A few years ago we were able to upgrade everything (OS and Apps) using a single command. I remember this was something we boasted about when talking to Windows and Mac fans. It was such an amazing feature. Something that users of proprietary systems hadn’t even heard about. We had this on desktops before things like Apple’s App Store and Play Store were a thing.
We can no longer do that thanks to Flatpaks and Snaps as well as AppImages.
Recently i upgraded my Fedora system. I few days later i found out i was runnig some older apps since they were Flatpaks (i had completely forgotten how I installed bitwarden for instance.)
Do you miss the old system too?
Is it possible to bring back that experience? A unified, reliable CLI solution to make sure EVERYTHING is up to date?
I guess
yay
is an easy solution, but it’s not very clean, at least from what I remember and just checked. It might be fine for single machines, but since it doesn’t build in a clean chroot, you can never be sure that the claimed dependencies are actually complete, and as such, a package built withyay
on one machine doesn’t necessarily work on another, even for the same processor type (portability might not be possible anyways if you build with-march=native
). It also doesn’t handle automatic rebuilds for necessary .so-bumps, but this is generally non-trivial to solve AFAIK.When I still used Arch exclusively, I had my own repository set up via
aurutils
on a remote server, granted this doesn’t handle .so-bumps by itself either but at least you get somewhat clean packages every time, and you’ll start to notice how many AUR packages are actually broken, with the most common occurrence beinggit
not listed as amakedepends
for packages that retrieve their data via Git because everyone using the AUR has it installed anyways to access anything on there. Granted this is a non-issue in practice but it’s not the only one.