Ludovic Courtès <l...@gnu.org> writes: > Ricardo Wurmus <rek...@elephly.net> skribis: > >> Chris Marusich <cmmarus...@gmail.com> writes: >> >>> Leo Famulari <l...@famulari.name> writes: >>> >>>> So, I use and recommend `guix pull`! >>> >>> I use it too. Statements by others in this thread that "nobody" uses it >>> or that "everyone" is using Git are mistaken. >>> >>> I use Git when I want to hack on Guix. Otherwise, I use 'guix pull'. >>> IMO, the biggest problem with 'guix pull' is that there is no easy >>> rollback. I can live with long execution times (--fallback is fine, but >>> it'd be nice if substitutes were available more often), and I can live >>> with 'guix pull' causing me to get a version of guix that's broken >>> somehow, but the inability to easily roll back when things go south >>> makes me hesitant to run 'guix pull' regularly. >> >> I believe this can be fixed by adding more links to “.config/guix”, >> i.e. before creating “latest” it would create “2017-05-24:08:21:01.123” >> and then link from there to “latest”. On update it would create a new >> link “2017-05-25:17:45:45.123” and link that to latest. Roll back would >> be a matter of pointing “2017-05-24:08:21:01.123” to “latest”. > > There would be some similarity with profiles. Should we simply use > profiles, and effectively turn ~/.config/guix/latest into a profile, > with generations etc.?
That’s not a bad idea! It sure beats messing with a single link and it makes it possible to more easily manage different versions of Guix. -- Ricardo GPG: BCA6 89B6 3655 3801 C3C6 2150 197A 5888 235F ACAC https://elephly.net