suspectum

@suspectum@lemmy.ml
2 Post – 10 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

OpenSUSE Tumbleweed is really good at keeping up with the latest packages while remaining really stable. Despite recieving gigabytes of updates since February when I first installed it I had a far better experience compared to the "stable" Ubuntu I was using before.

Plasma works really flawless on Tumbleweed for me. I never tried Fedora, but OpenSUSE is a lot better than Ubuntu for me. Less bugs and you always get the latest versions. NVIDIA driver is really easy to install: there are official repositories, they are updated just like any package. I think among the traditional distributions Tumbleweed is the best one.

Teams for Linux sucks and is not maintained anymore. Devs recommend using the web app and this is what I'm using in Chrome, works really well. Otherwise I'm also on Tumbleweed KDE :)

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I must admit I've mostly been an Ubuntu user since about 2007. But switching to Tumbleweed was like a breath of fresh air. A lot of the things were different, but accumulated experience over years allowed me to feel at home. I used YaST once or twice, you don't need it at all.

After many years on Ubuntu I switched to a Tumbleweed and couldn't be happier. Apparently a rolling distro can be more reliable than a traditional point-release one.

OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. It is a rolling distro like Arch but has automated testing of packages, and has been extremely stable in my experience. It's great for gaming because you get all the latest software very quickly after release. According to my observations TW receives updates on average quicker than Arch.

OpenSUSE Tumbleweed is a great choice for a robust rolling distribution. Automated testing of packages rules out most of regressions and its KDE implementation is top notch. If you were considering Fedora or Arch, look no further.

That's all right, thanks! It seems that it does do something indeed, I had to run with debug information and it was simply taking a long time to configure itself

NP_DEBUG=2 ./nix-portable nix-shell -p hello

The only issue is I downloaded a binary package which is dated early 2022 and it uses nix 2.5.1. I need to figure out how to force it to use the latest version of nix.

Thanks! I do run it indeed as a user. I don't have a sudo access on this server so I would like to do a completely portable installation. I downloaded a portable binary for nix https://releases.nixos.org/?prefix=nix/nix-2.16.1/ and unpacked it on a file system, however when running nix it thinks that nix store is at /nix/store:

$ /work/apps/nix/store/jdijjdjl6gjh07s4mwgb6bvm501hmjvh-nix-2.16.1/bin/nix
-bash: /work/apps/nix/store/jdijjdjl6gjh07s4mwgb6bvm501hmjvh-nix-2.16.1/bin/nix: /nix/store/4nlgxhb09sdr51nc9hdm8az5b08vzkgx-glibc-2.35-163/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2: bad ELF interpreter: No such file or directory

So far I wasn't able to configure a different location for nix store: I created ~/.config/nix/nix.conf and put this line inside nix.storeDir = /work/apps/nix/store but it couldn't pick up the custom store location.

Thanks, this explains it. I'm trying to set up nix-portable now, but it's quite confusing. I downloaded nix-portable binary which is a self-extracting archive that silently unpacked a bunch of files to ~/.nix-portable:

$ ls ~/.nix-portable/bin/
bwrap  proot  zstd

It seems I was meant to run it like so ./nix-portable nix-shell but this does nothing. On my local machine running OpenSUSE Tumbleweed it exists immediately, whereas on my work HPC server it gets stuck.

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