send help
Oh no, anyway
Boots into snapshot
Yup and I am getting sick of hearing this even on Arch Linux. Like, mofo, you could literally run a snapshot or backup before upgrading, don’t blame us if you’re yoloing your god damn computer. Windows have exactly the same problem too and this is why we have backups. Christ.
On my Arch Linux Install, I literally have a Pacman Hook that would forcibly run backup and verify the said backup before doing a system-wide update.
Beating this with NixOS
Not necessarily, you still need backups or snapshots especially on home directory in case software have a nasty bug like deleting your data.
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Sure until you can’t with flatpak. Flatpak does not safeguard against system binaries and there are always risks associated with that.
Honestly I think I am going to move on from Programming.dev, it’s filled with script kiddie like you. Good lord.
Fuck y’all. Good evening.
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Unfortunately I think we lost the True Linux Dev. Hopefully someone else comes in to maintain it.
You forgot a word, I guess you meant Nvidia GPU. Not that it’s accurate still.
it’s amd gpu and I’m trying to install opencl
Please don’t say you installed the proprietary driver…
You can install rocm but it still kinda sucks.
It’s the proprietary driver GPU experience. All the proprietary drivers can leave you hanging like this
Correction: Using NVidia GPU on openSUSE experience
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Might be true, honestly. I’m on NixOS using the proprietary drivers for my 3080 and 4090. No issues, took one line of configuration. I do have to stay on X11 unfortunately until Wayland supports the real drivers at least (though i hear that’s being worked on, maybe already working?).
For all of NixOS’ pain, it really does make some things awesome and simple.
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Analyzing the symptoms, I’m afraid to say, you might have nvidia.
Ok I did it! opencl works and computer has gui. nice and updated
chroot goes brrrr
Never happened to me, yet. Every update ran correctly and if there were any package conflicts it will prompt you several choices.
To be fair, I had this happen to me once with Nvidia’s open drivers and I switched back to the default… but just once, and either way if you do it properly and you won’t have to worry about this stuff. It was an easy fix to switch back that took all of five minutes away from me—and that’s if you count the boot time. You shouldn’t.
This is so true. I still think opensuse is great but it didn’t work out for me AT ALL. almost anything I tried to do faced with issues.