With the prospect of the death-of-product for Redhat 7-9 looming, we've discussed possible alternative distributions. One thing we haven't discussed is migrating from one distribution to another. Obviously, the easy answer is to build a new system, install the new distribution, tweak it up until it does most or all of what the old one does, then pull the plug on the old system. With a desktop system, you could do this in multiple partitions, although having to reboot to check the settings in the old one would be a pain. The real test, though, would be to "Upgrade" the existing installation, right there on the same partition, hoping to preserve at least some of the configuration, personalization, and package choices. Most distros have an "upgrade" function that is supposed to allow you to step from one release to the next with relative grace and ease. I know that going from Mandrake 9.1 to 9.2 wasn't as smooth as it should have been - lots of KDE stuff had to be re-installed for instance. I really don't think that I've seen anything where say a SuSE installer would offer to preserve the setting in a Mandrake installation while "upgrading" to SuSE. That's probably because I haven't really looked - haven't booted a SuSE install disk on the Mandrake system. Has anyone done this? Migrated a system from one Distro to another without just doing a clean rebuild? What advice, warnings, or suggestiosn do you have for us?