• Nisaea@lemmy.sdf.org
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    8 months ago

    You were just lucky. For some of us ut was just about having the wrong hardware at the wrong time.

    Not complaining, I knew the risks going in and still love my distro, but arch updates totally can brick a PC with no PEBCAK involved. It does happen. :3

    • Titou@feddit.de
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      8 months ago

      Arch dosn’t break by itself, i’ve used bunch of Arch installations and every time it broke it was because of bad manipulation, not pacman -syu

          • Skye@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Arch breaking grub has happened to me twice. Second time I couldn’t even recover the install.

            You learn a lot of good practices by using arch, eg a separate home partitjon, git repositories for your config files, maintaining a clean package tree etc. Installing Arch is also really useful for noobs like me to learn some Linux basics.

            I use Fedora, btw.

          • Nisaea@lemmy.sdf.org
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            8 months ago

            I was among one of the grub fiasco victims. Thank goodness they rolled it back pretty fast and I knew how to chroot.

          • ulterno@lemmy.kde.social
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            8 months ago

            A grub breaking thingy happened to me too.
            I was saved by having multiboot, with every OS having their own GRUB version installed. (just selected one using the motherboard’s interface)

            The problem occurred when, after pacman -Syu, I read notes in the output, one of which hinted I would want to update GRUB and went - “Sure, I’ll try the new GRUB update” and ran GRUB update.

            When it didn’t startup after a restart, I just used the debian’s GRUB to login to the OS in question, downgraded GRUB, reinstalled GRUB and then ran pacman -Syu again.

            I feel like mine wasn’t the problem instance that goes on around the web, mostly because:

            1. None of the mentioned fixes worked in my case.
            2. I feel like people won’t go out of their way to update GRUB most of the time.
          • I have not experienced it but half of the arch users on reddit seem to have experienced it. Also it’s not a continuous problem but rather a problem with a certain arch and grub version. However the fact it happened once (to many people) means it can happen a second time