Comment on Another reason to love Linux
PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat 5 days agoWhat didn’t you like about it? I am just curious; I finally stepped out of using Debian for everything which I have been doing for approximately 200 years, and tried NixOS, and to me it is incredibly nice the way it solves a lot of these issues.
Boomkop3@reddthat.com 5 days ago
When I tried it it looked really cool. Up until it just… didn’t work. And then looking around I found a bunch of people giving me better snippets of scripts and it was not helpful
PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat 5 days ago
Huh.
IDK man, my experience is that Nix solves the problem you originally talked about and a bunch of others, pretty effectively. Among other things if things “just… don’t work” you can trivially roll back to an earlier working config, and see what changed between working and not-working, and so what would be a pretty grueling debugging process in some other environment becomes pretty easy to sort out.
But whatever. If for some reason Docker makes you more happy and not less, you’re welcome to it and best of luck.
Boomkop3@reddthat.com 5 days ago
Perhaps it’s improved over the last year, I can give it a shot. But yes, for my own packaged applications without shared dependencies, docker is handy. And that’s exclusively what I run
PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat 5 days ago
I mean if it makes you happy, I won’t tell you to do anything different. I think a certain amount of it is just prejudice against Docker on my part. Just in my experience NixOS is the best of both worlds: You can have a single coherent system if everything in that system can play nice with each other, and if not, then things can be containerized completely that way still works too. And then on top it has a couple of other nice features like rolling back configs easily, or source builds that get slotted in in-place as if they were standard packages (which is generally where I abandon Docker installs of things, because making changes to the source seems like it’s going to be a big hassle).
I’m not trying to evangelize though, you should in all seriousness just do what you find to be effective.