Firefox the flatpak version crashed and decided to remove itself from the system, is this common on Linux??

I checked thru Discover and terminal using whereis firefox and all I got is user/lib64/firefox

I should be mad, but I find this too hilarious to be mad… lol… files disappear not entire apps

  • asudox
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    561 month ago

    Did it really uninstall itself? Run this command and check whether you can see Firefox’s ID or not:

    flatpak list
    
  • Strit
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    311 month ago

    If firefox is still in /usr/lib64/firefox, then it should still be there. Maybe just the .desktop file is removed?

    • N.E.P.T.R
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      101 month ago

      OP mentioned that it was the Flatpak version, which doesnt add anything to root owned parts of the filesystem.

  • More than likely it was a failed package transition that failed. You were running one version, an update triggered, something went wrong, and your data folders got orphaned. You can try running a repair on the package, but they usually fail the same way.

  • @the_doktor@lemmy.zip
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    81 month ago

    No, because it doesn’t happen. Guaranteed your storage device or some other hardware component is having problems that is corrupting your drive.

  • whoareu
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    51 month ago

    It’s… weird, did you do something that accidentally deleted firefox?

  • @Broadfern@lemmy.world
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    21 month ago

    I don’t have any advice for this exact problem but if it’s any consolation Firefox has randomly gotten offended at my video drivers and bricked my build. Multiple times. I use Librewolf when I can now.

    That is hilarious though, sending frustrated IT vibes your way in both empathy and hopes it’ll help you reach the critical mass of superstition for the problem to fix itself before you have to threaten to take a hammer to it.

  • @Decker108@lemmy.ml
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    11 month ago

    Damn, that’s tough. Have you heard about our lord and savior Ubuntu and it’s blessed snap version of Firefox?

  • @corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    11 month ago

    As someone formerly involved in security at the enterprise OS development scope, I consider one less Flatpak to be an improvement in security and consistency.

    Well done!

  • IHave69XiBucks
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    11 month ago

    i avoid using flatpaks if i can. recently had to migrate mine from the root partition to home partition cuz they had filled my root partition space.

  • @AndrewZabar@lemmy.world
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    -81 month ago

    Firefox is still extremely messy on Linux. It’s split between multiple platform types (flatpak, deb, snap) and I’ve seen multiple parts start to branch off on their own due to some fault. It’s really weird. Can’t even describe it. Why can’t they just do things simply.