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So I tried Manjaro at my parent's house, seemed to work fine + aur is awesome. However I've read bad things about Manjaro's management on the internet from a few years ago. Should I worry about that?
Basically I want latest drivers, but otherwise a stable computer. I don't want to fiddle with my pc just to start a game (which is why Arch is out of the question). Debian will let me have apt which I'm quite used to, but Manjaro has aur (does Debian have something like PPA?). Is Debian better supported by native games?
What's been your experience?
Last edited by ShabbyX on 24 Feb 2023 at 12:37 pm UTC
Around 10% of GoL users use Manjaro so they are clearing doing something right, and means you can most likely ask others for help here.
Even as a Debian user myself I would suggest Manjaro, at least for starters. You can always try out Debian, stable or unstable, later!
Broken packages can be a problem but it's usually that you need to be careful during upgrades and might sometimes have to wait for conflicts to be resolved or fix them yourself.
Problems with the system being unbootable or being in need of a complete reinstall I have never experienced. But that's no guarantee that it can't happen tomorrow.
View PC info
Your apparent dichotomy from switching from a conservative distro that's easy to get the latest versions of stuff to either extreme of rolling release or super long-term suggests that you really don't know what you want from a distro.
If you want Ubuntu but not snaps because you've heard from Reddit that snaps must be bad, just remove snapd. Or use one of the many Ubuntu derivatives that don't include snapd by default.
Decide what you want from a distro:
Once you've whittled down the list of appropriate distributions we move onto the next step:
Test them!
Download an install/live ISO for each of them. Then install each one (separately) into a virtual machine, get a feel for their usage in terms of methods of updates and configuration. Also check to make sure they do actually meet your previously set criteria.
Do this until you're down to at most 2 distributions.
Run it live!
Run a live iso version of the distribution on your own computer, this will let you know if you're hardware is working fine with it.
Finally once you've made your final decision, install it and enjoy.
Last edited by BlackBloodRum on 23 Feb 2023 at 5:59 pm UTC
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Ugh, no, I know what I'm talking about. It's not just snap, Canonical is just making bad decisions all around and it's been years I've been thinking of switching.
Thanks for the advice, but I mean, I did do that and I'm down to Manjaro vs Debian. I use the company-curated rolling release of Debian at work, and have been fiddling with Manjaro at my parents' house.
The reason I'm asking here is not for general advice, but specifics you can't just observe from live booting, after all gnome on Manjaro and gnome on Debian is just gonna look the same.
The questions were:
- Is either going to give more headaches running games?
- Is either less stable (let's assume rolling Debian)?
- Is there something like PPA/AUR on Debian?
- Are Manjaro rants on the internet about management something I should care about? I don't want to set everything up, then find out it's managed by a*holes.
Anyhow about Debian specifically:
The only real headache I can think of is that Debian didn't used to ship firmware with the (default) installer. You had to enable it from the non-free section after boot. That trips you up if you install over Wifi. There is an alternate installer available and I think the new one enables non-free firmware by default.
Most native games are usually only tested and recommend some version of Ubuntu, but it has only seldom been a problem. Usually the version required is so old I would assume you would have run into the same issues on a modern Ubuntu system.
There isn't really anything like a PPA system for Debian. Something like that have been suggested but it's never been implemented. You can however add (and host) custom repositories with Debian packages. Wine for example does this.
There's also usually release candidates of software like Mesa or the kernel in the (optional) experimental repository if you want even more bleeding edge stuff.
With regards to rants, and what people do - or do not - like about it. This doesn't make the distro, the software and configuration does.
Debian has tons of packages available, I think you'll easily find what you need for that distro.
Though, based on your criteria, have you looked at OpenSUSE Tumbleweed? It's sort of in the middle between the two. It's rolling release, has a crap ton of packages and extra ones can be found from OBS (think AUR) but also relatively stable and can roll-back if it breaks with btrfs snapshots. It also works well with games in most instances (I've not had any trouble anyway). And the management is handled well and not just by, as you put it, a*holes.
A bleeding edge distro (like Arch, or Endeavour, or Siduction) has its place. A stable long term distro (like Debian) has its place. A middle-of-the-road conservative distro that gets you newer stuff on a regular schedule (like Ubuntu) has the place that's going to be the best fit for generic desktop users. Any of these could be the best for a specific use case. Manjaro is just a bad choice for every use case; the two weeks that they hold back packages isn't enough time to test (and they don't have the resources to actually test anyway) but is just long enough to get conflicts between the stuff you get from Manjaro and the stuff you get from the AUR (which is expecting Arch versions). The whole model is just broken from the outset.
That's all before you think about them - at least twice - having let their security certificate expire, or misappropriation of donated funds, or any other of the miscellaneous shady or shonky things they've done. But it's your computer, and if those are the kind of people you want having root access to your machine, that's your choice, of course.
---
Thanks everyone for the input! I think I'll just go with Debian. As much as I'm _capable_ of fiddling with my installation to fix things, I really want things to just be rock solid at this point in my life.
I thought I'd miss out on the latest stuff, but it's been three years I'm on Ubuntu 20.04, and it was fine. I'll start with Debian stable, and if I find it's too old, I can always upgrade it to testing.
So you can install that, configure the package sources to track by codename (the specific bookworm release, not testing) and go from testing -> (new) stable.
I've also used Manjaro for about a year. For gaming, the AUR is not needed, everything works out of the box. I'm more familiar with apt, but pacman does an ok job (is very fast compared to apt or zypper).
I'd also second OpenSuse Tumbleweed. It's similar to debian testing in spirit and is very stable. I used it for about 2 years. I would throw a caveat; the way they do Nvidia drivers is odd and you can end up with a new kernel but no driver module for that kernel version. If you are not a frequent updater, that issues is mostly moot. If it does happen, the system is designed to let you roll back pretty easily.
Stable distros are severely outdated and I have run into multiple problems (including (severe) bugs, missing functionality, not possible to connect to servers, because of outdated clients etc.) because of super-outdated packages.
And backports etc. have not really helped, because they only cover a small percentage and many of them are also often outdated (even though not as severe as the distros themselves).
Also testing branches etc. were not really up-to-date for most packages, so this is kind of misleading.
Most importantly missing security updates (even though the stable distros claim to include security fixes) are a real problem.
But I guess it depends on the usecase, as some people seem to enjoy them.
Regarding Manjaro specifically:
I use it regularly and haven't come across any (severe) problems.
The two weeks (or so) between releases are mainly not for testing (by Manjaro), instead it is intended to watch for Bugreports on Arch Linux, so if there are severe problems, Manjaro can either fix these problems before release or delay a release further.
This approach works pretty well and I also use many AUR packages and only on one occassion there was problem with a version mismatch, but good software would include notes or warning for abi mismatches on compilation, so in my oppinion it is more a problem of software projects and less a problem of Distros.
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* Kernel itself (I usually build newest release, testing gets kernels with quite some delay).
* Firmware from upstream kernel repo (for AMD GPU). This one is updated in Debian very rarely.
* Mesa main for gaming (not replacing system Mesa).
* Wine from WineHQ Debian repo.
* vkd3d-proton / dxvk master from upstream.
* Firefox beta from Mozilla Linux build.
Other than that, I use what's in Debian repos.
Last edited by Shmerl on 27 Feb 2023 at 8:58 pm UTC