this post was submitted on 21 Dec 2023
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Welp, I made a similar thread yesterday regarding Manjaro but I decided to swap to Fedora as my daily driver for stability purposes. Unfortunately since fedora is yet another non Debian distro I need help finding a Syncterm replacement.

I'm my previous thread it was pointed out to me that syncterm has a docker option which I can run on Fedora, but I'd prefer running an app locally if possible.

I tried the Syncterm snap package which boots inside bash, but it doesn't have ANSI support (which is the entire point of using Syncterm) since I assume it's simply piggy backing off of bash- hence the 1.5* review on the snap store.

Looking for options.. if anyone can help a Linux noob I'm all ears. I tried Alien to convert deb to rpm and fell on my face.

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[–] chitak166@lemmy.world -5 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (1 children)

Looks like Syncterm is available in the AUR.

Open up Pamac, your graphical package manager, and click on the 3 lines in the top-right corner.

At the bottom of the window, click Third-Party, then enable AUR support.

Search for Syncterm and it should show up now.

Getting packages not in official repositories is significantly easier in Arch-based distros like Manjaro than Debian-based distros or RPM-based distros. It's a major reason why I never use either for personal computing.

Disclaimer: I've been a Manjaro user for 3+ and seeing people recommend Fedora over Manjaro just further cements in my mind that the vast majority of people in this community are not worth listening to.

Do you notice how many people in this thread are recommending you different distros instead of simple instructions on how to get Syncterm to work with Manjaro?

[–] LeFantome@programming.dev 3 points 11 months ago

Did you read that they moved away from Manjaro? So pamac is not going to cut it. How does pamac help them on Fedora?

Many of the recommendations are to install EndeavourOS where your pamac instructions would work ( although pamac is not installed by default ).

In EndeavourOS, “yay -S syncterm” would work out-of-the box on a fresh EOS install. No need even to “enable the AUR”.

In my opinion, that is even simpler than what you are proposing for Manjaro. And since EOS uses real Arch packages, it is less likely to break or complain about package versions than Manjaro is.

I used to use Manjaro. It broke my system and I had many AUR problems. To my ears, Manjaro is bad advice. I am a happy EOS user for years now.