I’m really interested in trying out an immutable distro like Fedora Silverblue. And I get the concept that the base system is read only and you install software through flatpaks.
But how does this work in practice?
If I change a config file in /etc, will the changes survive a reboot?
How can I see or decide which parts of the system are immutable and which are not?
Can I install packages that aren’t available as flatpaks, like more obscure stuff or command line tools?
What about ppd files for printing, firmware, drivers, fonts, icon packs, etc.? Where and how do those get installed?
Also, is it possible to replace or remove packages that are within the immutable part of the system?
I didn’t completely understand how etc is handled, but it worked fine and kept my configs while merging at the same time the files from the apps i installed
I’m note sure it’s possible, at least i didn’t see the option and i’ve never tried (i never needed it anyway). /var was mutable, /usr/lib /usr/bin… were not (/usr/local was mutable), and /opt and /home were symlinked to /var/opt and /var/home, so mutable
edit: now i remember there was something about using “overlays” that allowed to modify /usr, i think i only used it once so i don’t really remember
Yes, thanks to rpm-ostree, you can install basically any rpm with it, it’s just really slow as each transaction must create a new generation, but it worked fine. Also you are supposed to reboot to make the changes apply, unless you use the
--apply-live
option (which was described as experimental when i was using it, don’t now about now tho)Same thing, rpm-ostree
So I’ve read up a bit, and I’ve decided that Fedora Silverblue isn’t for me.
It just isn’t…simple enough. Like, the base concept is nice. But for example Firefox is part of the immutable system, which really screams “userspace app” to me, not base system.
Then the system doesn’t replace dnf with a different way of handling packages - it adds 3 more on top. So now I’ve got 4 ways of handling packages on my system (rpm and dnf inside toolbx, rpm-ostree and flatpaks).
And I have to decide which I want to use for what.
For Firefox I replaced it with the flatpak version and hid the system version, I found that better
As for chosing what to install where, i made simple rules
But if it’s too much of a hassle for and it’s gonna be your daily system, yeah better not use it.