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SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP6

Upgrade Guide

This book guides you through upgrades of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop.

Publication Date: December 12, 2024
List of Examples

Copyright © 2006–2024 SUSE LLC and contributors. All rights reserved.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or (at your option) version 1.3; with the Invariant Section being this copyright notice and license. A copy of the license version 1.2 is included in the section entitled GNU Free Documentation License.

For SUSE trademarks, see https://www.suse.com/company/legal/. All third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Trademark symbols (®, ™ etc.) denote trademarks of SUSE and its affiliates. Asterisks (*) denote third-party trademarks.

All information found in this book has been compiled with utmost attention to detail. However, this does not guarantee complete accuracy. Neither SUSE LLC, its affiliates, the authors nor the translators shall be held liable for possible errors or the consequences thereof.

Preface

1 Available documentation

Online documentation

Our documentation is available online at https://documentation.suse.com. Browse or download the documentation in various formats.

Note
Note: Latest updates

The latest updates are usually available in the English-language version of this documentation.

SUSE Knowledgebase

If you run into an issue, check out the Technical Information Documents (TIDs) that are available online at https://www.suse.com/support/kb/. Search the SUSE Knowledgebase for known solutions driven by customer need.

Release notes

For release notes, see https://www.suse.com/releasenotes/.

In your system

For offline use, the release notes are also available under /usr/share/doc/release-notes on your system. The documentation for individual packages is available at /usr/share/doc/packages.

Many commands are also described in their manual pages. To view them, run man, followed by a specific command name. If the man command is not installed on your system, install it with sudo zypper install man.

2 Improving the documentation

Your feedback and contributions to this documentation are welcome. The following channels for giving feedback are available:

Service requests and support

For services and support options available for your product, see https://www.suse.com/support/.

To open a service request, you need a SUSE subscription registered at SUSE Customer Center. Go to https://scc.suse.com/support/requests, log in, and click Create New.

Bug reports

Report issues with the documentation at https://bugzilla.suse.com/.

To simplify this process, click the Report an issue icon next to a headline in the HTML version of this document. This preselects the right product and category in Bugzilla and adds a link to the current section. You can start typing your bug report right away.

A Bugzilla account is required.

Contributions

To contribute to this documentation, click the Edit source document icon next to a headline in the HTML version of this document. This will take you to the source code on GitHub, where you can open a pull request.

A GitHub account is required.

Note
Note: Edit source document only available for English

The Edit source document icons are only available for the English version of each document. For all other languages, use the Report an issue icons instead.

For more information about the documentation environment used for this documentation, see the repository's README.

Mail

You can also report errors and send feedback concerning the documentation to <>. Include the document title, the product version, and the publication date of the document. Additionally, include the relevant section number and title (or provide the URL) and provide a concise description of the problem.

3 Documentation conventions

The following notices and typographic conventions are used in this document:

  • /etc/passwd: Directory names and file names

  • PLACEHOLDER: Replace PLACEHOLDER with the actual value

  • PATH: An environment variable

  • ls, --help: Commands, options, and parameters

  • user: The name of a user or group

  • package_name: The name of a software package

  • Alt, AltF1: A key to press or a key combination. Keys are shown in uppercase as on a keyboard.

  • File, File › Save As: menu items, buttons

  • Chapter 1, Example chapter: A cross-reference to another chapter in this guide.

  • Commands that must be run with root privileges. You can also prefix these commands with the sudo command to run them as a non-privileged user:

    # command
    > sudo command
  • Commands that can be run by non-privileged users:

    > command
  • Commands can be split into two or multiple lines by a backslash character (\) at the end of a line. The backslash informs the shell that the command invocation will continue after the end of the line:

    > echo a b \
    c d
  • A code block that shows both the command (preceded by a prompt) and the respective output returned by the shell:

    > command
    output
  • Notices

    Warning
    Warning: Warning notice

    Vital information you must be aware of before proceeding. Warns you about security issues, potential loss of data, damage to hardware, or physical hazards.

    Important
    Important: Important notice

    Important information you should be aware of before proceeding.

    Note
    Note: Note notice

    Additional information, for example about differences in software versions.

    Tip
    Tip: Tip notice

    Helpful information, like a guideline or a piece of practical advice.

  • Compact Notices

    Note

    Additional information, for example about differences in software versions.

    Tip

    Helpful information, like a guideline or a piece of practical advice.

4 Support

Find the support statement for SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop and general information about technology previews below. For details about the product lifecycle, see https://www.suse.com/lifecycle.

If you are entitled to support, find details on how to collect information for a support ticket at https://documentation.suse.com/sles-15/html/SLES-all/cha-adm-support.html.

4.1 Support statement for SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop

To receive support, you need an appropriate subscription with SUSE. To view the specific support offers available to you, go to https://www.suse.com/support/ and select your product.

The support levels are defined as follows:

L1

Problem determination, which means technical support designed to provide compatibility information, usage support, ongoing maintenance, information gathering and basic troubleshooting using available documentation.

L2

Problem isolation, which means technical support designed to analyze data, reproduce customer problems, isolate a problem area and provide a resolution for problems not resolved by Level 1 or prepare for Level 3.

L3

Problem resolution, which means technical support designed to resolve problems by engaging engineering to resolve product defects which have been identified by Level 2 Support.

For contracted customers and partners, SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop is delivered with L3 support for all packages, except for the following:

  • Technology previews.

  • Sound, graphics, fonts, and artwork.

  • Packages that require an additional customer contract.

  • Packages with names ending in -devel (containing header files and similar developer resources) will only be supported together with their main packages.

SUSE will only support the usage of original packages. That is, packages that are unchanged and not recompiled.

4.2 Technology previews

Technology previews are packages, stacks, or features delivered by SUSE to provide glimpses into upcoming innovations. Technology previews are included for your convenience to give you a chance to test new technologies within your environment. We would appreciate your feedback. If you test a technology preview, please contact your SUSE representative and let them know about your experience and use cases. Your input is helpful for future development.

Technology previews have the following limitations:

  • Technology previews are still in development. Therefore, they may be functionally incomplete, unstable, or otherwise not suitable for production use.

  • Technology previews are not supported.

  • Technology previews may only be available for specific hardware architectures.

  • Details and functionality of technology previews are subject to change. As a result, upgrading to subsequent releases of a technology preview may be impossible and require a fresh installation.

  • SUSE may discover that a preview does not meet customer or market needs, or does not comply with enterprise standards. Technology previews can be removed from a product at any time. SUSE does not commit to providing a supported version of such technologies in the future.

For an overview of technology previews shipped with your product, see the release notes at https://www.suse.com/releasenotes.

1 Lifecycle and support

This chapter provides background information on terminology, SUSE product lifecycles and Service Pack releases, and recommended upgrade policies.

1.1 Terminology

This section uses several terms. To understand the information, read the definitions below:

Backporting

Backporting is the act of adapting specific changes from a newer version of software and applying it to an older version. The most commonly used case is fixing security holes in older software components. Usually it is also part of a maintenance model to supply enhancements or (less commonly) new features.

Delta RPM

A delta RPM consists only of the binary diff between two defined versions of a package, and therefore has the smallest download size. Before being installed, the full RPM package is rebuilt on the local machine.

Downstream

A metaphor of how software is developed in the open source world (compare it with upstream). The term downstream refers to people or organizations like SUSE who integrate the source code from upstream with other software to build a distribution which is then used by end users. Thus, the software flows downstream from its developers via the integrators to the end users.

Extension, Add-on product

Extensions and third party add-on products provide additional functionality of product value to SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop. They are provided by SUSE and by SUSE partners, and they are registered and installed on top of the base product SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop.

Major release, General Availability (GA) version

The major release of SUSE Linux Enterprise (or any software product) is a new version which brings new features and tools, decommissions previously deprecated components and comes with backward-incompatible changes. Major releases for example are SUSE Linux Enterprise 12 or 15.

Migration

Updating to a Service Pack (SP) by using the online update tools or an installation medium to install the respective patches. It updates all packages of the installed system to the latest state.

Migration target

A compatible product to which a system can be migrated, containing the version of the products/extensions and the URL of the repository. Migration targets can change over time and depend on installed extensions. It is possible to select multiple migration targets.

Module

Modules are fully supported parts of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop with a different lifecycle. They have a clearly defined scope and are delivered via online channel only. Registering at the SUSE Customer Center, RMT (Repository Mirroring Tool), or SUSE Manager is a prerequisite for being able to subscribe to these channels.

Package

A package is a compressed file in rpm format that contains all files for a particular program, including optional components like configuration, examples, and documentation.

Patch

A patch consists of one or more packages and may be applied by means of delta RPMs. It may also introduce dependencies to packages that are not installed yet.

Service Pack (SP)

A service pack combines several patches into a form that is easy to install or deploy. Service packs are numbered and usually contain security fixes, updates, upgrades, or enhancements of programs.

Upstream

A metaphor of how software is developed in the open source world (compare it with downstream). The term upstream refers to the original project, author or maintainer of a software that is distributed as source code. Feedback, patches, feature enhancements, or other improvements flow from end users or contributors to upstream developers. They decide if the request will be integrated or rejected.

If the project members decide to integrate the request, it will show up in newer versions of the software. An accepted request will benefit all parties involved.

If a request is not accepted, it may be for different reasons. Either it is in a state that is not compliant with the project's guidelines, it is invalid, it is already integrated, or it is not in the interest or road map of the project. An unaccepted request makes it harder for upstream developers as they need to synchronize their patches with the upstream code. This practice is generally avoided, but sometimes it is still needed.

Update

Installation of a newer minor version of a package, which usually contains security or bug fixes.

Upgrade

Installation of a newer major version of a package or distribution, which brings new features. For a distinction between the upgrade options, see Section 2.3, “Online and offline upgrade”.

1.2 Product lifecycle

SUSE has the following product lifecycle:

  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server has a 13-year lifecycle: 10 years of general support and three years of extended support.

  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop has a 10-year lifecycle: seven years of general support and three years of extended support.

  • Major releases are made every four years. Service packs are made every 12-14 months.

SUSE supports previous service packs for six months after the release of the new service pack. Figure 1.1, “Major releases and service packs” depicts some mentioned aspects.

Major releases and service packs
Figure 1.1: Major releases and service packs

If you need additional time to design, validate and test your upgrade plans, Long Term Service Pack Support can extend the support you get by an additional 12 to 36 months in 12-month increments. This gives you a total of 2 to 5 years of support on any service pack. For details, see Figure 1.2, “Long term service pack support”.

Long term service pack support
Figure 1.2: Long term service pack support

For more information, refer to https://www.suse.com/products/long-term-service-pack-support/.

Refer to https://www.suse.com/lifecycle for more information about lifecycles, release frequency, and the overlay support period.

1.3 Module dependencies and lifecycles

For a list of modules, their dependencies, and lifecycles, see the Article “Modules and Extensions Quick Start”.

1.4 Generating periodic lifecycle report

SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop can regularly check for changes in the support status of all installed products and send the report via e-mail in case of changes. To generate the report, install the zypper-lifecycle-plugin with zypper in zypper-lifecycle-plugin.

Enable the report generation on your system with systemctl:

> sudo systemctl enable lifecycle-report.timer

The recipient and subject of the report e-mail, and the report generation period can be configured in the file /etc/sysconfig/lifecycle-report with any text editor. The settings MAIL_TO and MAIL_SUBJ define the mail recipient and subject, while DAYS sets the interval at which the report is generated.

The report displays changes in the support status after the change occurred and not in advance. If the change occurs right after the generation of the last report, it can take up to 14 days until you are notified of the change. Take this into account when setting the DAYS option. Change the following configuration entries to fit your requirements:

MAIL_TO='root@localhost'
MAIL_SUBJ='Lifecycle report'
DAYS=14

The latest report is available in the file /var/lib/lifecycle/report. The file contains two sections. The first section informs about the end of support for used products. The second section lists packages with their support end dates and update availability.

1.5 Support levels

The range for extended support levels starts from year 10 and ends in year 13. These contain continued L3 engineering level diagnosis and reactive critical bug fixes. With these support levels, you will receive updates for trivially exploitable root exploits in the kernel and other root exploits directly executable without user interaction. Furthermore, they support existing workloads, software stacks, and hardware with limited package exclusion list. Find an overview in Table 1.1, “Security updates and bug fixes”.

Table 1.1: Security updates and bug fixes
 

General Support for Most Recent Service Pack (SP)

General Support for Previous SP, with LTSS

Extended Support with LTSS

Feature

Year 1-5

Year 6-7

Year 8-10

Year 4-10

Year 10-13

Technical Services

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Access to Patches and Fixes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Access to Documentation and Knowledge Base

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Support for Existing Stacks and Workloads

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Support for New Deployments

Yes

Yes

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

No

Enhancement Requests

Yes

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

No

No

Hardware Enablement and Optimization

Yes

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

No

No

Driver updates via SUSE SolidDriver Program (formerly PLDP)

Yes

Yes

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

No

Backport of Fixes from Recent SP

Yes

Yes

Limited (Based on partner and customer requests)

N/A

N/A

Security Updates1

All

All

All

Critical only

Critical only

Defect Resolution

Yes

Yes

Limited (Severity Level 1 and 2 defects only)

Limited (Severity Level 1 and 2 defects only)

Limited (Severity Level 1 and 2 defects only)

1 For further information on the SUSE Linux Enterprise Update Policy, refer to the following knowledgebase article.

1.6 Registering and deregistering machines with SUSEConnect

On registration, the system receives repositories from the SUSE Customer Center (see https://scc.suse.com/) or a local registration proxy like SMT. The repository names map to specific URIs in the customer center. To list all available repositories on your system, use zypper as follows:

# zypper repos -u

This gives you a list of all available repositories on your system. Each repository is listed by its alias, name and whether it is enabled and will be refreshed. The option -u gives you also the URI from where it originated.

To register your machine, run SUSEConnect, for example:

# SUSEConnect -r REGCODE

To deregister your machine, you can use SUSEConnect too:

# SUSEConnect --de-register

To check your locally installed products and their status, use the following command:

# SUSEConnect -s

1.7 Identifying the SLE version

If you need to identify the version of an SLE installation, check the content of the file /etc/os-release.

A machine readable XML output is available with zypper:

> zypper --no-remote --no-refresh --xmlout --non-interactive products -i
<?xml version='1.0'?>
<stream>
<product-list>
<product name="SLES" version="15" release="0" epoch="0" arch="x86_64" vendor="SUSE" summary="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15" repo="@System" productline="sles" registerrelease="" shortname="SLES15" flavor="" isbase="true" installed="true"><endoflife time_t="0" text="0"/><registerflavor/><description>SUSE Linux Enterprise offers [...]</description></product>
</product-list>
</stream>

2 Upgrade paths and methods

SUSE® Linux Enterprise (SLE) allows upgrading an existing system to a later version or service pack. No new installation is needed. Existing data, such as home and data directories and system configuration, is kept intact. You can update from a local CD or DVD drive or from a central network installation source.

This chapter explains how to manually upgrade your SUSE Linux Enterprise system, be it by DVD, network, an automated process, or SUSE Manager.

2.1 Upgrading versus fresh installation

Upgrades between two major releases of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop are supported by SUSE. Whether it is better to upgrade or perform a fresh installation depends on your specific scenario. While upgrades involve less work, fresh installations ensure you benefit from all the new features of a release such as disk layout changes, specific file system features, and other improvements. To get the most out of your system, SUSE therefore recommends fresh installations in most scenarios.

In both cases—upgrade as well as a fresh installation—customers need to check if system settings and default values still fit their requirements.

For updates from one service pack of a specific release to another one of the same codestream, SUSE recommends to do it in-place, and not to perform a fresh installation. Nevertheless, there may be reasons and scenarios for a customer to perform a fresh installation in this case, too. The decision as to which is more suitable can only be made by the customer.

2.2 Supported upgrade and migration paths to SLED 15 SP6

Before you perform any migration, read Chapter 3, Preparing the upgrade.

Important
Important: Cross-architecture upgrades are not supported

Cross-architecture upgrades, such as upgrading from a 32-bit version of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop to the 64-bit version, or upgrading from big endian to little endian are not supported!

Also, since SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 is 64-bit only, upgrades from any 32-bit SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 systems to SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 and later are not supported.

To make a cross-architecture upgrade, you need to perform a new installation.

Note
Note: Skipping service packs

Skipping service packs on SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop is not supported. You need to consecutively install all service packs.

Overview of supported upgrade paths
Figure 2.1: Overview of supported upgrade paths
Warning
Warning: Upgrading databases

The upgrade paths described here apply only to SUSE Linux Enterprise as the operating system of a machine, not to all the applications it runs. If you have workloads such as PostgreSQL or MariaDB databases, intermediate OS upgrades may be required in order to upgrade your applications.

Before upgrading the operating system, consult the Release Notes for information about database versions. If a new major version is shipped, refer to Chapter 3, Preparing the upgrade for upgrade instructions.

Supported upgrade paths per version
Upgrading from SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 12 GA / SP1 / SP2

Upgrading from SLED 12 SP2 or older service packs directly is not supported. You need at least SLED 12 SP3 or SP4 before you can proceed to SLED 15 GA or SP1. Then, consecutively install all service packs up to SLED 15 SP6.

If you cannot do a fresh installation, first, upgrade your installed SLED 12 service pack to SLED 12 SP3 or SP4. This upgrade is described in the SLED 12 SP4 Deployment Guide.

Upgrading from SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 12 SP3 / SP4

Upgrading from SLED 12 SP4 or older service packs directly is not supported. You first have to upgrade to SLED 15 GA or SP1 before you can proceed to SLED 15 SP6 by consecutively installing all service packs.

If you cannot do a fresh installation, first, upgrade your installed SLED 12 SP3 or SP4 to SLED 15 GA or SP1. This upgrade is described in the SLED 12 SP4 Deployment Guide.

Upgrading from SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 GA / SP1 / SP2 / SP3 / SP4

Upgrading from SLED 15 GA, SP1, SP2, SP3, or SP4 directly is not supported. You need at least SLED 15 SP5 before you can proceed to SLED 15 SP6.

Upgrading from SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP5

Upgrading from SLED 15 SP5 is supported both online and offline. Refer to Section 2.3, “Online and offline upgrade” for details.

2.3 Online and offline upgrade

SUSE supports the following upgrade and migration methods. For more information about the terminology, see Section 1.1, “Terminology”. The methods are:

Online

Upgrades that are executed from the running operating system itself (system up and running state). Examples: online update with Zypper or YaST, connected through SUSE Customer Center or Repository Mirroring Tool (RMT), Salt Policy via SUSE Manager.

For details, see Chapter 5, Upgrading online.

When migrating between Service Packs of the same major release, we suggest following Section 5.4, “Upgrading with the online migration tool (YaST)” or Section 5.5, “Upgrading with Zypper”.

Offline

Upgrading offline implies that the operating system to be upgraded is not running (system down state). Instead, the installer for the target operating system is booted (for example, from the installation media, via network or via local boot loader), and performs the upgrade.

For details, see Chapter 4, Upgrading offline.

Important
Important: SUSE Manager clients

If your machine is managed by SUSE Manager, update it as described in the SUSE Manager documentation. The Client Migration procedure is described in the SUSE Manager Upgrade Guide, available at https://documentation.suse.com/suma/.

3 Preparing the upgrade

Before starting the upgrade procedure, make sure your system is properly prepared. Among other things, preparation involves backing up data and checking the release notes. The following chapter guides you through these steps.

3.1 Make sure the system is up-to-date

Upgrading the system is only supported from the most recent patch level. Make sure the latest system updates are installed by either running zypper patch or by starting the YaST module Online-Update.

Note
Note: New 4096-bit signing key for SUSE Linux Enterprise 15

Mid 2023, the SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 product family switched over from a RSA 2048-bit signing key to a new RSA 4096-bit key. This change covers RPM packages, package repositories and ISO signatures. Old repositories that are not updated anymore and RPMs released up to the switch-over date, will remain signed with the old 2048-bit key.

If you update your system, the new key is automatically imported into the RPM keyring from the suse-build-key package on SLE 15 SP 4 and SP5 as well as the LTSS versions of SLE 15 SP1, SP2 and SP3.

If the key has not been imported yet, you can manually import it with:

> sudo rpm --import /usr/lib/rpm/gnupg/keys/gpg-pubkey-3fa1d6ce-63c9481c.asc

If you are running an older version of SLE or did not import the new key, you will be asked to trust it during the upgrade. Make sure the fingerprint matches:

pub   rsa4096/0xF74F09BC3FA1D6CE 2023-01-19 [SC] [expires: 2027-01-18]
Key fingerprint = 7F00 9157 B127 B994 D5CF  BE76 F74F 09BC 3FA1 D6CE
uid           SUSE Package Signing Key <build@suse.de>

Additionally, a reserve 4096-bit RSA key for disaster recovery purposes was imported:

pub   rsa4096/0xA1BFC02BD588DC46 2023-01-19 [SC] [expires: 2033-01-16]
Key fingerprint = B56E 5601 41D8 F654 2DFF  3BF9 A1BF C02B D588 DC46
uid           SUSE Package Signing Key (reserve key) <build@suse.de>

This key can be manually imported using:

> sudo rpm --import /usr/lib/rpm/gnupg/keys/gpg-pubkey-d588dc46-63c939db.asc

Both keys can also be found on the installation media and the SUSE website at https://www.suse.com/support/security/keys/.

3.2 Read the release notes

Find a list of all changes, new features, and known issues in the release notes. You can also find the release notes on the installation media in the docu directory.

The release notes usually only contain the changes between two subsequent releases. If you are skipping one or more Service Packs, check the release notes of the skipped Service Packs as well.

Consult the release notes to check whether the following applies:

  • Your hardware needs special considerations

  • Any currently used software packages have changed significantly

  • Your installation requires special precautions

3.3 Make a backup

Before upgrading, back up your data by copying the existing configuration files to a separate medium (such as tape device, removable hard disk, etc.). This primarily applies to files stored in /etc and some directories and files in /var and /opt. You may also want to write the user data in /home (the HOME directories) to a backup medium.

Back up all data as root. Only root has sufficient permissions for all local files.

If you have selected Update an Existing System as the installation mode in YaST, you can choose to do a (system) backup at a later point in time. You can choose to include all modified files and files from the /etc/sysconfig directory. However, this is not a complete backup, as all the other important directories mentioned above are missing. Find the backup in the /var/adm/backup directory.

3.4 Check the available disk space

Software tends to grow from version to version. Therefore, take a look at the available partition space before updating. If you suspect you are running short of disk space, back up your data before increasing the available space by resizing partitions, for example. There is no general rule regarding how much space each partition should have. Space requirements depend on your particular partitioning profile and the software selected.

Note
Note: Automatic check for enough space in YaST

During the update procedure, YaST will check how much free disk space is available and display a warning to the user if the installation may exceed the available amount. In that case, performing the update may lead to an unusable system! Only if you know exactly what you are doing (by testing beforehand), you can skip the warning and continue the update.

3.4.1 Checking disk space on non-Btrfs file systems

Use the df command to list available disk space. For example, in Example 3.1, “List with df -h, the root partition is /dev/sda3 (mounted as /).

Example 3.1: List with df -h
Filesystem     Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
     /dev/sda3       74G   22G   53G  29% /
     tmpfs          506M     0  506M   0% /dev/shm
     /dev/sda5      116G  5.8G  111G   5% /home
     /dev/sda1       39G  1.6G   37G   4% /windows/C
     /dev/sda2      4.6G  2.6G  2.1G  57% /windows/D

3.4.2 Checking disk space on Btrfs root file systems

On a Btrfs file system, the output of df can be misleading, because in addition to the space the raw data allocates, a Btrfs file system also allocates and uses space for metadata.

Consequently a Btrfs file system may report being out of space even though it seems that plenty of space is still available. In that case, all space allocated for the metadata is used up. For more information refer to man 8 btrfs-filesystem and https://btrfs.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/FAQ.

When using Btrfs for root file systems on your machine, make sure there is enough free space. Check the available space on all mounted partitions. In the worst case, an upgrade needs as much disk space as the current root file system (without /.snapshot) for a new snapshot.

The following recommendations have been proven:

  • For all file systems, including Btrfs, you need enough free disk space to download and install big RPMs. The space of old RPMs is only freed after new RPMs are installed.

  • For Btrfs with snapshots, you need as a minimum as much free space as your current installation takes. We recommend having twice as much free space as the current installation.

    If you do not have enough free space, you can try to delete old snapshots with snapper:

    # snapper list
          # snapper delete NUMBER

    However, this may not help in all cases. Before migration, most snapshots occupy only little space.

3.5 Listing installed packages and repositories

You can save a list of installed packages; for example, when doing a fresh install of a new major SLE release or reverting to the old version.

Note
Note

Be aware that not all installed packages or used repositories are available in newer releases of SUSE Linux Enterprise. Some may have been renamed and others replaced. It is also possible that some packages are still available for legacy purposes while another package is used by default. Therefore, some manual editing of the files might be necessary. This can be done with any text editor.

  1. Create a file named repositories.bak.repo containing a list of all used repositories:

    # zypper lr -e repositories.bak
  2. Also create a file named installed-software.bak containing a list of all installed packages:

    # rpm -qa --queryformat '%{NAME}\n' > installed-software.bak
  3. Back up both files. The repositories and installed packages can be restored with the following commands:

    # zypper ar repositories.bak.repo
    # zypper install $(cat installed-software.bak)
    Note
    Note: Number of packages increases with an update to a new major release

    A system upgraded to a new major version (SLE X+1) may contain more packages than the initial system (SLE X). It will also contain more packages than a fresh installation of SLE X+1 with the same pattern selection. Reasons for this are:

    • Packages were split to allow a more fine-grained package selection. For example, 37 texlive packages on SLE 11 were split into over 3000 packages on SLE 15.

    • When a package has been split, all new packages are installed in the upgrade case to retain the same functionality as the previous version. However, the new default for a fresh installation of SLE X+1 may be to not install all packages.

    • Legacy packages from SLE X may be kept for compatibility reasons.

    • Package dependencies and the scope of patterns may have changed.

3.6 Disable the LTSS extension

If you upgrade a SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop system with Long Term Service Pack Support (LTSS) to a version that is still under general support, the upgrade will fail with the error No migration available. This happens because zypper migration tries to migrate all repositories, but there is no LTSS repository for the new version yet.

To fix this issue, disable the LTSS extension before the upgrade.

  1. Check if the LTSS extension is enabled:

    > sudo SUSEConnect --list-extensions | grep LTSS
    SUSE Linux Enterprise Server LTSS 12 SP4 x86_64 (Installed)
    Deactivate with: SUSEConnect -d -p SLES-LTSS/12.4/x86_64
  2. Disable the LTSS extension with the command from the SUSEConnect output above:

    > sudo SUSEConnect -d -p SLES-LTSS/12.4/x86_64
    Deregistered SUSE Linux Enterprise Server LTSS 12 SP4 x86_64
    To server: https://scc.suse.com/
  3. Verify the LTSS repository is no longer present with zypper lr.

3.7 Create non-MD5 server certificates for Java applications

As a security measure, MD5-based certificates are no longer supported in Java. If you have certificates created as MD5, re-create your certificates with the following steps:

  1. Open a terminal and log in as root.

  2. Create a private key:

    # openssl genrsa -out server.key 1024

    If you want a stronger key, replace 1024 with a higher number, for example, 4096.

  3. Create a certificate signing request (CSR):

    # openssl req -new -key server.key -out server.csr
  4. Self-sign the certificate:

    # openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in server.csr -signkey server.key -out server.crt
  5. Create the PEM file:

    # cat server.key server.crt > server.pem
  6. Place the files server.crt, server.csr, server.key, and server.pem in the respective directories where the keys can be found. For Tomcat, for example, this directory is /etc/tomcat/ssl/.

3.8 Shut down virtual machine guests

If your machine serves as a VM Host Server for KVM or Xen, make sure to properly shut down all running VM Guests prior to the update. Otherwise you may not be able to access the guests after the update.

3.9 Adjust your SMT client setup

If the machine you want to upgrade is registered as a client against an SMT server, take care to do the following:

Check if the version of the clientSetup4SMT.sh script on your host is up to date. clientSetup4SMT.sh from older versions of SMT cannot manage SMT 12 clients. If you apply software patches regularly on your SMT server, you can always find the latest version of clientSetup4SMT.sh at <SMT_HOSTNAME>/repo/tools/clientSetup4SMT.sh.

In case upgrading your machine to a higher version of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop fails, deregister the machine from the SMT server as described in Procedure 3.1. Afterward, restart the upgrade process.

Procedure 3.1: Deregistering a SUSE Linux Enterprise client from an SMT server
  1. Log in to the client machine.

  2. The following step depends on the current operating system of the client:

    • For SUSE Linux Enterprise 11, execute the following commands:

      > sudo suse_register -E
      > sudo rm -f /etc/SUSEConnect
      > sudo rm -rf /etc/zypp/credentials.d/*
      > sudo rm -rf /etc/zypp/repos.d/*
      > sudo rm -f /etc/zypp/services.d/*
      > sudo rm -f /var/cache/SuseRegister/*
      > sudo rm -f /etc/suseRegister*
      > sudo rm -f /var/cache/SuseRegister/lastzmdconfig.cache
      > sudo rm -f /etc/zmd/deviceid
      > sudo rm -f /etc/zmd/secret
    • For SUSE Linux Enterprise 12, execute the following commands:

      > sudo SUSEConnect --de-register
      > sudo SUSEConnect --cleanup
      > sudo rm -f /etc/SUSEConnect
      > sudo rm -rf /etc/zypp/credentials.d/*
      > sudo rm -rf /etc/zypp/repos.d/*
      > sudo rm -f /etc/zypp/services.d/*
  3. Log in to the SMT server.

  4. Check if the client has successfully been deregistered by listing all client registrations:

    > sudo smt-list-registrations
  5. If the client's host name is still listed in the output of this command, get the client's Unique ID from the first column. (The client might be listed with multiple IDs.)

  6. Delete the registration for this client:

    > sudo smt-delete-registration -g UNIQUE_ID
  7. If the client is listed with multiple IDs, repeat the step above for each of its unique IDs.

  8. Check if the client has now successfully been deregistered by re-running:

    > sudo smt-list-registrations

3.10 Adjust the resume boot parameter

On systems that have been installed with SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 12 or older, the default kernel command line in /etc/default/grub may contain a resume parameter using a device node name such as /dev/sda1 to refer to the hibernation (suspend-to-disk) device. As device node names are not persistent and may change between reboots, fixing this is highly recommended. Otherwise, the upgraded system may hang on reboot.

  1. Find the hibernation device:

    > sudo grep resume /etc/default/grub
    GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="resume=/dev/sda1 splash=silent quiet showopts"

    The hibernation device is /dev/sda1. If the command returns nothing, hibernation is not configured.

  2. Get the UUID for /dev/sda1:

    > sudo blkid /dev/vda1
    /dev/vda1: UUID="a1d1f2e0-b0ee-4be2-83d5-78a98c585827" TYPE="swap" PARTUUID="000134b5-01"

    The UUID for /dev/sda1 is a1d1f2e0-b0ee-4be2-83d5-78a98c585827.

  3. Edit /etc/default/grub and adjust the resume parameter. Replace /dev/sda1 with UUID=a1d1f2e0-b0ee-4be2-83d5-78a98c585827. The result will look like this:

    GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="resume=UUID=a1d1f2e0-b0ee-4be2-83d5-78a98c585827 splash=silent quiet showopts"
  4. Update the configuration of the grub boot manger:

    > sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg

If the system does not use hibernation, you can simply remove the resume parameter and update the boot configuration.

4 Upgrading offline

This chapter describes how to upgrade an existing SUSE Linux Enterprise installation using YaST which is booted from an installation medium. The YaST installer can, for example, be started from a DVD, over the network, or from the hard disk the system resides on.

4.1 Conceptual overview

Before upgrading your system, read Chapter 3, Preparing the upgrade first.

To upgrade your system, boot from an installation source, as you would do for a fresh installation. However, when the boot screen appears, you need to select Upgrade (instead of Installation). The upgrade can be started from:

4.2 Starting the upgrade from an installation medium

The procedure below describes booting from a DVD, but you can also use another local installation medium like an ISO image on a USB mass storage device. The medium and boot method to select depends on the system architecture and on whether the machine has a traditional BIOS or UEFI.

Procedure 4.1: Manually upgrading to SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP6
  1. Select and prepare a boot medium, see Book “Deployment Guide”.

  2. Insert the Unified Installer DVD for SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP6 and boot your machine. A Welcome screen is displayed, followed by the boot screen.

  3. (Optional) To force the installer to only install packages from the DVD and not from network sources, add the boot option media_upgrade=1.

  4. Start up the system by selecting Upgrade in the boot menu.

  5. Proceed with the upgrade process as described in Section 4.4, “Upgrading SUSE Linux Enterprise”.

4.3 Starting the upgrade from a network source

To start an upgrade from a network installation source, make sure that the following requirements are met:

Requirements for upgrading from a network installation source
Network installation source

A network installation source is set up according to Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 13 “Setting up a network installation source”.

Network connection and network services

Both the installation server and the target machine must have a functioning network connection. Required network services are:

  • Domain Name Service

  • DHCP (only needed for booting via PXE, IP can be set manually during setup)

  • OpenSLP (optional)

Boot medium

A bootable SUSE Linux Enterprise DVD, ISO image or functioning PXE setup. For details about booting via PXE, see Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 14 “Preparing network boot environment”, Section 14.4 “Preparing the target system for PXE boot”. Refer to Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 8 “Remote installation” for in-depth information on starting the upgrade from a remote server.

4.3.1 Manually upgrading via network installation source—booting from DVD

This procedure describes booting from a DVD as an example, but you can also use another local installation medium like an ISO image on a USB mass storage device. The way to select the boot method and to start up the system from the medium depends on the system architecture and on whether the machine has a traditional BIOS or UEFI. For details, see the links below.

  1. Insert the Unified Installer DVD for SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP6 and boot your machine. A Welcome screen is displayed, followed by the boot screen.

  2. Select the type of network installation source you want to use (FTP, HTTP, NFS, SMB, or SLP). Usually you get this choice by pressing F4, but in case your machine is equipped with UEFI instead of a traditional BIOS, you may need to manually adjust boot parameters. For details, see Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 4 “Boot parameters” and Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 5 “Installation steps”.

  3. Proceed with the upgrade process as described in Section 4.4, “Upgrading SUSE Linux Enterprise”.

4.3.2 Manually upgrading via network installation source—booting via PXE

To perform an upgrade from a network installation source using PXE boot, proceed as follows:

  1. Adjust the setup of your DHCP server to provide the address information needed for booting via PXE. For details, see Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 14 “Preparing network boot environment”, Section 14.1.1 “Dynamic address assignment”.

  2. Set up a TFTP server to hold the boot image needed for booting via PXE. Use the Installer DVD for SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP6 for this or follow the instructions in Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 14 “Preparing network boot environment”, Section 14.2 “Setting up a TFTP server”.

  3. Prepare PXE Boot and Wake-on-LAN on the target machine.

  4. Initiate the boot of the target system and use VNC to remotely connect to the installation routine running on this machine. For more information, see Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 8 “Remote installation”, Section 8.3 “Monitoring installation via VNC”.

  5. Proceed with the upgrade process as described in Section 4.4, “Upgrading SUSE Linux Enterprise”.

4.4 Upgrading SUSE Linux Enterprise

Before you upgrade your system, read Chapter 3, Preparing the upgrade first. To perform an automated migration, proceed as follows:

Note
Note: SUSE Customer Center and Internet connection

If the system you want to upgrade is registered with the SUSE Customer Center, make sure to have an Internet connection during the following procedure.

  1. After you have booted (either from an installation medium or the network), select the Upgrade entry on the boot screen.

    Warning
    Warning: Wrong choice may lead to data loss

    Make sure you select Upgrade at this point. If you select Installation by mistake, your data partition will be overwritten with a fresh installation.

    YaST starts the installation system.

  2. On the Welcome screen, choose Language and Keyboard. Proceed with Next.

    YaST checks your partitions for already installed SUSE Linux Enterprise systems.

  3. On the Select for Upgrade screen, select the partition to upgrade and click Next.

  4. YaST mounts the selected partition and displays the license agreement for the upgraded product. To continue, accept the license.

  5. On the Previously Used Repositories screen, adjust the status of the repositories. By default all repositories are removed. If you have not added any custom repositories, do not change the settings. The packages for the upgrade will be installed from DVD, and you can optionally enable the default online repositories in the next step.

    If you have custom repositories, you have two choices:

    • Leave the repository in state Removed. Software that was installed from this repository will be removed during the upgrade. Use this method if no version of the repository that matches the new release is available.

    • Update and enable the repository if it matches the new release. Change its URL by clicking the repository in the list, and then click Change. Enable the repository by checking Toggle Status until it is set to Enable.

    Do not keep repositories from the previous release, as the system may be unstable or not work at all. Then proceed by clicking Next.

  6. The next step depends on whether the upgraded system is registered with the SUSE Customer Center or not.

    1. If the system is not registered with the SUSE Customer Center, YaST displays a pop-up message suggesting using a second installation medium, the SLE-15-SP6-Full-ARCH-GM-media1.iso image.

      If you do not have that medium, the system cannot be upgraded without registration.

    2. If the system is registered with the SUSE Customer Center, YaST will show possible migration targets and a summary.

      Select one migration target from the list and proceed with Next.

  7. In the next dialog you can optionally add an additional installation medium. If you have additional installation media, activate the I would like to install an additional Add On Product option and specify the media type.

  8. Review the Installation Settings for the upgrade.

  9. If all settings are according to your wishes, start the installation and removal procedure by clicking Update.

    Tip
    Tip: Upgrade failure on SMT clients

    If the machine to upgrade is an SMT client, and the upgrade fails, see Procedure 3.1, “Deregistering a SUSE Linux Enterprise client from an SMT server” and restart the upgrade procedure afterward.

  10. After the upgrade process has finished successfully, perform the post-upgrade steps described in Chapter 6, Finishing the upgrade.

4.5 Upgrading with SUSE Manager

SUSE Manager is a server solution for providing updates, patches, and security fixes for SUSE Linux Enterprise clients. It comes with a set of tools and a Web-based user interface for management tasks. See https://www.suse.com/products/suse-manager/ for more information about SUSE Manager.

You can perform a system upgrade using SUSE Manager. The AutoYaST technology allows upgrades from one major version to the next.

If your machine is managed by SUSE Manager, update it as described in the SUSE Manager documentation. The Client Migration procedure is described in the SUSE Manager Upgrade Guide, available at https://documentation.suse.com/suma/.

4.6 Updating registration status after rollback

When performing a service pack upgrade, it is necessary to change the configuration on the registration server to provide access to the new repositories. If the upgrade process is interrupted or reverted (via restoring from a backup or snapshot), the information on the registration server is inconsistent with the status of the system. This may lead to you being prevented from accessing update repositories or to wrong repositories being used on the client.

When a rollback is done via Snapper, the system notifies the registration server to ensure access to the correct repositories is set up during the boot process. If the system was restored with another method, or the communication with the registration server fails, trigger the rollback on the client manually. An example for manually triggering a rollback can be that the server was not accessible because of network issues. To do a rollback, execute:

> sudo snapper rollback

We suggest always checking that the correct repositories are set up on the system, especially after refreshing the service using:

> sudo zypper ref -s

This functionality is available in the rollback-helper package.

4.7 Registering your system

If the system was not registered before running the upgrade you can register your system at any time using the Product Registration module in YaST.

Registering your systems has these advantages:

  • Eligibility for support

  • Availability of security updates and bug fixes

  • Access to SUSE Customer Center

  1. Start YaST and select Software › Product Registration to open the Registration dialog.

  2. Provide the E-mail address associated with the SUSE account you or your organization uses to manage subscriptions. In case you do not have a SUSE account yet, go to the SUSE Customer Center home page (https://scc.suse.com/) to create one.

  3. Enter the Registration Code you received with your copy of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop.

  4. If one or more local registration servers are available on your network, you can choose one of them from a list.

  5. To start the registration, proceed with Next.

    After successful registration, YaST lists extensions, add-ons, and modules that are available for your system. To select and install them, proceed with Book “Deployment Guide”, Chapter 6 “Registering SUSE Linux Enterprise and managing modules/extensions”, Section 6.3 “Managing modules and extensions in a running system”.

5 Upgrading online

SUSE offers an intuitive graphical and a simple command-line tool to upgrade a running system to a new service pack. Both provide support for rollback of service packs and more. This chapter provides step-by-step instructions on how to perform a service pack upgrade using these tools.

5.1 Conceptual overview

SUSE releases new service packs for the SUSE Linux Enterprise family at regular intervals. To make it easy for customers to migrate to a new service pack and minimize downtime, SUSE supports migrating online while the system is running.

Starting with SLE 12, YaST Wagon has been replaced by YaST migration (GUI) and Zypper migration (command line). This has the following advantages:

  • The system is always in a defined state until the first RPM is updated.

  • Canceling is possible until the first RPM is updated.

  • Simple recovery if there is an error.

  • It is possible to do a rollback via system tools—no backup or restore needed.

  • Use of all active repositories.

  • The ability to skip a service pack

Warning
Warning: Online migration not supported for major releases

The online migration is only supported for migrating between service packs. Online migration is not supported for upgrading to new major releases. For details, see Chapter 2, Upgrade paths and methods.

Use the offline migration to upgrade to a new major release. For details, see Chapter 4, Upgrading offline.

Important
Important: Upgrading SUSE Manager clients

If the system to upgrade is a SUSE Manager client, it cannot be upgraded by YaST online migration or zypper migration. Use the Client Migration procedure instead. It is described in the SUSE Manager Upgrade Guide.

5.2 Service pack migration workflow

A service pack migration can be executed by either YaST, zypper, or AutoYaST.

Before you can start a service pack migration, your system must be registered at the SUSE Customer Center or a local RMT server. SUSE Manager can also be used.

Regardless of the method, a service pack migration consists of the following steps:

  1. Find possible migration targets on your registered systems.

  2. Select one migration target.

  3. Request and enable new repositories.

  4. Run the migration.

The list of migration targets depends on the products you have installed and registered. If you have an extension installed for which the new SP is not yet available, it could be that no migration target is offered to you.

The list of migration targets available for your host will always be retrieved from the SUSE Customer Center and depend on products or extensions installed.

5.3 Canceling service pack migration

A service pack migration can only be canceled at specific stages during the migration process:

  1. Until the package upgrade starts, there are only minimal changes on the system, such as changes to services and repositories. Restore /etc/zypp/repos.d/* to revert to the previous state.

  2. After the package upgrade starts, you can revert to the previous state by using a Snapper snapshot (see Book “Administration Guide”, Chapter 10 “System recovery and snapshot management with Snapper”).

  3. After the migration target was selected, SUSE Customer Center changes the repository data. To revert this state manually, use SUSEConnect --rollback.

5.4 Upgrading with the online migration tool (YaST)

To perform a service pack migration with YaST, use the Online Migration tool. By default, YaST does not install any packages from a third-party repository. If a package was installed from a third-party repository, YaST prevents packages from being replaced with the same package coming from SUSE.

Note
Note: Reduce installation size

When performing the Service Pack migration, YaST will install all recommended packages. Especially in the case of custom minimal installations, this may increase the installation size of the system significantly.

To change this default behavior and allow only required packages, adjust the solver.onlyRequires option in /etc/zypp/zypp.conf.

solver.onlyRequires = true

Additionally, edit the file /etc/zypp/zypper.conf and change the installRecommends option.

installRecommends=false

This changes the behavior of all package operations, such as the installation of patches or new packages. To change the behavior of Zypper for a single invocation, use the parameter --no-recommends.

To start the service pack migration, do the following:

  1. Deactivate all unused extensions on your registration server to avoid future dependency conflicts. If you forget an extension, YaST will later detect unused extension repositories and deactivate them.

  2. If you are logged in to a GNOME session running on the machine you are going to update, switch to a text console. Running the update from within a GNOME session is not recommended. Note that this does not apply when being logged in from a remote machine (unless you are running a VNC session with GNOME).

  3. Run YaST online update to get the latest package updates for your system.

  4. Install the package yast2-migration and its dependencies (in YaST under Software › Software Management).

  5. Restart YaST, otherwise the newly installed module will not be shown in the control center.

  6. In YaST, choose Online Migration (depending on the version of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop that you are upgrading from, this module is categorized under either System or Software). YaST will show possible migration targets and a summary. If more than one migration target is available for your system, select one from the list.

  7. Select one migration target from the list and proceed with Next.

  8. If the migration tool offers update repositories, it is recommended to proceed with Yes.

  9. If the online migration tool finds obsolete repositories from DVD or a local server, it is highly recommended to disable them. Obsolete repositories are for a previous service pack. Old repositories from SUSE Customer Center or RMT are removed automatically.

    If the registration server does not offer migrations for a module or extension, its repository configuration will remain unchanged. This usually happens with 3rd party repositories such as the NVIDIA Compute Module that are not specific to a product version or service pack. If necessary, you can manually check the repository configuration after the migration.

  10. Check the summary and proceed with the migration by clicking Next. Confirm with Start Update.

  11. After the successful migration restart your system.

5.5 Upgrading with Zypper

To perform a service pack migration with Zypper, use the command line tool zypper migration from the package zypper-migration-plugin.

Note
Note: Reduce installation size

When performing the Service Pack migration, YaST will install all recommended packages. Especially in the case of custom minimal installations, this may increase the installation size of the system significantly.

To change this default behavior and allow only required packages, adjust the solver.onlyRequires option in /etc/zypp/zypp.conf.

solver.onlyRequires = true

Additionally, edit the file /etc/zypp/zypper.conf and change the installRecommends option.

installRecommends=false

This changes the behavior of all package operations, such as the installation of patches or new packages. To change the behavior of Zypper for a single invocation, use the parameter --no-recommends.

To start the service pack migration, do the following:

  1. If you are logged in to a GNOME session running on the machine you are going to update, switch to a text console. Running the update from within a GNOME session is not recommended. Note that this does not apply when being logged in from a remote machine (unless you are running a VNC session with GNOME).

  2. Register your SUSE Linux Enterprise machine if you have not done so:

    > sudo SUSEConnect --regcode YOUR_REGISTRATION_CODE
  3. Start the migration:

    > sudo zypper migration

    Some notes about the migration process:

    • If more than one migration target is available for your system, Zypper allows you to select one SP from the list. This is the same as skipping one or more SPs. Keep in mind, online migration for base products (SLES, SLED) remains available only between the SPs of a major version.

    • By default, Zypper uses the option --no-allow-vendor-change which is passed to zypper dup. If a package was installed from a third-party repository, this option prevents packages from being replaced with the same package coming from SUSE.

    • If Zypper finds obsolete repositories coming from DVD or a local server, it is highly recommended to disable them. Old SUSE Customer Center or RMT repositories are removed automatically.

  4. Review all the changes, especially the packages that are going to be removed. Proceed by typing y (the exact number of packages to upgrade can vary on your system):

    266 packages to upgrade, 54 to downgrade, 17 new, 8 to reinstall, 5 to remove, 1 to change arch.
    Overall download size: 285.1 MiB. Already cached: 0 B  After the operation, additional 139.8 MiB will be used.
    Continue? [y/n/? shows all options] (y):

    Use the ShiftPage ↑ or ShiftPage ↓ keys to scroll in your shell.

  5. After successful migration restart your system.

5.6 Upgrading with plain Zypper

If your system is not registered because you do not have access to the Internet or a registration server, migrating to a new service pack is not possible with YaST Migration or zypper migration. In this case you can still migrate to a new service pack with plain Zypper and some manual interactions.

Important
Important: For unregistered systems only

This migration path to a new service pack is only supported for unregistered systems that do not have access to the Internet or a registration server. This may, for example, be the case for machines in a specially protected network. If you have a registered system, use YaST or Zypper migration.

Important
Important: Installation sources

This migration path requires that the system you are going to migrate has access to the installation sources. For example, this can be done by setting up an RMT server or an SLP server.

It is also required that the system has access to an up-to-date update repository for the installed product version.

  1. If you are logged in to a graphical session running on the machine you are going to migrate, log out of that session and switch to a text console. Running the update from within a graphical session is not recommended. Note that this does not apply when being logged in from a remote machine (unless you are running a VNC session with X).

  2. Update the package management tools with the old SUSE Linux Enterprise repositories:

    > sudo zypper patch --updatestack-only
  3. Get a list of packages that currently do not have a repository assigned to them (orphaned packages). These packages will not be migrated and there is no guarantee that they will work after the migration (because other packages they rely on may have changed in such a way that they are no longer compatible). To get the list, run:

    > sudo zypper packages --orphaned

    Carefully review the list and remove all orphaned packages that are no longer needed. Make a note of all remaining orphaned packages, you will need it later for comparison.

  4. Get a list of all repositories that the system is currently subscribed to by running:

    > sudo zypper repos -u

    Update each repository URL so that its product version number is 15-SP6. For example, if the URL of a repository is

    http://rmt.example.com/repo/SUSE/Products/SLE-15-SP4-Product-SLES/x86_64/product/

    change it to

    http://rmt.example.com/repo/SUSE/Products/SLE-15-SP6-Product-SLES/x86_64/product/

    This needs to be done with all repositories that are enabled. You may want to consider also doing this for repositories that are currently disabled, to avoid having wrong installation sources in the system when activating them at a later point in time.

    To change the repository URLs you have the following options:

    1. Using YaST › Software › Software Repositories. Select a repository and click Edit to make the required change. Repeat this for all repositories.

    2. Using Zypper. Remove the old repository by running

      > sudo zypper removerepo OLD_REPO_ID

      Then add the corresponding new repository by running

       > sudo zypper addrepo -f URL NAME-15-SP6
    3. By editing repository configuration files in /etc/zypp/repos.d. Each repository is represented by one configuration file. Changing the value for the baseurl parameter is required in each file.

  5. Review your changes by running zypper repos -u and update the repositories by running:

    > sudo zypper refresh -f -s

    In case updating a repository fails, double-check whether you entered the wrong URL. If the problem cannot be fixed, it is recommended to disable the failing repository.

    If all repositories are correctly configured, run

    > sudo zypper refresh -f -s

    again, to make sure all repositories are up-to-date.

  6. Before starting the migration it is recommended do a test run first:

    > sudo zypper dup -D --no-allow-vendor-change --no-recommends

    The parameter -D will perform a dry run that simulates the migration without actually changing the system. If problems occur, fix them before proceeding. In case the test run succeeds, perform the real migration by running:

    > sudo zypper dup --no-allow-vendor-change --no-recommends

    -no-allow-vendor-change ensures that third-party RPMs will not overwrite RPMs from the base system. The option --no-recommends ensures that packages deselected during initial installation will not be added again.

  7. When the migration has finished and the system has booted into the new service pack version, run the check for orphaned packages again:

    > sudo zypper packages --orphaned

    Compare the new list with the one you generated before starting the migration. If new packages appear in the list, it may be because they were moved to a different module in the new service pack. If you did not have that module in the previous installation, the package did not get updated.

    You can check to which module a package belongs at https://scc.suse.com/packages. Add the missing modules using zypper addrepo or the YaST Software Repositories module, and update the orphaned packages afterwards by running:

    > sudo zypper install --no-recommends LIST OF PACKAGES
  8. You have successfully migrated to a new service pack!

5.7 Rolling back a service pack

If a service pack does not work for you, SUSE Linux Enterprise supports reverting the system to the state before the service pack migration was started. Prerequisite is a Btrfs root partition with snapshots enabled (this has been the default since SLES 12). See Book “Administration Guide”, Chapter 10 “System recovery and snapshot management with Snapper” for details.

  1. Get a list of all Snapper snapshots:

    > sudo snapper list

    Review the output to locate the snapshot that was created immediately before the service pack migration was started. The column Description contains a corresponding statement and the snapshot is marked as important in the column Userdata. Memorize the snapshot number from the column # and its date from the column Date.

  2. Reboot the system. From the boot menu, select Start boot loader from a read-only snapshot and then choose the snapshot with the date and number you memorized in the previous step. A second boot menu (the one from the snapshot) is loaded. Select the entry starting with SLES 15 SP6 and boot it.

  3. The system boots into the previous state with the system partition mounted read-only. Log in as root and check whether you have chosen the correct snapshot. Also make sure everything works as expected. Note that since the root file system is mounted read-only, restrictions in functionality may apply.

    In case of problems or if you have booted the wrong snapshot, reboot and choose a different snapshot to boot from—up to this point no permanent changes have been made. If the snapshot is correct and works as expected, make the change permanent by running the following command:

    > sudo snapper rollback

    Reboot the machine. On the boot screen, choose the default boot entry to reboot into the reinstated system.

  4. Check if the repository configuration has been properly reset. Furthermore, check if all products are properly registered. If either one is not the case, updating the system at a later point in time may no longer work, or the system may be updated using the wrong package repositories.

    Make sure the system can access the Internet before starting this procedure.

    1. Refresh services and repositories by running

      > sudo zypper ref -fs
    2. Get a list of active repositories by running

      > sudo zypper lr

      Carefully check the output of this command. No services and repositories that were added for the update should be listed. For example, if you are rolling back from SLES 15 SP6 to SLES15 GA, the list must contain the SLES15-GA repositories, and not the SLES15-SP6 repositories.

      If wrong repositories are listed, delete them and, if necessary, replace them with the versions matching your product or service pack version. For a list of repositories for the supported migration paths refer to Section 1.3, “Module dependencies and lifecycles”. (Note that manual intervention should not be necessary, as the repositories should be updated automatically, but it is a best practice to verify and make any necessary corrections.)

    3. Last, check the registration status for all products installed by running

      > sudo SUSEConnect --status

      All products should be reported as being Registered. If this is not the case, repair the registration by running

      > sudo SUSEConnect --rollback

Now you have successfully reverted the system to the state that was captured immediately before the service pack migration was started.

5.8 Upgrading with SUSE Manager

SUSE Manager is a server solution for providing updates, patches, and security fixes for SUSE Linux Enterprise clients. It comes with a set of tools and a Web-based user interface for management tasks. See https://www.suse.com/products/suse-manager/ for more information about SUSE Manager.

SP Migration allows migrating from one Service Pack (SP) to another within one major version (for example, from SLES 15 GA to SLES 15 SP6).

If your machine is managed by SUSE Manager, update it as described in the SUSE Manager documentation. The Client Migration procedure is described in the SUSE Manager Upgrade Guide, available at https://documentation.suse.com/suma/.

6 Finishing the upgrade

After the upgrade, you need to perform some additional tasks. The following chapter guides you through these steps.

6.1 Check for old packages

Use zypper packages to check for orphaned and unneeded packages.

Orphaned Packages are no longer available in any of the configured package repositories. They can no longer get updated and become unsupported.

For a list of orphaned packages, run:

> zypper packages --orphaned

Unneeded packages are dependencies of packages that have been installed either explicitly by the user or implicitly as part a pattern or product, and that have been removed in the meantime. They are usually no longer needed and should be removed, too.

For a list of unneeded packages, run:

> zypper packages --unneeded
Tip
Tip

To avoid unneeded packages, use zypper rm with the --clean-deps option or YaST with Options › Clean up when deleting packages enabled.

You can combine both lists into one:

> zypper packages --orphaned --unneeded

Use these lists to determine which packages are still needed and which can be safely removed.

Warning
Warning: Do not remove packages you need

If packages are renamed or removed from a pattern or product, zypper may no longer consider them explicitly installed and mark them as unneeded, even though they are still crucial for your installation.

Carefully review the list of packages you are removing.

To remove all orphaned and unneeded packages with a single command, run:

> sudo zypper rm $(zypper --no-refresh packages --orphaned --unneeded | gawk '{print $5}' | tail -n +5)

Exclude a single package or pattern from being uninstalled:

> sudo zypper rm $(zypper --no-refresh packages --orphaned --unneeded | gawk '{print $5}' | tail -n +5 | grep -v PACKAGE_TO_EXCLUDE)

Exclude multiple packages defined in a text file, separated by a newline:

> sudo zypper rm $(zypper --no-refresh packages --orphaned --unneeded | gawk '{print $5}' | tail -n +5 | grep -v -f /PACKAGES/TO/KEEP.txt)

6.2 Review your configuration files

Check for any *.rpmnew and *.rpmsave files. When an upgrade includes changes to a default configuration file that has been altered after package installation, instead of overwriting the file, one of these file types is created. While *.rpmnew contains the new default configuration and leaves your altered file untouched, *.rpmsave is a copy of your altered configuration that has been replaced by the new default file.

If you find any of these files, examine their content and merge desirable changes. You do not need to search the whole file system, only the /etc directory. Use the following command:

> find /etc/ -name "*.rpmnew" -o -name "*.rpmsave"

6.3 Enable the Python 3 module

SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 uses Python 3.6 by default. Python 3.9 was added in SLED 15 SP3 as a more recent alternative. This version is no longer supported as of SLED 15 SP4. Instead, recent Python versions with important updates and security fixes are available through the Python 3 module.

If you installed Python 3.9 under SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP3, enable the Python 3 module with:

> sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-module-python3/15.6/x86_64.

Alternatively, you can return to the default Python version by removing 3.9 with zypper remove -u python39.

6.4 Reformat XFS v4 devices

SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop supports the on-disk format (v5) of the XFS file system. The main advantages of this format are automatic checksums of all XFS metadata, file type support, and support for a larger number of access control lists for a file.

Note that this format is not supported by SUSE Linux Enterprise kernels older than version 3.12, by xfsprogs older than version 3.2.0, and GRUB 2 versions released before SUSE Linux Enterprise 12.

Important
Important: V4 is deprecated

XFS is deprecating file systems with the V4 format. This file system format was created by the command:

> sudo mkfs.xfs -m crc=0 DEVICE

The format was used in SLE 11 and older releases, and it currently creates a warning message by dmesg:

Deprecated V4 format (crc=0) will not be supported after September 2030

If you see the message above in the output of the dmesg command, it is recommended that you update your file system to the V5 format:

  1. Back up your data to another device.

  2. Create the file system on the device.

    > sudo mkfs.xfs -m crc=1 DEVICE
  3. Restore the data from the backup on the updated device.

7 Backports of source code

SUSE extensively uses backports, for example for the migration of current software fixes and features into released SUSE Linux Enterprise packages. The information in this chapter explains why it can be misleading to compare version numbers to judge the capabilities and the security of SUSE Linux Enterprise software packages. This chapter also explains how SUSE keeps the system software secure and current while maintaining compatibility for your application software on top of SUSE Linux Enterprise products. You will also learn how to check which public security issues actually are addressed in your SUSE Linux Enterprise system software, and the current status of your software.

7.1 Reasons for backporting

Upstream developers are primarily concerned with advancing the software they develop. Often they combine fixing bugs with introducing new features which have not yet received extensive testing and which may introduce new bugs.

For distribution developers, it is important to distinguish between:

  • bugfixes with a limited potential for disrupting functionality; and

  • changes that may disrupt existing functionality.

Usually, distribution developers do not follow all upstream changes when a package has become part of a released distribution. Usually they stick instead with the upstream version that they initially released and create patches based on upstream changes to fix bugs. This practice is known as backporting.

Distribution developers generally will only introduce a newer version of software in two cases:

  • when the changes between their packages and the upstream versions have become so large that backporting is no longer feasible, or

  • for software that inherently ages badly, like anti-malware software.

SUSE uses backports extensively as we strike a good balance between several concerns for enterprise software. The most important of them are:

  • Having stable interfaces (APIs) that software vendors can rely on when building products for use on SUSE's enterprise products.

  • Ensuring that packages used in the release of SUSE's enterprise products are of the highest quality and have been thoroughly tested, both in themselves and as part of the whole enterprise product.

  • Maintaining the various certifications of SUSE's enterprise products by other vendors, like certifications for Oracle or SAP products.

  • Allowing SUSE's developers to focus on making the next product version, rather than spreading their focus thinly across a wide range of releases.

  • Keeping a clear view of what is in a particular enterprise release, so that our support can provide accurate and timely information about it.

7.2 Reasons against backports

It is a general policy rule that no new upstream versions of a package are introduced into our enterprise products. This rule is not an absolute rule however. For certain types of packages, in particular anti-virus software, security concerns weigh heavier than the conservative approach that is preferable from the perspective of quality assurance. For packages in that class, occasionally newer versions are introduced into a released version of an enterprise product line.

Sometimes also for other types of packages the choice is made to introduce a new version rather than a backport. This is done when producing a backport is not economically feasible or when there is a very relevant technical reason to introduce the newer version.

7.3 The implications of backports for interpreting version numbers

Because of the practice of backporting, one cannot simply compare version numbers to determine whether a SUSE package contains a fix for a particular issue or has had a particular feature added to it. With backporting, the upstream part of a SUSE package's version number merely indicates what upstream version the SUSE package is based on. It may contain bug fixes and features that are not in the corresponding upstream release, but that have been backported into the SUSE package.

One particular area where this limited value of version numbers when backporting is involved can cause problems is with security scanning tools. Some security vulnerability scanning tools (or particular tests in such tools) operate solely on version information. These tools and tests are therefore prone to generating false positives (when a piece of software is incorrectly identified as vulnerable) when backports are involved. When evaluating reports from security scanning tools, always check whether an entry is based on a version number or on an actual vulnerability test.

7.4 Checking for fixed bugs and backported features

Information about backported bug fixes and features is stored in several locations:

  • The package's changelog:

    > rpm -q --changelog name-of-installed-package
    > rpm -qp --changelog packagefile.rpmpackagefile.rpm

    The output briefly documents the change history of the package.

  • The package changelog may contain entries like bsc#1234 (BugzillaSuse. Com) that refer to bugs in SUSE's Bugzilla tracking system or links to other bugtracking systems. Because of confidentiality policies, not all such information may be accessible to you.

  • A package may contain a /usr/share/doc/PACKAGENAME /README.SUSE file which contains general, high-level information specific to the SUSE package.

  • The RPM source package contains the patches that were applied during the building of the regular binary RPMs as separate files that can be interpreted if you are familiar with reading source code. See Book “Administration Guide”, Chapter 9 “Managing software with command line tools”, Section 9.1.3.5 “Installing or downloading source packages” for installing sources of SUSE Linux Enterprise software. See Book “Administration Guide”, Chapter 9 “Managing software with command line tools”, Section 9.2.5 “Installing and compiling source packages” for building packages on SUSE Linux Enterprise. See the Maximum RPM book for details about software package builds for SUSE Linux Enterprise.

  • For security bug fixes, consult the SUSE security announcements. These often refer to bugs through standardized names like CAN-2005-2495 which are maintained by the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) project.