this post was submitted on 27 Mar 2025
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Yeah apt tends to shit itself very often. I don't like how it's actually two different programs (dpkg and apt) glued together with perl and python. It all feels too fragile. A friend once tried updating a package, and it failed because... he was issuing the apt command from with a python virtual environment. Can't say for pacman because I've never used arch, but xbps is just one set of self-contained binaries, which feels much more robust. Alpine's APK fits that bill as well, lovely little package manager. Tho I guess apt predates both of those, so it's not a fair comparison. Someone had to make those mistakes for the first time.
I also really dislike the Debian/Ubuntu culture of fucking around with the sources file to add other people's repositories on top of the distro-default ones (ubuntu calls this PPA). It's a good idea in theory, but in practice those third party repos always fuck up in some way and brick your package manager. Just search for "apt Failed to fetch" in your favourite internet search engine, and you will see hundreds of people confused about it. You can do it with almost any package manager, but for some reason it's mainly the debian/ubuntu people who like shooting themselves in the foot like this.