F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems It has been a lengthy day.

It has been a lengthy day.

It has been a lengthy day.

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AmericanGirl02
Junior Member
10
06-02-2023, 05:21 PM
#1
I changed my gaming PC to CachyOS today. It didn’t go perfectly. I’m still facing some issues—I added an extra SSD for games, formatted it, installed Btrfs, but mounting was a nightmare. Eventually it worked. Steam treats it as an external drive, which is fine, though it’s still frustrating. I’m relieved it functioned. Tomorrow I’ll move my 4TB game drive to Btrfs and fix the installation problem. My networking logs today were tough, with over a hundred GB of downloads. Lucky for me, I have gigabit internet and a 10GbE switch. :3
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AmericanGirl02
06-02-2023, 05:21 PM #1

I changed my gaming PC to CachyOS today. It didn’t go perfectly. I’m still facing some issues—I added an extra SSD for games, formatted it, installed Btrfs, but mounting was a nightmare. Eventually it worked. Steam treats it as an external drive, which is fine, though it’s still frustrating. I’m relieved it functioned. Tomorrow I’ll move my 4TB game drive to Btrfs and fix the installation problem. My networking logs today were tough, with over a hundred GB of downloads. Lucky for me, I have gigabit internet and a 10GbE switch. :3

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xAnduril
Junior Member
17
06-02-2023, 07:11 PM
#2
We chose catchyOS for its modern feel and flexibility, rather than sticking to traditional Debian-based or pure Arch setups. It offers a balance between stability and ease of use while supporting the latest software updates.
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xAnduril
06-02-2023, 07:11 PM #2

We chose catchyOS for its modern feel and flexibility, rather than sticking to traditional Debian-based or pure Arch setups. It offers a balance between stability and ease of use while supporting the latest software updates.

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Vesuviuz
Junior Member
37
06-04-2023, 07:59 PM
#3
Instead of Ext4, you could opt for a faster file system like XFS or Btrfs. For games and apps, consider Flatpak or Steam’s own storage solutions.
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Vesuviuz
06-04-2023, 07:59 PM #3

Instead of Ext4, you could opt for a faster file system like XFS or Btrfs. For games and apps, consider Flatpak or Steam’s own storage solutions.

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TheFleche
Junior Member
13
06-04-2023, 09:28 PM
#4
CachyOS works well enough for gaming. It's a dedicated gaming PC, and most of my time will be spent playing games on it. I appreciate the Cachy meta files, CachyOS Proton, and the option to use Yay along with CachyOS files. Do you prefer BTRFS? I’m not sure if this system includes any Flatpak features at all. I’ll verify that later.
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TheFleche
06-04-2023, 09:28 PM #4

CachyOS works well enough for gaming. It's a dedicated gaming PC, and most of my time will be spent playing games on it. I appreciate the Cachy meta files, CachyOS Proton, and the option to use Yay along with CachyOS files. Do you prefer BTRFS? I’m not sure if this system includes any Flatpak features at all. I’ll verify that later.

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sunnyhop
Junior Member
30
06-06-2023, 03:19 AM
#5
That's fair, I've fully embraced arch for gaming.
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sunnyhop
06-06-2023, 03:19 AM #5

That's fair, I've fully embraced arch for gaming.

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220
06-06-2023, 04:38 AM
#6
What's flatpack?
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itza_red_panda
06-06-2023, 04:38 AM #6

What's flatpack?

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_IceStar_
Junior Member
18
06-17-2023, 10:49 AM
#7
Sorry. Flatpak. And no, flatpak isn't even installed on the machine.
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_IceStar_
06-17-2023, 10:49 AM #7

Sorry. Flatpak. And no, flatpak isn't even installed on the machine.

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FlashPlaysHD
Junior Member
4
06-19-2023, 10:22 AM
#8
Flatpaks are small software packages designed for Android devices, allowing users to install and run apps directly from the app store.
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FlashPlaysHD
06-19-2023, 10:22 AM #8

Flatpaks are small software packages designed for Android devices, allowing users to install and run apps directly from the app store.

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WiWeetaa
Member
65
06-19-2023, 06:02 PM
#9
TL;DR - a flexible method for delivering software that works across different distributions without relying on specific package managers. Since Flatpaks operate independently of your distro, updates happen more often than with traditional updates. They follow a standard format, making them a good fit for first-party repositories and official package lists. Flatpaks are found in repositories like FlatHub, which hosts both official and community versions. Their key benefit is that they bundle all needed libraries, ensuring compatibility across systems. Unlike regular packages, you don’t need to choose specific distros for support; the system handles it. Flatpak runs with limited privileges, offering security, but may require extra permissions depending on the app. They can share dependencies between themselves or other apps via runtimes, blending aspects of both traditional and modern package management. More details are available elsewhere, but this overview captures the main points. Snap packages are another option promoted by Canonical, though they’re proprietary and not free. Flatpaks are often preferred in Ubuntu-based environments, while Snap is more popular outside that space.
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WiWeetaa
06-19-2023, 06:02 PM #9

TL;DR - a flexible method for delivering software that works across different distributions without relying on specific package managers. Since Flatpaks operate independently of your distro, updates happen more often than with traditional updates. They follow a standard format, making them a good fit for first-party repositories and official package lists. Flatpaks are found in repositories like FlatHub, which hosts both official and community versions. Their key benefit is that they bundle all needed libraries, ensuring compatibility across systems. Unlike regular packages, you don’t need to choose specific distros for support; the system handles it. Flatpak runs with limited privileges, offering security, but may require extra permissions depending on the app. They can share dependencies between themselves or other apps via runtimes, blending aspects of both traditional and modern package management. More details are available elsewhere, but this overview captures the main points. Snap packages are another option promoted by Canonical, though they’re proprietary and not free. Flatpaks are often preferred in Ubuntu-based environments, while Snap is more popular outside that space.

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PanKlocek
Member
100
06-19-2023, 06:08 PM
#10
This suggestion works well when considering the limitations of the loader and the fact that the older Ext2 driver is more stable than the newer Btrfs version. People tend to avoid rewriting a 4TB disk full of corruption.
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PanKlocek
06-19-2023, 06:08 PM #10

This suggestion works well when considering the limitations of the loader and the fact that the older Ext2 driver is more stable than the newer Btrfs version. People tend to avoid rewriting a 4TB disk full of corruption.

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