ron.sanpedro
2006-05-16, 05:12 PM
Is there a whitepaper or some other kind of documentation on the proper upgrade process?
I have the original 9.0 on my machine, and I have started the install of the new build, skipped the content install, and I get to the Install Licenses part, and I have to redo all my network server info. It seems to me that the install SHOULD see that there is an older version and just install the fix. Ideally a silent install, that just fixes what is there, with minimal muss and fuss. I am hoping there is a way to do this and I just haven't found it. If there isn't and installing a new build means completely redoing the entire install process, then I for one vote for patches. At a bare minimum I should be able to reacreate my network install with the exact same settings I had before. As far as I can tell, now I have to document all my settings, recreate my network install based on my notes, then run the install on machines. And I am still unclear how I could get a GPO based Revit install to "update" in anything like an automated manner.
So, "My kingdom (ok, fifedom) for a whitepaper!"
Thanks,
Gordon
I have the original 9.0 on my machine, and I have started the install of the new build, skipped the content install, and I get to the Install Licenses part, and I have to redo all my network server info. It seems to me that the install SHOULD see that there is an older version and just install the fix. Ideally a silent install, that just fixes what is there, with minimal muss and fuss. I am hoping there is a way to do this and I just haven't found it. If there isn't and installing a new build means completely redoing the entire install process, then I for one vote for patches. At a bare minimum I should be able to reacreate my network install with the exact same settings I had before. As far as I can tell, now I have to document all my settings, recreate my network install based on my notes, then run the install on machines. And I am still unclear how I could get a GPO based Revit install to "update" in anything like an automated manner.
So, "My kingdom (ok, fifedom) for a whitepaper!"
Thanks,
Gordon