7 hours ago
Hi there. I'm a relatively new user and I'm really enjoying the new goodies (updated kernels, gtk apps, xfce version).
However, I wanted to point out a default behavior that (unless I did something wrong myself) feels a bit reckless: the update appears to have overridden my user's .bashrc. My .bashrc is a symlink to a git repo (a common practice), so this even propagated through my config repo.
In my opinion, system upgrades should only change system files (and leave behind backup copies if they could have been manually modified).
However, I wanted to point out a default behavior that (unless I did something wrong myself) feels a bit reckless: the update appears to have overridden my user's .bashrc. My .bashrc is a symlink to a git repo (a common practice), so this even propagated through my config repo.
In my opinion, system upgrades should only change system files (and leave behind backup copies if they could have been manually modified).


![[Image: X5qGkCg.png]](https://imgur.com/X5qGkCg.png)
![[Image: 0op1GNe.png]](https://i.imgur.com/0op1GNe.png)
![[Image: LgJ2mtP.png]](https://i.imgur.com/LgJ2mtP.png)
![[Image: vLZcFUE.png]](https://imgur.com/vLZcFUE.png)
![[Image: lrUHro3.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/lrUHro3.jpg)