= Upgrading ''' [NOTE] ====== This page was automatically converted from https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Upgrading It is probably * Badly formatted * Missing graphics and tables that do not covert well from mediawiki * Out-of-date * In need of other love Please fix it, remove this notice, and then add to `_topic_map.yml` Pull requests accepted at https://pagure.io/fedora-docs/fedora-howto Once that is live, go to the original wiki page and add an `{{old}}` tag, followed by a note like .... {{admon/note|This page has a new home!| This wiki page is no longer maintained. Please find the up-to-date version at: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/whatever-the-url }} .... ====== ''' [[upgrading-fedora-workstation]] Upgrading Fedora Workstation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fedora Workstation 23 and later include a graphical system upgrade mechanism. When a newer stable release is available, you should see a graphical notification, similar to the ones you see for system updates. Clicking this, or running the _Software_ application and going to the _Updates_ pane, should show you a simple graphical interface for upgrading the system. It will first download the upgrade files, then prompt you to reboot the system and install them, again in similar fashion to a system update. When the upgrade is complete, the system will reboot again to the new release. image:Upgradef24f25-gs.png[Upgradef24f25-gs.png,title="Upgradef24f25-gs.png",width=640] [[upgrading-with-dnf-system-upgrade-plugin]] Upgrading with DNF system upgrade plugin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ For instructions on upgrading with the DNF system upgrade plugin, refer to link:DNF_system_upgrade[the dedicated page]. This mechanism can also be used for Fedora Workstation upgrades if you prefer a command-line tool or if you need to try and analyze some kind of package issue that seems to be preventing the graphical method from working. [[online-rebases-for-fedora-atomic-host-via-rpm-ostree]] Online rebases for https://getfedora.org/en/cloud/download/atomic.html[Fedora Atomic Host] via rpm-ostree ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ For instructions on upgrading Fedora Atomic Host installations between Fedora releases, refer to link:Atomic_Host_upgrade[the dedicated page]. [[online-upgrade-with-pure-dnf]] Online upgrade with pure DNF ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Upgrading from one release to the next using directly, without the DNF system upgrade plugin, is not explicitly tested by Fedora QA and issues with it are not considered blockers for a release, but in practice it works for many users. To learn more, refer to link:Upgrading_Fedora_using_package_manager[Upgrading Fedora using dnf]. [[updating-from-a-pre-release-alpha-beta-or-other-development-snapshot-to-the-final-release]] Updating from a pre-release (Alpha, Beta, or other development snapshot) to the final release ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you are using a pre-release of Fedora, and want to know more about upgrading to the final release, refer to link:Upgrading_from_pre-release_to_final[Upgrading from pre-release to final]. This is not technically an 'upgrade' operation, it is simply an update, but there are some special considerations involved in making sure you stay on the update track you intend to use, which are documented on this page. [[tips]] Tips ~~~~ * Ensure you have a good backup of your data. * Ensure you read the http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/%7B%7BFedoraVersionNumber%7D%7D/html/Release_Notes/[Release Notes] carefully before attempting an upgrade. [[upgrading-to-rawhide-and-branched]] Upgrading to Rawhide and Branched ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ link:Releases/Rawhide[Rawhide] and link:Releases/Branched[Branched] are the development releases of Fedora. They are suitable for people who are developing or testing Fedora before broad public release. They are *NOT SUITABLE* for regular day-to-day use unless you are a fairly experienced user, and certainly not suitable for mission-critical use. You should read through those pages carefully before deciding to run Branched or, particularly, Rawhide. See link:Fedora_Release_Life_Cycle[Fedora Release Life Cycle] for more information on how the whole Fedora cycle works from Rawhide, to Branched, to the milestone releases (Alpha and Beta), to a 'final' release. If you are sure you want to do it, upgrading to a Branched release or to Rawhide can be done with link:DNF_system_upgrade[DNF system upgrade] just like upgrading to a newer stable release. There are just a couple of special notes that are covered in the instructions. [[upgrading-from-end-of-life-releases]] Upgrading from link:End_of_life[End of life] releases ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Note that Fedora strongly recommends against ever running an end-of-life release on any production system, or any system connected to the public internet, in any circumstances. You should never allow a production Fedora deployment to reach end-of-life in the first place. With that in mind, if you do have an end-of-life release installed on a system you cannot just discard or re-deploy, you can attempt to upgrade it, though this is not officially tested or supported. If you have Fedora 21 or later, you can try to upgrade using link:DNF_system_upgrade#eol[DNF system upgrade]. If you have Fedora 20 or earlier, you will have to perform at least part of the upgrade with link:Upgrading_from_EOL_Fedora_using_package_manager[bare ]. You can either use that method to upgrade to Fedora 21 or later and then use link:DNF_system_upgrade[DNF system upgrade] to upgrade from there to a currently-supported release, or just use bare or for the entire upgrade process. Note that when upgrading from Fedora 20 or earlier, you are both upgrading from an end-of-life release and using a not-officially-recommended upgrade mechanism; such upgrades are very much performed 'at your own risk' and may well require various kinds of manual intervention to run and clean up the upgraded system, if they work at all. [[upgrading-using-the-fedora-installer-anaconda]] Upgrading using the Fedora installer (anaconda) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Fedora releases up to Fedora 17 included upgrade functionality in the Fedora installer, anaconda. This can be a better choice than link:Upgrading_from_EOL_Fedora_using_package_manager[a package manager upgrade] for some EOL upgrades, especially upgrades to Fedora Core 2, Fedora Core 3, and Fedora 17. If you are attempting to upgrade from Fedora 16 or older, it is highly recommended to upgrade to Fedora 16 and then perform an installer upgrade from Fedora 16 to Fedora 17 before upgrading any further. To upgrade using the installer, boot the system from a network install or DVD image for the target release, and run through the initial steps of the install process. After you select storage devices - if your install is located on a 'specialized' storage device, ensure to configure and select it - the installer should offer you the option to upgrade the installed system. ''' See a typo, something missing or out of date, or anything else which can be improved? Edit this document at https://pagure.io/fedora-docs/fedora-howto.