Say a friend is looking for a new system, and said person is not particularly savvy with technology, what system would you point them toward?

  • mech@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    It’s the package manager. And it doesn’t have write access to your installed root either.
    It doesn’t change anything on your installed file system at all, it installs a new system next to it.

    • Victor@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      So it installs a whole new filesystem? Interesting. That feels like it sets limitations on how well you can take advantage of the full space of your hard drive.

      And this action can only be performed by the package manager running under some magical God user that sits above root? Or some other mechanism?

      • mech@feddit.org
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        1 day ago

        It utilizes the copy-on-write functionality of the BTRFS file system.
        So it doesn’t need double the disk space, it only actually writes the differences between your installed system and the new one.
        And it runs normally with sudo, not some special god user.
        You could do it manually, too.

        • Victor@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          it runs normally with sudo

          So root still has write access to the system then, gotcha. Then it’s not really immutable per se, the package manager just has a different way of writing to the filesystem that simulates immutability, I guess?

          • hikaru755@lemmy.world
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            14 hours ago

            So root still has write access to the system then

            No, not while the system is running. The base-layer of the OS is fully read-only.

            An update doesn’t write to the existing system, it creates a new one that will be switched to on next reboot. So the current system is not actually changed, hence the term immutability. This has two benefits:

            • atomic updates: either the upgrade is successful and you switch over to the new system, or it isn’t and you stay on the untouched current system. There’s no way to end up in a broken OS because an upgrade went sideways.
            • rollback: the old version stays untouched on disk, so even if the upgrade was successful but something still turns out to be broken after you boot into it, you can just switch back to the old, known-working system
          • mech@feddit.org
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            1 day ago

            I get the feeling you’re deliberately trying not to understand.
            Maybe read up on how it works yourself, since I don’t seem to get through to you.

            • Victor@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              The hell? I’m trying to confirm whether I understood correctly or not. You are definitely mistaken.

              Never mind, I’ll find someone more polite.