I ran into this on a btrfs subreddit:
I don't know enough about flatpaks to answer, but if Flatpaks are completely distro agnostic and quickly re-installed, is there any reason to back them up? I can see a use-case where one would use a separate subvolume as suggested above to reduce overall snapshot/backup size of the main subvolume.
Furthermore, could one mount the same flatpak subvolume in multiple install (in the case of dual booting) and would that work? I assume you would have to somehow create the menu entries in the other distros.
I have questions, people...
is it good practice to create a subvolume for /var/lib/flatpak?
I mean, are flatpaks completely "independent" from the rest of the system?
so if I restore a previous btrfs snapshot with old kernel and libraries, do flatpaks still work with this layout?
I mean, are flatpaks completely "independent" from the rest of the system?
so if I restore a previous btrfs snapshot with old kernel and libraries, do flatpaks still work with this layout?
I don't know enough about flatpaks to answer, but if Flatpaks are completely distro agnostic and quickly re-installed, is there any reason to back them up? I can see a use-case where one would use a separate subvolume as suggested above to reduce overall snapshot/backup size of the main subvolume.
Furthermore, could one mount the same flatpak subvolume in multiple install (in the case of dual booting) and would that work? I assume you would have to somehow create the menu entries in the other distros.
I have questions, people...
Comment