- cross-posted to:
- linux@zerobytes.monster
- cross-posted to:
- linux@zerobytes.monster
Ted Ts’o sent out the EXT4 updates today for Linux 6.11. He explained in that pull request:
“Many cleanups and bug fixes in ext4, especially for the fast commit feature. Also some performance improvements; in particular, improving IOPS and throughput on fast devices running Async Direct I/O by up to 20% by optimizing jbd2_transaction_committed().”
Extremely slow package manager (the most important one), confusing installer, fast deprecation of important technologies and testing of new technologies on its users (making major upgrades risky) is what I can remember now.
Thank you for the reply!
Fair. Though, IIRC, it’s in the same order of magnitude as
apt
andzypper
. But yeah;apk
,pacman
andxbps
are definitely faster by a wide margin. Hopefully,dnf5
will be able to close the gap significantly.I often hear this. But I’m not sure if I understand. Is it because Anaconda does not walk you (explicitly) through all parts of the installation (at least by default)? And, instead, chooses to give the user an overview (at some point) in which the user is expected to go over each one of them by themselves.
Fair. I think this is the most legitimate concern. Thankfully, over the last two years, I have yet to bang my head against a brick wall for reasons related to this. But I understand why others are more reluctant based on Fedora’s (less recent) track record.
Apt can be improved with frontends and it doesn’t take 10 minutes to sync the repos.
Idk much about it but I heard it’s slow too.
Yes.
Yea even archinstall might be better than this design lol.
X11. Though I don’t remember if they decided to drop it before explicit sync was introduced for NVidia drivers or after.
nala
is indeed pretty cool.Thank you for clarifying/confirming the parts related to how Fedora’s installation is confusing.
Totally forgot about this one. Blame AMD 😛. Thank you for correcting me!