• @woelkchen
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    547 months ago

    Rolling release master race checking for updates several times per day.

    • @[email protected]
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      367 months ago

      Cannot update 600 packages because library-you’ve-never-heard-of conflicts with what-the-fuck-even-is-a-polypterodaclib?

      • @[email protected]
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        37 months ago

        I haven’t had those issues on Tumbleweed. It gets massive updates all the time but everything seems to go just fine.

      • SeekPie
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        17 months ago

        Whenever something breaks/doesn’t feel right, I’ll just reinstall the OS and it’ll work again

    • @AnUnusualRelic
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      7 months ago

      Rolling release, update every now and then, 4000+ packages is common. Nothing ever breaks.

      Thanks zipper!

        • @AnUnusualRelic
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          97 months ago

          I did.

          However my zipper never breaks either. So both work, although in that case it’s loosely related.

    • voxel
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      7 months ago

      i haven’t checked for updates on one of my machines for like 7 months now. some packages are partial upgrades (hilariously, xz is currently on the backdoored version and I don’t care to fix it)
      the thing survived multiple 500+ package upgrades from partial upgrade state and has been running for like 2.5 years now

  • Rikj000
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    347 months ago

    Update your system frequently,
    that minimizes the chance of things breaking in my experience.

    • ReallyZen
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      7 months ago

      I only ever update between projects - no way am I going to break something in the middle of everything.

      This time, jump to new gnome means broken extensions as usual, and a hilarious one: qbittorrent doesn’t show it’s window in Wayland (gnome-with-X works). The soft is running, it there in the list of apps, there’s even a big X “Close Window” button on Zoom Out but no actual window.

      Eh. Lol?

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        I only ever update between projects - no way am I going to break something in the middle of everything.

        I learned to do that the hard way…

    • @[email protected]
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      -17 months ago

      But not too frequently. Updating too often on Arch will increase your chances of something breaking. Updating once a week or twice a week gives the developers some time to fix bugs and make changes to other packages as needed

      • Rikj000
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        -57 months ago

        Your comment is my reasoning why I use Manjaro :P

        All the Arch niceness,
        with fewer bugs / breakage
        and easier to use.

        Sure you might get an issue from outdated dependencies from AUR packages from time to time, but the chance / impact of those is usually rather small.

  • Count Regal Inkwell
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    317 months ago

    Once I went travelling and left my arch(btw) desktop computer unplugged for just over a full month.

    When I came back there were 1 235 packages needing updating, between repo and AUR.

    … It worked fine tho. That install didn’t really go to shit until about a month ago, when months of sloppy system management on my end finally caught up to me and left me with a lot of mysterious issues. So I cut my losses and ditched it.

    I’m using OpenSUSE Tumbleweed now (btw).

    • 乇ㄥ乇¢ㄒ尺ㄖ
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      7 months ago

      I’m using OpenSUSE Tumbleweed now (btw).

      I wonder why people don’t say : I don’t use Arch BTW… ?

      • @[email protected]
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        Yeah, I ran Arch for years and every time the wiki or someone in irc said, “Do it X way, not Y,” I always followed that instruction. Never had a single issue with system stability.

        Guess that’s atypical? I learned a lot, these days I mostly use Ubuntu or Debian.

        Tbh, trusting pacman with everything and keeping my AUR pkg sources preserved in a source folder is literally all it took to keep the system stable. Idk, is that a lot? It felt easy.

    • Ephera
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      47 months ago

      I’m using OpenSUSE Tumbleweed now (btw).

      Well, prepare for some even bigger updates. When a new libc or gcc or similar such version comes out, they like to recompile everything.
      Sometimes you get 4000+ package updates, just from one day to the next.

      They do that, though, because it increases compatibility, and you get automatic snapshots, too, so it’s kind of less daunting than 250+ package updates on Debian et al.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        I haven’t personally had those huge updates ever break on Tumbleweed. The one thing that apparently caused stuff to break was the recent KDE 6 update, but I’ve heard so and did it with Discover’s offline update and it all went fine.

  • @Malatesta
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    307 months ago

    My roommate will have 400+ updates waiting because “something breaks every time I update.”

    • @woelkchen
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      247 months ago

      My roommate will have 400+ updates waiting because “something breaks every time I update.”

      Sounds like your roomie uses Ubuntu with a bunch of random PPAs.

  • Phoenixz
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    167 months ago

    Last time my Ubuntu Linux broke anything during an update is over 15 years ago. Last time a version upgrade failed was probably too over 5-10 years ago. I literally can’t remember those times

  • @BadNewsNobody
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    147 months ago

    I have a laptop running Linux Mint I only use for hosting bar trivia. I only need it to run like 4 applications but I need them to run flawlessly. The last time I updated it jacked up my soundboard, which I didn’t notice until I was in front of a crowd and it played the wrong sound effects. Never again.

  • Johanno
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    147 months ago

    Use glorious nixos. Never fear anything breaking. And even if you manage to do so just roll back in the boot menu or terminal.

    • @LinusSexTips
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      47 months ago

      Ahh until something hangs when updating grub. Had it happen twice over the last couple of months. No real biggie as it’s not the hardest thing to recover from / easy enough to pull my config and rebuild.

      Maybe it’s me, maybe it’s Nixos or Grub.

      • Johanno
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        37 months ago

        Why would you update grub?

        Also I am not sure if I am even using grub. Does systemd have a bootloader?

        Normal people don’t change their bootloader that often.

        • @[email protected]
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          27 months ago

          Yeah, systemd-init. Pretty sure the GUI installer uses systemd-init – never broke once for me.

          • @LinusSexTips
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            27 months ago

            I’ll probs have to migrate back over, grub will be written to on every rebuild for what I’m assuming is adding entries. Not sure of the inner workings all I know is it’s caused me headaches a couple of times now.

      • @[email protected]
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        07 months ago

        That’s why I use Gentoo. If something breaks I just boot system from external drive and solve the issue. Or even if bootloader breaks I can use kernel from external drive, but boot into main system.

    • bruhduh
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      Btrfs snapshots not always work tho), i tell this story for *th time on lemmy but my fedora 38 btrfs broke completely from update to 39 and when i tried revert to 38 with help of btrfs snapshots, what came out is weird mix of 38 and 39 and when i reverted again, my whole ssd on which fedora btrfs was installed, this ssd locked completely, on hardware level, even though it was brand new, 2 weeks of usage by me, i fortunately repaired ssd myself and flashed lmde6 on it, but avoided btrfs and fedora after that

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        Yeah, also a bit wary of btrfs. I sure hope some day bcachefs can be the true cow filesystem in Linux. There is hope, it is pretty good already.

        NixOS definitely solves the issue of rollbacks the best here. And FreeBSD.

    • @[email protected]
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      17 months ago

      Was using btrfs then in manjaro, broke my laptop because btrfs seems to be shit at handling loss of power cases. Switched to good ol ext4 and nixos, never looked back since.

    • @NegativeInf
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      97 months ago

      Don’t worry. When you reboot, your kernel will have magically disappeared!

  • @[email protected]
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    77 months ago

    Or something not working, so you ignore the issue and update around it until the updates allow it to be fixed.

  • @Pacmanlives
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    77 months ago

    Just wait till you have 1200+ packages to upgrade. Luckily OpenSuSe Tumbleweed handles it like a champ

    • @woelkchen
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      67 months ago

      Just wait till you have 1200+ packages to upgrade. Luckily OpenSuSe Tumbleweed handles it like a champ

      New major version of GCC? Let’s recompile everything! Takes a bit to download but yes, openQA at openSUSE does its job.

  • @[email protected]
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    57 months ago

    Updating pandoc on arch feels like 250 packages, so you don’t have to forget updating for this experience.

    • @[email protected]
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      27 months ago

      I once updated shortly before pandoc got updated, and I have the habit of running yay again so it says that no packages need updating. On this occasion however, I suddenly had more updates than before

  • @[email protected]
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    57 months ago

    I update my packages every day on debian. I have yet to have something break. The only issue I ever had was steam got uninstalled when dist-upgrading from debian 11 to 12. Promptly reinstalled, of course all my games were still on disk.

    • metaStatic
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      27 months ago

      I use a cron job but have

      alias updog='sudo apt update | lolcat && sudo apt upgrade -y | lolcat'
      for when I feel like making sure

      • @ozymandias117
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        77 months ago

        You should look into unattended-upgrades