tumbleweed-cli
opi
tumbleweed-cli | opi | |
---|---|---|
13 | 51 | |
80 | 222 | |
- | 2.3% | |
2.6 | 8.8 | |
6 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Shell | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
tumbleweed-cli
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OpenSuse:TumbleWeed Update Broken?
There is a third controversial option: tumbleweed-cli which is helping to move from snapshot to snapshot. To be honest I'm not aware of the status.
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Can I install the last week image?
Would this work? https://github.com/boombatower/tumbleweed-cli
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From Fedora to Tumbleweed: looking for guidance
There is also https://github.com/boombatower/tumbleweed-cli which i like very much when using tumbleweed
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Is there any love for Gnome on Leap?
If the persistent updates or update notifications are the only problem for a switch to TW, then there's always the installable package 'tumbleweed-cli' (you can find it in the repos) more infos. https://github.com/boombatower/tumbleweed-cli With this you can set a specific opensuse snapshot. This should only be used for updates, not for rollbacks, that's what snapper is for. As far as I know monthly updating is recommended (at least).
- Question on Tumbleweed updates, and checking before updating
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The resilience of Tumbleweed (or why you can trust it as much as Leap/Debian) -- 227 days between updates
A certain number of older snapshots is kept on the mirrors and can be chosen with tumbleweed-cli.
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(Help) Not exactly sure what has happened to my install but I've somehow broke it.
Jesus. It's not that zypper isn't a good tool, it's that tumbleweed-cli uses the snapshot versions, and is actually designed for this exact use case. See this thread and the comment by u/bommbatower for more information.
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Opensuse Tumbleweed - Need clarifications before deciding to switch
I use tumbleweed-cli to upgrade from a solid snapshot to the next one, typically once every two weeks or so. This allows rolling as quickly or slowly as is desired, provided the snapshots are still available here: http://download.opensuse.org/history/
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I am just discovering OpenSUSE and I have some questions !
I'd suggest you to install tumbleweed-cli (zypper in tumbleweed-cli) to target a specific snapshot, so you're not going to upgrade your system all the time, but only when a new snapshot is released (and when you want to switch to it, at your discretion).
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Tumbleweed cli vs zypper dup vs KDE discover
I do believe you're right! My mistake. That's good to know. It looks like it's just the scoring system that's done by a third party - unless I'm wrong again :) Please let me know if I am. I'm still hesitant to use it with respect to the scoring system as an ordinary user. I was under the misconception that the github repo at https://github.com/boombatower/tumbleweed-cli would have been under the official opensuse github repo.
opi
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Do you guys have installed codec trough zypper or opi?
This is incorrect. It also installs a set list of packages.
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Seriously, what is the special magic sauce that openSUSE has for KDE?
Have you looked into OPI? This allows you to easily search and install community packages from the Open Build System similarly to how it is with working with yay on Arch. It very likely does not contain things like git packages or fonts but it can be pretty useful for packages like ckb-next and since it pulls from the OBS it is always guaranteed to be a binary, no compilation necessary
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Installing CODECs
As of this writing, opi performs the following operations behind the curtains (see here for reference):
- New install, codec issues
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Firefox does not play all videos or live streams on fresh Tumbleweed
opi will implement a workaround in https://github.com/openSUSE/opi/pull/120 which will force the ffmpeg version on tumbleweed to be >=5.
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As a noob to openSUSE but as an arch user (~1yr), what are some things I should know about openSUSE?
OPI is your friend. You don't have to update every day...once a week or so is fine. Set up multiversion for kernels. A lot of times if a vendor offers a Fedora RPM and not openSUSE, the Fedora RPM will work fine. If you are using Nvidia, wait to update kernels... that's all I can think of. Use and update the wiki as needed, it's a good resource, but can get outdated.
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Following Fedora and openSUSE, Manjaro moves further away from Arch Linux by not enabling Mesa's patent-loaded codecs
Yeah I'm pretty sure it's using Packman https://github.com/openSUSE/opi
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Help with installing kvantum manager on opensuse 🙏
For more information https://github.com/openSUSE/opi
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[Help] issue with Firefox after fresh install.
OPI is also useful for finding other packages that aren't in the regular repos
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Should I try moving to OpenSUSE?
The easiest way to install software is with OPI, you can also search with Zypper or YaST. Generally, if you can find an RPM file built for Fedora, you can install it on Tumbleweed as well - I'm sure there are exceptions.
What are some alternatives?
snapper - Manage filesystem snapshots and allow undo of system modifications
linux-tkg - linux-tkg custom kernels
openQA - openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools.
flathub - Pull requests for new applications to be added
Bumblebee - Bumblebee daemon and client rewritten in C
openSUSE-release-tools - Tools to aid in staging and release work for openSUSE/SUSE
dnfdragora - dnfdragora is a dnf frontend based on libyui abstraction
com.discordapp.Discord
scanmem - memory scanner for Linux
OSC - OSC: Arduino and Teensy implementation of OSC encoding
archwiki - MediaWiki used on Arch Linux websites (read-only mirror)
developer-workstation-setup-script - Post-install script for Fedora and RHEL 9 clones to create your ultimate development environment