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Joined 5 months ago
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Cake day: June 10th, 2025

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  • That is pretty funny. However the “not having it at all” mfs suddenly reconsider when it’s the only way to install an app. I for example maintain the 4K Video Downloader Plus snap and the only other installation method is a .deb. In the stats I can see many other distros than just Ubuntu. I think it’s the ideal packaging format for apps that should stay up to date at all time, even if the system isn’t.








  • tsugu@gregtech.eutolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldI love snap /s
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    1 month ago

    Hi, a real snap packager here. In comparison to flathub the devs are not required to publish their snapcraft.yamls but the store won’t accept an app with privileged access. By default you can’t even connect to dbus. You go to the forum, link your snapcraft.yaml and explain why you need the access. The process is the same with plugs that don’t auto connect, which ones are those you can read here. You can upload an app with a plug that doesn’t auto connect but your users will have to manually do so.

    The requirements for classic snaps (no confinement) are much stricter and the admins are careful about granting that privilege. The store also makes it clear whether a package is official or from a star developer so if the app is going to handle sensitive data, you probably won’t trust an unverified developer.

    As for the walled garden, you’re free to share your .snap files and their snapcraft.yamls anywhere you want. Canonical has control of the central store but nothing can stop you from having a repo with snaps that your users install locally. The vast majority of apps won’t do that because there’s no reason to, but you can. I know Obsidian Notes used to do that at some point.