What's that one feature you liked so much while distrohopping that you want it by default in all distros?
I have always been discovering new things about Linux distros while distro hopping. And when I get something I really like, I just copy the package name and make sure I install it in every distro I use in the future.
Let me start:
1. Clipboard manager (Gpaste)
2. KDE connect
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eshep
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Normal Mode
in reply to Jerald • • •It has 2 basic functions:
1. It allows you to add (effectively) tab pages to your shell, and split each page into multiple windows. Yes your terminal can likely do this, but this is running inside your shell, so it works the same way if youβre logged in locally or running over SSH.
1/2
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Normal Mode
in reply to Normal Mode • • •2. Your tmux session runs in a server process, so if you close the enclosing terminal or disconnect from your SSH session, everything in your tmux session keeps running and you can reconnect to it later on.
You can also have a bunch of tmux sessions running in a single tmux server, and switch between them with a couple of keystrokes.
Once you start using tmux (or screen) itβs very hard to imagine going back to life without it!
2/2
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Jason
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russjr08
in reply to Jerald • • •I'd probably say the vast amount of packages that can be installed via the AUR, but since the rising popularity of Flatpak, we're getting incredibly close to this.
My next want would be having the ability to make your system declarative (at least, the initial config) in a fashion that NixOS and Guix do.
Nix & NixOS | Reproducible builds and deployments
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eshep
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russjr08
in reply to eshep • • •sudo pacman -S package_name
and then being up and running :)like this
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π½πππππππππ
in reply to russjr08 • • •I have really come to depend on rolling-release systems. I have a few alliances that run Ubuntu, because of a dependency on vendor packages and insufficient interest in fighting with software+hardware issues, and I hate when I have to deal with them. The paupacy of software, the frequent breakage on release upgrades; I don't know how people who prefer these systems justify how bad they are in comparison to Arch (or Nix, or any other rolling release-based distro).
I haven't yet done it, but Arch is so reliable I'm tempted to create a daily
-Syu
cron job (or, more precisely, a systemd timer job, because I'm only yet running Artix on a couple of systems). The only thing that gives me pause are the kernel updates, which are frequency and necessitate system reboots.Those kernel updates really make me wish Linus had focused on a microkernel architecture.
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Ephera
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Secunergy π§
in reply to Ephera • • •iod likes this.
Ephera
in reply to Secunergy π§ • • •Oh, on openSUSE, you don't need to configure anything. Just install with the default partition setup and it will automatically take snapshots of your operating system (/home/ is excluded) whenever there are changes.
It uses incremental snapshots, so they won't take up infinite space...
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Secunergy π§
in reply to Ephera • • •jumanjimanju
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lhotze
in reply to Jerald • • •Everything NixOS (nixos.org) does. I am 99% sure that if anyone tries it out and gets comfortable with it they will never change again.
- Your configuration is written in code, it is therefore persistent. Do you know that annoying feeling of "oh shit, how did I configure x program that I want to install on this other machine"? Never again.
- You can wipe your machine and recover your config in no time. I have 3 machines working with the same config except for small variations. If I change the command to take a screenshot it changes in all of them. If I change my firefox bookmarks it is persisted accross them too. Its awesome.
- NixOS generates revisions of your config automatically. Ifyou change something and it breaks you can always use a previous version of your system that you know works to fix it.
- The Nix package repository is the largest (by far) in all the linux ecosystem. And, even if a package you want is missing, adding
... show moreEverything NixOS (nixos.org) does. I am 99% sure that if anyone tries it out and gets comfortable with it they will never change again.
I am probably missing other nice things, but those are awesome already.
It's true that the learning curve it a bit steeper than usual, but there is no distro quite like it and even for non coders you can get a lot out of it.
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Jerald
in reply to lhotze • • •undefined> Your configuration is written in code, it is therefore persistent. Do you know that annoying feeling of βoh shit, how did I configure x program that I want to install on this other machineβ? Never again.
This is sick! thank you!
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Zach777
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dotCaffe
in reply to lhotze • • •Nix has been on my mind for a while, but I've been hesitant to go all in. Unfortunately, messing around a bit with VMs I still don't feel like I have a good handle on how it all works.
One question I'd ask you is how much upfront work it is to get, say, a stable setup for a laptop where all of the little things are working (opening/closing the lid, connecting to external screen, switching audio outputs, media keys. Laptop stuff!)
As context, a long time ago I ran Gentoo and later Arch, so I'm not technically clueless, but eventually decided to switch to easier distros that came with a reasonable system defaults that works out of the box. I'm super interested in NixOS for all the reasons you mentioned, but worried about how time I'll end up spending just getting that config file to where I want it!
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lhotze
in reply to dotCaffe • • •NixOS as a distribution is pretty easy to get running, if you are familiar with the desktop environment that you install in your system getting it setup is much much simpler than doing so in other distros like Arch, since it usually consists of adding a line like
desktopEnvironment.gnome.enable = true
to your config and the system takes care of almost everything. I even think that gnome gets installed by default on the first run.dotCaffe
in reply to lhotze • • •Thanks! I ended up messing with Nixos a bunch in the past few weeks. My impression is generally positive, though while many of the things it does are very elegant (like the gnome example you mentioned), a lot of it also seems a bit hacky. Ultimately, figuring out how to declaratively configure specific things seems to take so much more time than my current approach of a written document detailing the steps of setting up my system.
I'm going to keep tinkering in a VM though, and maybe I'll have a breakthrough. Keeping configs working across two computers especially is tempting (read: an excuse to get a second computer).
One last question - one of the things I worked on was Firefox with home manager. How did you get it set up so bookmarks were included in the config?
lhotze
in reply to dotCaffe • • •bookmarks
. You can set them there:You can always look at the home manager reference, I usually look here.
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Tiuku
in reply to lhotze • • •Laser
in reply to Tiuku • • •I recently tried NixOS and was considering Guix as well, however what made me decide on NixOS was the fact that it doesn't restrict you to free packages by the distro default choice.
Does Guix have an equivalent to flakes or does it even need one? I never looked closer into the design.
π½πππππππππ
in reply to Jerald • • •For KDE Connect, there's a headless program called mconnect with no Qt (or KDE) dependencies. I use it with the KDE Connect Android app, and it works well. All of the commands on the Linux end are CLI, and many of the functions are supported.
Edit: link to source
GitHub - bboozzoo/mconnect: mconnect - KDE Connect protocol implementation in Vala/C
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Jerald
in reply to π½πππππππππ • • •really sorry, I don't understand the point of this app. I mean, KDE connect works well, so why change?
Are you talking about a situation where it's not possible to install those Qt or KDE dependencies (then it might be useful to me)
Thank you for your output either way!
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tοΏ½m
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π½πππππππππ
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Pantherina
in reply to Jerald • • •Kde has Klipper and everything else? Maybe I miss stability, because currently its a buggy mess sometimes.
MXLinux's Conky manager... havent got it to run normally again.
Vorthas
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