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General Linux Discussion Thread
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<blockquote data-quote="SeriousHoax" data-source="post: 1102470" data-attributes="member: 78686"><p>Yeah, and Tumbleweed is very stable for a rolling release distro since they do automatic quality testing via their openQA tool. Sometimes it even gets updates quicker than Arch like last night it received kernel 6.10.11 which Arch hadn't received yet at that time. One of the main advantages of openSUSE is that it comes with BTRFS Snapshot by default. So, if you break something you simply just rollback to a state before the breakage as if nothing happened. </p><p>Reminds me of [USER=61091]@simmerskool[/USER] who broke his ZorinOS after installing XFCE.</p><p>Actually, I've been using Arco Linux (based on Arch) for the last few days. I really like it as Arch is great and Pacman package manager is blazingly fast at everything from downloading to installation but might just go back to Tumbleweed again because I couldn't make Arch+Grub+Secure Boot to work together. Works fine with systemd-boot+secure boot after signing them using a tool name sbctl. But systemd-boot doesn't support BTRFS Snapshot.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SeriousHoax, post: 1102470, member: 78686"] Yeah, and Tumbleweed is very stable for a rolling release distro since they do automatic quality testing via their openQA tool. Sometimes it even gets updates quicker than Arch like last night it received kernel 6.10.11 which Arch hadn't received yet at that time. One of the main advantages of openSUSE is that it comes with BTRFS Snapshot by default. So, if you break something you simply just rollback to a state before the breakage as if nothing happened. Reminds me of [USER=61091]@simmerskool[/USER] who broke his ZorinOS after installing XFCE. Actually, I've been using Arco Linux (based on Arch) for the last few days. I really like it as Arch is great and Pacman package manager is blazingly fast at everything from downloading to installation but might just go back to Tumbleweed again because I couldn't make Arch+Grub+Secure Boot to work together. Works fine with systemd-boot+secure boot after signing them using a tool name sbctl. But systemd-boot doesn't support BTRFS Snapshot. [/QUOTE]
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