![]() ![]() Make sure Buster is updated/cleaned: "sudo apt update & sudo apt upgrade -y & sudo apt autoremove".By all means backup to external storage as insurance but then stop Linux and open crosh > "vmc start termina" then "lxc copy penguin buster" then start the terminal and perform an in-place upgrade of penguin. Upon restore it simply replaces any existing penguin container. Crostini backup/restore makes a tar.gz image of the penguin container with 'tini' extension. This is what allows me to see how space is actually being used in different container scenarios. I'm not in Dev mode but I have set my termina VM to use dynamic storage allocation. As for apps, there's quite a jump between Buster and Bullseye, and some stuff in the testing (Bookworm) channel is starting to appear in Bullseye Backports. Since Google made their Bullseye container available via the flag it has been rock solid in my experience and it is more optimised for the Crostini environment weighing in at just 2.9 GB without apps. Both ways produce stable containers but in both cases they require more storage space - close to 5 GB with no apps. ![]() Second, by performing in-place upgrade to the official Google-built Buster container. First, by creating a custom container in lxc and adding the cros integration. I originally tested it in Crostini two ways. I've been running Bullseye for about a year now (keep in mind Debian only released it in August) and it has been solid. In case you find out that some of your hardware is unsupported by the free Debian 11 installer, you may choose to use non-free installer images that include firmware for AMD and Nvidia graphic cards, Intel audio hardware, and other proprietary drivers.įinally, you may deploy a server with Debian 11 pre-installed from your chosen cloud infrastructure provider and not bother about operating system installation, nor hardware compatability at all.No, they're not converted, we have to do that manually. ![]() If you would like to check whether Debian 11 is right for you and if it supports your hardware, you may run a live install image that does not modify your disk storage and simply loads the operating system into memory. You can find systemd log journal in "/var/log/journal/".
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