I’ve been using manjaro for a couple of years and I really like it. especially the wide variety of packages available. Recently been using yay to find/install.

I prefer to run FLOSS packages when they are available. But I do not find a convenient way to preferentially seek these out. Even to know what licenses apply without individually researching each specific package.

It does not seem to be possible to search, filter or sort based on license in the web interface for packagegs or AUR. I do not find anything about it in man pacman(8) or man yay(8).

The only way I have found to find license info from the terminal is using expac. You can use %L to display the license. I guess you could combine this in a search to filter, similar to some of the examples listed on pacman/Tips and tricks - ArchWiki. But I haven’t quite got it to work.

This seems like something other people would want but I don’t find any available solution for it. Am I missing something? Or is it something with the arch-based distros?

  • linuxPIPEpower@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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    9 months ago

    Don’t you think that in the context of this thread, ubuntu is more FLOSS than arch?

    This post is made wishing that someone will tell me I am missing something here. But if I’m not then it seems like we have to give the point to ubuntu no? because you have a much better chance of obtaining a FLOSS system if you can at least have a way to select what you are installing.

    Would be interesting if there was a script that could audit the licenses being used by all the installed applications. Then generate a report. I wonder what the arch-based community is rocking with. I guess they also have logs of what people download though not sure how centralized/available that info is.

    • Evkob@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      Would be interesting if there was a script that could audit the licenses being used by all the installed applications

      This thread is hurting my brain, but if I understand correctly maybe absolutely-proprietary is the kind of thing you’re looking for? It checks your installed packages against a list of proprietary packages and suggests libre alternatives if they exist.

      • linuxPIPEpower@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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        9 months ago

        ah wonderful!

        Your GNU/Linux is infected with 87 proprietary packages out of 5290 total installed.
        Your Stallman Freedom Index is 98.36
        

        boooooooooo!!!

        Somehow my wifi drivers have become non-free? I am pretty certain I selected the free variant during install. Though come to think of it I wasn’t clear how assertive that option was. I do think there are free drivers for this… hmm.

        As FYI for anyone reading this,you need to use -f to get a complete list. It only shows me about a dozen even though it says there 87! The information is carefully hidden.

        This thread is hurting my brain

        i live like this all the time. :/ wouldn’t wish it on anyone else. sorry to inflict my cognition on you but I appreciate your time :D