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  • nickjj 48 minutes

    It is nice to have this confidence.

    I ran Arch Linux for almost a year in WSL 2, it was really good.

    Then I ran Arch natively for ~5 months, it's really good.

    Now I still run Arch natively, but I also use the Arch Docker image to test my dotfiles[0] with a fresh file system.

    Also, for when I want to run end to end tests for my dotfiles that set up a complete desktop environment I run Arch in a VM.

    I have 99 problems but running Arch isn't one of them.

    [0]: https://github.com/nickjj/dotfiles

  • fragmede 4 hours

    and they said compilers are deterministic...

    This is a huge accomplishment! But it wouldn't be so huge if compilers were trivially deterministic. It took 5 decades of development for compilers to get here. I'm sure ChatGPT in 2073 is going to be more deterministic than it was in 2023.

  • aa-jv 4 hours

    This is a really interesting accomplishment - I am also working heavily on reproducible builds for my firmware projects, and .. lo and behold .. the package manager key administrivia is the final bone to be broken.

    I wonder if Arch leading the way on this will prompt other distro's to attempt the same feat. Reproducible builds are important for certification, security and safety-critical applications .. it'd be great to see Linux distros become more conformant to this method.

    Pay08 4 hours

    Debian already has an ongoing project for this: https://wiki.debian.org/ReproducibleBuilds.

  • kippinsula 4 hours

    reproducible images are one of those features where the payoff is mostly emotional until the day it isn't. we had an incident where two supposedly identical images on two machines had a three byte delta in a timestamp and it cost us an afternoon to bisect from the wrong end. boring win, but a real one.

    loloquwowndueo 1 hours

    How did a differing timestamp cause an incident in the first place? Curious.

    bluGill 1 hours

    My guess is it was the only obvious evidence of an attack.

  • azangru 2 hours

    A totally unrelated comment; but — there is an animation on that page that moves practically everything on the page about 20 pixels down over the course of 1 second.

    I thought that would completely trash the Cumulative Layout Shift core web vital. Because, hey! the layout is shifting in front of my very eyes. But no, the CLS on the page is 0.

    Is CLS a misleading metric then?

    chrisweekly 1 hours

    It's happening as a result of a deliberate animation. The CLS metric relates to initial render. So yes, there is layout shift, but it's not CLS per se.

    azangru 18 minutes

    > The CLS metric relates to initial render.

    The CLS measures the total sum of layout shifts over the entire lifespan of a page, not just during initial render.

    epolanski 1 hours

    The layout isn't shifting, so it's not a layout shift.

    And it's not unexpected, because it comes from a css transition.

    azangru 1 hours

    Sure.

    It's just that the spirit of Google's core web vitals has been to measure the properties of a web page that have the most impact on users. How quickly content appears on a page, how visually stable the content is, and how long it takes the page to respond to an interaction.

    In the case of this page, I don't think it can be considered visually stable at all in the first second after it's loaded.

    And yet, core web vitals cannot demonstrate this.

  • dev_l1x_be 4 hours

    All docker containers should have been like that. apt-get update in a docker build step is an anti pattern.

    bandrami 1 hours

    This has been a solved problem for over two decades now with Nix but people can't be asked

    dev_l1x_be 1 hours

    It has been solved even without Nix for a long time, just laziness is probably why we are not doing it

    malikolivier 3 hours

    This is to solve such issues that I am using and running StableBuild.

    It is a managed service that keeps a cached copy of your dependencies at a specific time. You can pin your dependencies within a Dockerfile and have reproducible docker images.

    schonfinkel 2 hours

    I don't wanna be that guy but...

    NIX FIXES THIS.

    dijit 2 hours

    So does Bazel. :p

    bluGill 1 hours

    You are screwed either way. If you don't update your container has a ton of known security issues, if you do the container is not reproducable. reproducable is neat with some useful security benefits, but it is something a non goal if the container is more than a month old - day might even be a better max age.

    dev_l1x_be 1 hours

    I update my docker containers regularly but doing it in a reproducible, auditable, predictable way

    tom1337 47 minutes

    Could you explain how you achieve this?

    oefrha 24 minutes

    Chainguard, Docker Inc’s DHI etc. There’s a whole industry for this.

    DuncanCoffee 4 hours

    I know it's an anti-pattern, but what is the alternative if you need to install some software? Pulling its tagged source code, gcc and compile everything?

    kandros 2 hours

    Copying from another image is an under appreciated feature

    FROM ubuntu:24.04

    COPY --from=ghcr.io/owner/image:latest /usr/local/bin/somebinary /usr/local/bin/somebinary

    CMD ["somebinary"]

    Not as simple when you need shared dependencies

    liveoneggs 1 hours

    pretend you don't do it and add your extra software to the layer above

    dev_l1x_be 1 hours

    base image

    software component image

    both should be version pinned for auditing

    Filligree 1 hours

    Run “nix flake update”. Commit the lockfile. Build a docker image from that; the software you need is almost certainly there, and there’s a handy docker helper.

    PunchyHamster 34 minutes

    oh, great, adding more dependency, and one that just had serious security problem

    hexa555 22 minutes

    as if other sandboxing software is perfect

    klodolph 39 minutes

    Recently I’ve been noticing that Nix software has been falling behind. So “the software you need is almost certainly there” is less true these days. Recently = April 2026.

    sestep 28 seconds

    Are you referring to how the nixpkgs-unstable branch hasn't been updated in the past five days? Or do you have some specific software in mind? (not arguing, just curious)

    bennofs 2 hours

    Both Debian and Ubuntu provide snapshot mirrors where you can specify a date to get the package lists as they looked at that time.

    bluGill 1 hours

    Which is only useful for historical invesigation - the old snapshot has security holes attackers know how to exploit.

    lloeki 36 minutes

    > the old snapshot has security holes attackers know how to exploit.

    So is running `docker build` and the `RUN apt update` line doing a cache hit, except the latter is silent.

    The problem solved by pinning to the snapshot is not to magically be secure, it's knowing what a given image is made of so you can trivially assert which ones are safe and which ones aren't.

    In both cases you have to rebuild an image anyway so updating the snapshot is just a step that makes it explicit in code instead of implicit.

    rowanG077 4 hours

    With a binary cache that is not so bad, see for example what nix does.

    Pay08 3 hours

    I don't really see how that's different from a normal binary install of a reproducible package. Especially with the lacking quality of a lot of Nix packages.

    bandrami 1 hours

    If you're in a situation where you want reproducibility you're using nix to build your own packages anyways, not relying on their packages

    rowanG077 3 hours

    It's not if you can pin the package. It gives you reproducable docker containers without having to rebuild the world. Wasn't that the entire question?