nunez an hour ago

This is the same concept as CoreOS, which now lives on as Flatcar, though with harder isolation guarantees because VMs.

I love the idea. Extremely minimal attack surface.

At the moment, I'm working on building a virtual version of the NUC that I purchased that will also run Flatcar so that I can test the configuration of my Docker Compose services.

midenginedcoupe 3 hours ago

I've been using it as my daily dev machine for ~5 years now.

As per the article, the usability tradeoffs are considerable. But the separation of domains into separate VMs is really lovely. If nothing else, having a separate VM per client just feels "right". No intermingling of code and, even more importantly, secrets or credentials or even comms. Being able to use the same physical machine for personal stuff as well as work is also a bonus.

freeqaz 10 hours ago

One of the killer features of Qubes when I used it was the ability to "pause" a VM and all of the apps running in it. That's something I've tried to replicate with tools like tmuxp but I've never found an abstraction as clean as "serialize the whole process tree to disk" like Qubes has.

I gave up on it for usability reasons, but that feature is killer. Anybody else aware of anything similar?

  • bjoli 4 hours ago

    I have used VMs to configure gaming keyboards. Razer's huntsman v2 red silent is an amazing office keyboard, but you need the brain vomit "Synapse" to configure it. I just start a VM, install Synapse and go to town instead, leaving my regular system pristine.

  • orbital-decay 9 hours ago

    The amount of hidden state modern hardware uses is humongous, it's infeasible without abstracting it in a VM. I remember some Win9x software that would let you save the process state to disk and restore it later, but even in that much more primitive era it was hit and miss.

    • brubois 4 hours ago

      and yet, Microsoft do it on their consoles with the "quick resume" feature.

      • rbanffy 4 hours ago

        It helps to have full control over software and hardware.

        • lloeki an hour ago

          It helps that these are all segregated HyperV VMs. Basically like Qubes.

  • harry8 7 hours ago

    There used to be cryopid in the days of 32 bit x86 and it was great and Bernard is cool.

    https://github.com/maaziz/cryopid

    Somehow I doubt it's still a thing but haven't had a reason to check.

  • atmanactive 4 hours ago

    > I gave up on it for usability reasons

    Pray tell what were those reasons?

  • vaylian 9 hours ago

    What is your use-case for it? Hibernation?

atmanactive 4 hours ago

I hope Qubes OS developed a solution for GPU passthrough by now, as, reading the article, that's the only thing that's missing, back in 2023. Similar to how sys-net and sys-usb work, we need sys-pci and ... done.