I am deadset on not having 32bit libraries outside of a sandbox on my PC. I’m supposed to get a refund on all faulty PC parts I had so I ordered new ones and once they arrive, I will have a fresh system. I used flatpak Steam on my current system and it had no access to my download folder which I found slightly irritating. What would be better on Arch for Steam only: Snap or Flatpak? I am now partial to trying Snap but I figured I’ll ask in case anyone has any great/terrible experiences to share. c:

  • Julian@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    You can use flatseal to change flatpak permissions. It itself is available on flathub.

  • Wigwam@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    If file access was the only issue with Flatpak, I would try also installing Flatseal as it will allow you to change the access of each application. I tried Snaps on my Mum’s Ubuntu machine (I run Fedora, for reference) and I hated it spamming lsblk like it were docker swarm.

  • recursed@lemmy.recursed.net
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    1 year ago

    Flatseal is a great tool as mentioned by julianh but wanted to mention that you can use the following command to add a directory on an already installed flatpak from this askubuntu post.

    flatpak override <package_name_here> --nofilesystem=<path_here>
    
  • UrbenLegend@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Flatpak is better IMHO. It’s super easy to setup on Arch. The reason why it had no access to your download folder is just simply due to the sandboxing. Check your Flatpak permissions using Flatseal (also available on Flatpak) or using KDE’s flatpak-kcm.