• @hackeryarnOP
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    91 year ago

    That’s a super interesting idea. I will have to give that a shot!

    Right now I just use flatpak for all my gaming needs and shared things like browsers, slack, etc.

    • @[email protected]M
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      1 year ago

      My issue with flatpaks is that having too many flatpaks becomes a chore to manage. I did not have a fun time with Steam in a flatpak (required some mucking around to get the DPI and cursor size right) and same with Chromium a while back (took me a long time to figure out how to pass on the flags to enable Wayland support). IMO, having a single container (or a container for a particular activity, like gaming) would be a much more cleaner approach, while offering the flexibility akin to a mutable OS (so no weird flatpak quirks to deal with… in theory). This would also make things like backups easier, I could just save my “gaming” container to one tar and not worry about whether I missed any dependencies etc.

      • Vincent
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        1 year ago

        If that is your ideal setup, then I think VanillaOS and its apx package manager might be of interest to you.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        That’s pretty much what I do, spin up a container for anything I need to do and everything is within that… once I’ve finished I blow the container away and all the dependencies go with it. Currently use proxmox as a frontend for that although I ran on the command line for ages before switching to a beefier server.

        I do the same with docker - nest it in a container so everything is together (and also so it can’t screw around with the host networking). eg. my lemmy container has the lemmy docker and its dependencies together.

      • @hackeryarnOP
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        31 year ago

        Yeah that’s totally fair. It’s definitely far from perfect. Although, I do like that it provides at least some level of isolation.