OC for you.

    • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pubOP
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      1 year ago

      I daily Fedora at home (and Windows at work). Got tired Arch breaking every so often, and wanted something that didn’t come with anxiety with every update haha

      • Hovenko@iusearchlinux.fyi
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        1 year ago

        Yeah that is completely fine. I would not dare to go Arch on work computer. :D OpenSuse works like a charm, but in general pre/post update snaphosts always save the day.

        • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pubOP
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, I thought those preupdate snapshotters were crazy paranoid freaks… until my first Arch update hahahaha

          I’ve wanted to try OpenSuse for a while now. I have a spare laptop that I was planning on installing Gentoo on, but am dreading the antiquated (by today’s standards) installation process. Maybe I’ll use it for OpenSuse.

          • Hovenko@iusearchlinux.fyi
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            1 year ago

            YOu can set those pre/post snapshots automatically and not really pay attention. I think OpenSuse does that by default if you install your root on btrfs. They even have an OS version called MicroOS which does a cool thing with snaphosts. Basically if your system does not boot after update it will revert automatically to previous snapshot, or you can pick a snapshot to boot into manually from grub menu. Bit it is quite a different thing than your usual linux distro as it uses read only root FS.

              • Hovenko@iusearchlinux.fyi
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                1 year ago

                Hmm… it’s complicated since it’s a very opinionated topic. There will be people who like it and there are people who will kill your entire family because you mentioned it :D The benefits depend on what are you using it for. The difference is mainly in features it provides. I am using it mainly for snapshots, subvolumes and raid support. Raid is stable only for jbod, 0, 1 and 10. 5 and 6 are still having issues. Raid is self healing if I am correct. So if there are some checksum errors it will repair stuff from working mirror.

                You need to do some research before using it. For example since it is cow FS it is not good for databases or VM images. But you can turn off the QCOW feature for specific directory. The other thing is space usage. Due tyo snapshots and cow feature 'df -h ’ will not show exactly correct usage data. You have 'btrfs filesystem df -h ’ instead. If you kill up the disk it can be more bothersome to clean it up afterwards.

                I would say, try it out and decide yourself. There are definitely videos online that explain it better than I did just now.

                • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pubOP
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                  1 year ago

                  Sounds like btrfs is still more on the bleeding edge side of things. Sounds pretty cool for a tester laptop. I installed OpenSuse with it last night, but forgot to format the drive first, so it installed on a small partition. I would just rearrange partitions, but the manpages state that it can cause issues with btrfs, so a reinstall it is haha

                  • Hovenko@iusearchlinux.fyi
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                    1 year ago

                    Oh cool. Yeah. The update pre/post snapshots are enabled by default so you need a bigger partition. I think they recommend 60g? But in the worst case you can turn them off.

                    Regatding bleeding edge thing. I think it is pretty stable for general use. SLES (opensuse enterprise) is using it as default for root fs enterprise deployments. I don’t think they would risk finantial loses using unstable filesystem.

                    I can imagine the problems will probably appear on large scale deploymets, maybe with deduplication. For example I am using btrfs on my home server in raid10 array… for abou 6-8years now. I had issue only once so far which was due to me being a dumbass.