this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2024
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Interesting times ahead! I am really looking forward to the Leap Micro release and hope it advances the state of the art. :-)

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[–] perishthethought@lemm.ee 29 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I'll take care of the "What is this thing?" for you, OP.

Leap Micro is an ultra-reliable, lightweight operating system built for containerized and virtualized workloads.

https://get.opensuse.org/leapmicro

[–] t0mri@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

tell me if this is what I'm looking for. I build Lineage OS, which requires me to download a load of apps. I wish (analogy coming) I could manage everything like a npm project, where I can keep all the dependencies under a single dir. I want to use my package manager to handle the dependencies, rather than manually downloading the bins, mv-ing them to the dir, and setting the path. Once I've finished building, dispose everything with just one or two commands, leaving no footprint on my OS/machine.

[–] boredsquirrel 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I would love Slowroll or Leap, the tested packages of OpenSUSE using rpm-ostree. OpenSUSEs "immutable" model is worthless. It is not better than what Tumbleweed does with BTRFS snapshots

[–] LaggyKar@programming.dev 3 points 4 months ago

It's better in one way, in that updates are applied on reboot rather than pulling the rug put from under running applications. But I agree that it doesn't go all the way, as it doesn't provide a verifiable base system with clearly separated modifications. OSTree would be great.

Another possibility would be to distribute a base image as a btrfs send stream (possibly differential against previous versions) containing a compose-fs image and associated files. And then OS extensions could be installed with systemd-sysext.