Interesting. After updating today, I can't actually get the Wayland icon anymore. It's always the distro's icon - Fedora or Ubuntu - even after changing it myself for at least the launcher... I'll keep an eye on it but at this point I'm being defeated into just waiting for Flatpak/Snap to make a native messaging portal
I actually kinda like the idea of booting by default into a standard PC desktop setup, and being able to switch over to steam game mode with gamescope for a more console-like experience whenever I want
And also wanted to ask what the limits of those snapshots are; like, say I totally fuck up everything about my install - WM and DE are fucked, errors everywhere, home folder is destroyed or some shit - would a btrfs snapshots be able to roll everything back to a previously working state?
your home folder probably isn't so critical, back that up however you please - you don't need to worry about backing the actual OS up with a btrfs snapshot to recover from an update because of ostree pinning
Say I try installing something myself that could lead to issues, what would be a good way to make a "backup" to roll back to with ostree, just in case I need to?
Say I try it out and attempt to debug it myself - or idk, say instead of layering I rebase into bazzite-plasma:stable - and try to fix the issues that arise myself. If I find that I can't fix them, I'd want to "roll back" to before I attempted the whole thing
If anyone else asks about 1Password and Firefox native messaging, I'd just link them to this and say it's coming soon... I'm going to give up and just keep using the flatpak Firefox for now
This is an implementation of a slightly modified version of the interface proposed in #655 for starting WebExtensions native messaging servers on behalf of a confined web browser. The main change ...
Id.. pin my current deployment, backup my home folder to another drive or something.. right? And if it totally fails or whatever, I'd rebase back to my pinned deployment and restore my home folder backup?
I've done this before on arch and nobara (and clear Linux but that's a diff story), but this time around Id like to be able to say "nah fuck this, this ain't working" and roll back
the whole OS is booted from an image. if you change anything that would alter its immutable state, you need to rebuild this image. that leaves you with an old image and a new one. by default the OS is going to hold onto both in case your new image can't boot etc.