this post was submitted on 03 Nov 2023
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    [–] Synthead@lemmy.world 13 points 1 year ago (3 children)

    Docker is a success in some ways, but it's not a silver bullet. It's a great way to make a 800 KiB program ship in a complex 300 MiB box.

    If you had an entire operating system built with static links, it would be giant and ugly. You have to stop and think: if it's such a great idea, then why does pretty much every distro supply packages with dynamic links?

    When shipping your own software, yes, you certainly want control over your own runtime. If you rely on an OS-supplied Ruby, for example, then when Ruby 3.3.0 comes out, your gems will need to be rebuilt, and it'll happen by surprise. A runtime and shipping stuff to your own infra is much different than packages responsible for running the operating system.

    [–] theneverfox@pawb.social 4 points 1 year ago

    It's almost a silver bullet. 300mb is pretty modest by today's standards, and nix supports both bare metal and docker containers, and everything in between

    Seems to me we need to bridge that gap - make nix smarter and more compatible with docker, and we get a fully featured desktop/dev environment that can be packaged directly into the minimal reproducible deployment package

    And that sounds like a silver bullet to me

    [–] chellomere@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

    There's another aspect than size that I feel people overlook: security updates. When e.g. libcurl is duplicated in a million places, how do you update them all when a critical security issue is discovered in it? Who will update all the random flatpaks, snaps and docker images that happen to include it?

    [–] MrSpArkle@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    Yeah, there is definitely a delineation between system and user, and like most things the line will be fuzzy.

    But in that end-user software space, 300mb is a pittance to pay for a minor system package update not breaking their favorite application, or a user not being able to use software because their distro is one version behind on libfoo.

    [–] Synthead@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    Imagine a world where people say "I would use Linux, but I'm going to stay with Windows because Linux is too bloated."

    I don't know where the recent surge of not wanting package dependencies is coming from. Folks even not wanting dynamic links. We're acting like Linux distros are somehow suddenly broken or impossible to maintain, yet there are hundreds of successful distros doing just that, and for decades.

    [–] MrSpArkle@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    You gotta have more empathy for the average person.

    If the average person cared about binary size in terms of bloat, then being that smartphone apps are almost all statically linked, why are smartphones the most popular computer in the world?

    To them bloat would feel more like apps you can’t delete, or say ads in a key gui component.

    The bloat most people will care about in terms of Linux is facing down a software update prompt with 1000 packages and feeling anxiety over the last such dialog box destroying the use of their favorite apps.

    I’m glad there are hundreds of successful distros, their complexities will serve well the hundreds of Linux desktop users.

    [–] Synthead@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

    The bloat most people will care about in terms of Linux is facing down a software update prompt with 1000 packages and feeling anxiety over the last such dialog box destroying the use of their favorite apps.

    This would be a bug in packaging. File a bug with the distro.

    This doesn't happen as often as you think on a properly-configured system.