this post was submitted on 05 Oct 2025
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I'm not familiar with Arch's updating scheme, but I'd bet that it's pretty similar to Red Hat's and Debian's. If you don't complete an update, boot it up
even if it's in a semi-broken state
and just start the update again. Even if the thing dies right in the middle of updating something boot-critical, so that it can't boot, you can probably just use liveboot media, mount the drives in question, start a chrooted-to-your-regular-root-partition root shell, and restart the update.
Doing that and installing or reinstalling packages is a pretty potent tool to fix a system. It's not absolutely impossible that you can manage to hork a system up badly enough to render it still unusable in that situation
I once wiped ld.so from a system, for example, and had to grab another copy and manually put it in place to get stuff dynamically-linked stuff like the package manager working again. But that'll deal with the great majority of problems you could create.
That's why I like OpenSUSE. If anything went wrong and system couldn't boot properly you just choose an older snapshot.
I agree, I do the same in NixOS with Generations
Yeah, also an awesome distro. My wife's laptop is running nixOS