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Add snap package for nosqlclient #482

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rsercano opened this issue Mar 4, 2019 · 7 comments
Open

Add snap package for nosqlclient #482

rsercano opened this issue Mar 4, 2019 · 7 comments

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@rsercano
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rsercano commented Mar 4, 2019

https://tutorials.ubuntu.com/tutorial/create-your-first-snap#0

@rsercano rsercano added this to the v4.0.0 milestone Mar 4, 2019
@rsercano rsercano self-assigned this Mar 4, 2019
@rsercano rsercano added this to To Do in Nosqlclient 4.0.0 via automation Mar 4, 2019
@ethanmassie
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I would like to help with this issue.

@rsercano
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rsercano commented Oct 2, 2019

That would be great @ethanmassie !

@w0k3
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w0k3 commented Jun 15, 2020

@ethanmassie any news on this?

@ethanmassie
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@w0k3 I haven't worked on this in awhile. When I was working on it I ran into some trouble with getting meteorjs as a runtime dependency. The problem was mainly related to the install procedure for meteorjs being curling and running a bash script.

@w0k3
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w0k3 commented Jun 15, 2020

Thank you for info.

@dandv
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dandv commented Jun 16, 2020

"In the Ubuntu 20.04 package base, the Chromium package is indeed empty and acting, without your consent, as a backdoor by connecting your computer to the Ubuntu Store. Applications in this store cannot be patched, or pinned. You can't audit them, hold them, modify them, or even point Snap to a different store. You've as much empowerment with this as if you were using proprietary software, i.e. none. This is in effect similar to a commercial proprietary solution, but with two major differences: It runs as root, and it installs itself without asking you."

-- from Linux Mint dumps Ubuntu Snap

@rsercano
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"In the Ubuntu 20.04 package base, the Chromium package is indeed empty and acting, without your consent, as a backdoor by connecting your computer to the Ubuntu Store. Applications in this store cannot be patched, or pinned. You can't audit them, hold them, modify them, or even point Snap to a different store. You've as much empowerment with this as if you were using proprietary software, i.e. none. This is in effect similar to a commercial proprietary solution, but with two major differences: It runs as root, and it installs itself without asking you."

-- from Linux Mint dumps Ubuntu Snap

I'm confused with that actually

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