It’s atomic! If the latest version you try has issues you can roll back to the last one that was working. It’s really cool. You cannot write to anything other than /etc and /var unless you make a reversible commit on top of the system base image.
It’s atomic! If the latest version you try has issues you can roll back to the last one that was working. It’s really cool. You cannot write to anything other than /etc and /var unless you make a reversible commit on top of the system base image.
Have you tried “arrete?”
How do you unit test something like that?
All of my problems are because other people are billionaires.
Ok that’s hyperbole, sometimes a jar has a tight lid. Literally every non-trivial problem.
Oh, gotcha. Yeah they are shitheads. It honestly should be illegal to make an account for someone using an unverified email.
Report them to the CFPB. They’re forced to have an actual human review and respond.
Snake coiled around the pie chart swallowing its own tail.
This one would be like a “GNU General Pubic License.”
If this were local and private it could be neato. I will never know, since I have dropped Chrome a long while ago.
My experience with DKMS is that it is fucked on every distro. I was using Debian at the time and it somehow broke.
As long as you don’t post any uncomfortable facts about China.
I saw a video on the extent they went to locking down the Xbox, I think they would do the same for the handheld.
Anti-Snap is pro-consumer. Using Ubuntu at all is anti-consumer, I would rather Mint or just Debian.
This is visually beautiful but makes me long for a few days ago when the weekend was ahead of me.
I agree with you but I assume they want Debian for a reason.
I’m trying to make a TPM chip work out of curiosity and it has been frustrating. Does that help?
What’d you dislike about Incus that libvirt does easier? I’m on a similar trajectory as you. I have Incus on Debian but I am transitioning to IoT for that machine. I kinda like Incus. I want to attach USB devices to a couple of my containers, it was a learning curve but eventually worked out alright.
If you have a spare homelab machine Fedora does an immutable build called IoT (they branded it wrong it’s just a barebones install appropriate for servers also).
Your files are a mutable part, they stick around for rebase and rollback. (I believe /etc also.) If it’s only files in a home directory you could try a different DE by making a new user. But yeah I don’t think it has a built-in solution for something like that.
Thank you for sharing those links, I have been struggling with making
rpm-ostree compose
go from a yaml to an ISO, these look like they might reduce the level of effort!