Btrfs my beloved. Things stop working? Just load a snapshot lol.
Just don’t try plugging it into a Raspberry Pi 5.
No data loss, but won’t work without changing your kernel. The other way around is much worse though — you can use an RPi5 to make a BTRFS drive which essentially only works on RPi5s.
As a former arch linux guy, the solution to this is to be prepared by having a separate partition for home, and a bash script to reinstall f—ing everything again with a single command.
a bash script to reinstall f—ing everything again
Why would you ever want to do that?
First of all, almost any Arch update induced problem can be solved by downgrading the offending package to the previous version, which handily is available in
/var/cache/pacman/pkg/
. This is an essential Arch troubleshooting skill.Even an unbootable system (which has only happened once in my 10 years of using Arch because I didn’t read important news) can be fixed this way, because you can always boot from the installation usb stick and then use
arch-chroot
to access your installation and fix problems.Secondly, if the problem was indeed caused by an Arch update, you will just reinstall the problem if you run a reinstall script.
There’s never a wrong time to update Arch Linux!
No wrong times, only small periods of unfortunate times!
I think you mean there’s never a right time to update! You’re always rolling the dice!
That’s what snapshots are for.
Timeshift has been huge for this
Atomic distro users: Look what they need to mimic a fraction of our power!
Never seen the third LotR film; I was literally about to finally watch it today so thanks for spoiling the movie for me.
That’s Harry Potter
Gollum, Frodo, and Gandalf are in the Harry Potter films?
Frodo has been working out it seems
“An update can wreck your bootloader with no notice, but hey, that’s part of the fun!”
A wrecked bootloader is not a problem, but a lesson to keep a usb drive to be able to chroot.
aaaand thats why i like “newbie” distros like ubuntu mint fedora and such.
i want my computer to work without a hitch and without having to maintain the OS.
Ubuntu has never been remotely stable for me. Something stupid breaks or becomes difficult to get what I want out of it.
Been that way since it came out for me.
I find Arch much less hassle than Ubuntu ever was.
Just recently put Ubuntu on a machine for a work project. It was broken from the get go, throwing errors and being it’s usual shitty self.
I could never recommend it.
Fedora on the other hand has been on a spare laptop for about 6 months and I gotta say they really have put some polish in. Updates are frequent but reasonable and most everything works well. Some small issues but they are not show stoppers and Fedora is aware of them.
The moment you finally install arch and your realize you still feel empty inside.
The moment I finally installed Arch was then I felt “freedom” for the first time. No longer do I need to make compromises on my system and have things installed that I don’t need or want. It’s my system that I put together the way I like it. A bonus is that I know my system pretty well if something should break and I have the wiki to guide me