Am 03.08.2017 um 15:55 schrieb Matthew Miller <mattdm@xxxxxxxxxx>: > > On Thu, Aug 03, 2017 at 03:25:36PM +0200, hw wrote: >>> In all honesty, I wouldn't want Libreoffice running in a container >>> and I can't imagine why you'd want an xterm in its own container. >> It was only an example. The point of doing that is to use different versions of >> xterm and of emacs as come by default. How else would I do that when non-default >> versions of packages require their own container each? > > I think what you're looking for here is Flatpak. Just a off-topic question (maybe in the future of EL less off-topic); Does the concept of flatpak make updates in general more complicated (e.g. security issues in libraries)? The centralized concept of "shared libraries" does support by design the elimination of issues with "one" update. The flatpak approach implies that "every" flatpak packaged software must be updated individually, right? I hope that i got it right? Thanks, LF _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos