Ok man, there are no problems. You system will work perfectly, 'cause unlike
Windows Linux is a modular kernel. On the next boot (already on new
motherboard) all of your hardware will be re-detected, and the correct
modules will be loaded.
The only "problem" that can happen is your NIC appear as "eth1", because
"eth0" is already "remembered" from the old motherboard... (just edit udev
rules to correct this)
PS: Sorry by my poor english.
2010/6/11 loyal_barber <loyal_barber@yahoo.com>
>
>
> I have a system running CentOS 5.4. I needed to upgrade the memory but
> alas, it only has the 2 slots which are already full. I picked up
> a motherboard cheap that works with my ancient Quad Core AMD processor
> but instead of nVidia chipset it is an AMD chipset. That means
> the entirety of disk drivers, video drivers, etc will be different.
> I would like to hear of anyone has done this without starting fresh
> and what the gotchas are besides the obvious back everything up.
>
> Loyal
>
>
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Friday, June 11, 2010
Re: [LINUX_Newbies] swapping mobo with installed CentOS 5
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