab or by hand have changed, and some of the file systems have changed names. To find out what the new options are, it's suggested that you read the manual page for the file systems' mount commands, for example mount_nfs(8) for NFS. Finally, you will want to delete old binaries that were part of the version of NetBSD that you upgraded from and have since been removed from the NetBSD distribution. IMPORTANT NOTE: if you use NFS, remove /sbin/nfsd and /sbin/nfsiod; the new versions of these programs are in /usr/sbin.