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6 points

Arch has rolling releases and is super stable.

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15 points

How do you define “stable”?

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11 points

“Ability to reboot without breaking a sweat”

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13 points

Low occurence of notable bugs during daily use.

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9 points

I have never had Arch break during an update. I’ve never had it crash. I’ve never encountered an issue I couldn’t resolve, and for that matter I don’t really encounter issues. Usually the only problems are that I haven’t installed a service that would usually come standard with another OS, so I have to check the wiki, install, and configure something.

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6 points

Stable doesn’t mean that the OS doesn’t break, but that the way it functions doesn’t change.

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7 points

I haven’t had Arch break during an update, but I always check the home page first, there are absolutely times my system would have broken during a blind update.

Arch doesn’t support blind updates - it explicitly tells you to always check the home page before an update in case “out-of-the-ordinary” user intervention is required. https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/System_maintenance

Basically, don’t run arch unless you’re willing to be a Linux system admin.

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5 points

I see. I asked because “stable” means different things in different distros. In Debian it means that interfaces and functionality in one version doesn’t change. If I set up a script that interacts with the system in various ways, parsing output, using certain binaries in certain ways etc, I should be able to trust that it works the same year after year with upgrades within the same release. To some people this is important, to some people it isn’t.

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6 points

Wouldn’t OpenSUSE Tumbleweed be a much better option then?

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1 point

One of my staff runs Tumbleweed. I will get around to evaluating it one day.

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