[kwlug-disc] Ubuntu LTS future
Jon Champagne
jon at jchampagne.ca
Fri Jun 26 15:16:25 EDT 2020
I've been using Ubuntu 20.04 pretty much since release at the end of
April on my main desktop for school and play, and honestly I generally
forget snaps are even installed. Given, I'm using a pretty high end
desktop, but still snaps don't get in the way and I haven't found any
programs I use on a daily basis to be snap-ified unless they're
incompatible otherwise (ie cherrytree because no python 2 anymore).
Yes, Canonical might be pushing a bit hard with the whole snap thing,
but honestly between snap, flatpak, and native packages I can get
absolutely everything I need to get work done every day, and it all
works like a well oiled machine and has been since day one.
On Fri, Jun 26, 2020 at 2:22 pm, Paul Nijjar via kwlug-disc
<kwlug-disc at kwlug.org> wrote:
>
> In my experience with 20.04 so far, Chromium is the only package I
> noticed that has been replaced with a Snap. Khalid or others who use
> 20.04 more extensively may know more, though.
>
> - Paul
>
> On Fri, Jun 26, 2020 at 01:45:15PM -0400, Doug Moen wrote:
>> I'm deciding how to upgrade my Ubuntu 18.04 LTS desktop.
>>
>> One issue is that I use ZFS and rely on Ubuntu's ZFS packaging.
>> Most distribution don't support ZFS, so you have to roll your own.
>> Another issue is that I have an nvidea GPU.
>>
>> Options:
>> Ubuntu 20.04, but remove Snap.
>> Pop OS 20.04. No support for ZFS on root or automatic filesystem
>> snapshot on package install. But I could roll my own using BTRFS on
>> root. My existing ZFS array is supported. Pop has some features i'd
>> like to try, such as tiling window mode, and a flat pack app store.
>> No snap and good nvidea support.
>>
>> Doug.
>>
>> On Fri, Jun 26, 2020, at 11:39 AM, Khalid Baheyeldin wrote:
>> > In another thread, Paul said:
>> >
>> > On Thu, Jun 25, 2020 at 8:51 PM Paul Nijjar via kwlug-disc
>> <kwlug-disc at kwlug.org <mailto:kwlug-disc at kwlug.org>> wrote:
>> >> Clearly LTS is losing, which means a lot more cognitive burdens
>> for
>> >> sysadmins -- but at the same time Salt (and many other
>> projects) that
>> >> use the rolling release "move fast and break things" approach
>> depend
>> >> upon a stable Ubuntu onto which they can build THEIR software.
>> They
>> >> just don't want the people USING Salt to have the same
>> experience.
>> >> There is some kind of disconnect here.
>> >>
>> >> In this case the situation is worse. Ubuntu included the
>> >> salt-master in its LTS release. Ubuntu 18.04 is still
>> supported. But
>> >> the LTS release promise is now broken, because if somebody
>> installs
>> >> Salt from the Ubuntu repos they will get software with a level
>> 10 CVE.
>> >>
>> >> Unfortunately, I think this means I ought to track upstream and
>> use
>> >> their repos, which is another administrative headache I wanted
>> to
>> >> avoid. It also means that I would now need to upgrade all my
>> minions to
>> >> track the latest release, and who knows what that will break.
>> >
>> > Paul,
>> >
>> > I am in complete agreement with you here. I don't use Salt, but I
>> know
>> > that I want to stay with LTS releases, feeling secure. This
>> depends on
>> > repository governance and stewardship by those who maintain the
>> > packages and the distro's security team.
>> >
>> > Lately, there have been cases where the ball was dropped (Salt is
>> such
>> > a case).
>> >
>> > More worrying is that going forward, Canonical is forging ahead
>> with snap.
>> > Snap freezes the dependencies of an app at a certain point.
>> Moreover, it
>> > requires a cluttered file system, with each app having its own
>> /snap/xxx
>> > file system mounted!
>> >
>> > On a new 20.04 LTS server install, I am getting these snap apps
>> by default:
>> >
>> > /dev/loop0 72M 72M 0 100% /snap/lxd/15682
>> > /dev/loop3 97M 97M 0 100% /snap/core/9436
>> > /dev/loop1 72M 72M 0 100% /snap/lxd/15766
>> >
>> > And Canonical will be releasing Chrome/Chromium as a snap package,
>> > encapsulated withing a .deb. This means Canonical is acting as an
>> intermediary
>> > unnecessarily.
>> >
>> > Mint decided that enough is enough, and will not support snap
>> anymore.
>> >
>> > <https://www.zdnet.com/article/linux-mint-dumps-ubuntu-snap/>
>> >
>> > All this makes me wonder whether Ubuntu should still be the
>> favoured distro
>> > with LTS and rich maintained repos. Should I go with Debian
>> stable and be
>> > done with it?
>> > _______________________________________________
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>> >
>
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>
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