• 1 Post
  • 5 Comments
Joined 1 month ago
cake
Cake day: June 30th, 2025

help-circle





  • I haven’t gone through your specific case, but generally what I do when doing a major update with potentially breaking changes:

    • Read the upgrade guides, if they have them. Some devs will put them out if they know their users will encounter issues when upgrading. If they don’t have an upgrade guide, there might be some in the change logs. Going from 1.17.1 to (assuming) 2.x.y, check the change logs at 2.0.0.
    • Backup everything. I’d recommend doing this on a regular basis anyway.
    • (If you’re running it in a docker container) Setup a second instance, restore the backup, then run the upgrade. You’ll be able to check to see if it breaks at all. If it works, you can just destroy the old one and use the new one
    • (if you’re not running it in a container) with the backup, try upgrading. If it breaks, you should be able to uninstall & reinstall the old version, then restore the backup

  • It says Hungary was violating Brussels laws, but doesn’t explain what and the nuances of why the Danish are going after Hungary.

    From what I found: Hungary put a new law in place that says they can investigate and prosecute anyone that “threatens the sovereignty of Hungary” [source]. But because of how the law is written, it violates the EU policy that states citizens have the right to privacy.

    It seems like the Danish are pulling an article 7 (to block Hungary from voting) so they can boot out Hungary who is an opponent to Ukraine becoming an EU member; which is causing problems with the EU supporting Ukraine against Russia