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Clad in Sky l33t
Joined: 04 May 2007 Posts: 885 Location: Germany
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Posted: Wed Dec 08, 2010 7:24 pm Post subject: Going 64bit - keeping old home directory |
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Hi,
I just ordered me some ram and anyway, this is 2010 and people (like me) are still running 32bit? Sounds weird.
The question is: can I keep my old (from a 32bit install) home directory, so I won't have to do all those customizations to Gnome, Openoffice and other programs again? _________________ Kali Ma
Now it's autumn of the aeons
Dance with your sword
Now it's time for the harvest |
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sera Retired Dev
Joined: 29 Feb 2008 Posts: 1017 Location: CET
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Posted: Wed Dec 08, 2010 7:56 pm Post subject: |
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Yes, you can use your home directory under a 64 bit system. If you have installed binaries there, you will need to have IA32_EMULATION enabled in your kernel to run them. |
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gkmac Guru
Joined: 19 Jan 2003 Posts: 333 Location: West Sussex, UK
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Posted: Wed Dec 08, 2010 10:27 pm Post subject: Re: Going 64bit - keeping old home directory |
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Clad in Sky wrote: | can I keep my old (from a 32bit install) home directory, so I won't have to do all those customizations to Gnome, Openoffice and other programs again? |
Absolutely. I kept my old /home directory when I jumped to 64-bit, the customisations and settings for KDE, OpenOffice and everything else were preserved and worked properly.
Whilst setting it up I actually had two root partitions, one temporarily had my existing 32-bit install copied from the old hard drive and the other would have my brand new 64-bit install. Using GRUB I could select either one, the 32-bit when I wanted to do something and the 64-bit when I could leave it to compile stuff.
Both used the same /home directory (on a separate partition) and there weren't any ill effects at all swapping back and forth between 32-bit and 64-bit. _________________ If ~amd64 ebuilds are cutting edge, then git-9999 ebuilds are chainsaws.
"Not everyone can ride a unicycle, does that mean we should put another wheel on it?" - Lokheed |
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yoshi314 l33t
Joined: 30 Dec 2004 Posts: 850 Location: PL
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Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 2:35 pm Post subject: |
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there might be a problem with gtk apps not showing icons. it might not exist anymore but i had it a couple of times when switching between 32bit and 64 bit frequently.
if i remember right gtk or one of it's related libraries used to store list of some plugins with full absolute paths, and that confused 32bit systems. i had to wipe out few configuration files to resolve it. i think it manifested itself as gtk apps not showing icons on buttons, missing texts in menus, etc.
i think this has been fixed for a while, but you never know. aside from that everything else worked fine. _________________ ~amd64
shrink your /usr/portage with squashfs+aufs |
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