this post was submitted on 13 Mar 2026
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    [–] Shayeta@feddit.org 11 points 1 day ago (1 children)

    Sure, arch has a steep learning curve, but in the long run easier to use than others since it has better documentation.

    Since you're already doing a fresh install, might as well create the root partition as a BTRFS with opensuse-style subvolumes for easy snapshotting and rollback. And since you're so close might as well also add LUKS1 encryption across the partition, since TPM is untrustworthy for REAL security. You're going to be using a grub config with rd.luks params and a protected keyfile so you don't have to decrypt the partition twice per boot like some scrub, of course.

    Of course, technically there is nothing wrong just a plain arch install as long you've devised a proper opsec strategy, alongside daily, weekly and monthly full-disk offsite encrypted backups!

    And yes indeed, Arch linux is the distro that was ordained to me!

    [–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 day ago

    Arch forces you to learn about Linux internals and components. Most people don’t need to know these things to work productively with their computers. Arch is more of an „build your own OS“ toolkit than a well defined base operating system. Two Arch installs can be more wildly different to use than Fedora and Ubuntu. That’s why you need the mountains of documentation. Arch wiki is great, but it’s not perfect or correct. Lots of outdated info lingers there as well.

    BTRFS with subvolumes is they way to go, I agree. Mint sadly still defaults to EXT4 with only an encrypted /home. I installed Mint recently and a modern partition setup like you describe was difficult to get working. I don’t even remember, what I ended up with.

    security

    The AUR is a security nightmare.

    easy snapshotting and rollback

    That‘s an area Mint is pretty weak in.

    OpenSuSE

    Makes fantastic distros, that more people should use.