So in a nut shell this is taking dockerization/ containerization and making it 
more for the every day Linux user instead of the HPC user?

It would be interesting to have a distro built around such a setup.

Regards,
Jonathan

-----Original Message-----
From: Beowulf <beowulf-boun...@beowulf.org> On Behalf Of Chris Samuel
Sent: Tuesday, 23 July 2019 07:38
To: beowulf@beowulf.org
Subject: Re: [Beowulf] flatpack

On 22/7/19 10:26 pm, Jonathan Aquilina wrote:

> Hi Guys, I think I might be a bit tardy to the party here, but the way 
> you describe flatpack is equivalent to the portable apps on windows is 
> my understanding correct?

It seems that way, with an element of sandboxing to try and protect the user 
who is using these packages.  The Debian/Ubuntu package describes it thus:

  Flatpak installs, manages and runs sandboxed desktop application bundles.
  Application bundles run partially isolated from the wider system, using
  containerization techniques such as namespaces to prevent direct access
  to system resources. Resources from outside the sandbox can be accessed
  via "portal" services, which are responsible for access control; for
  example, the Documents portal displays an "Open" dialog outside the
  sandbox, then allows the application to access only the selected file.
  .
  Each application uses a specified "runtime", or set of libraries, which is
  available as /usr inside its sandbox. This can be used to run application
  bundles with multiple, potentially incompatible sets of dependencies within
  the same desktop environment.
  .
  This package contains the services and executables needed to install and
  launch sandboxed applications, and the portal services needed to provide
  limited access to resources outside the sandbox.

There's also more about it here:

http://docs.flatpak.org/en/latest/basic-concepts.html

The downside (from the HPC point of view) is that these binaries will need to 
be compiled for a relatively low common denominator of architecture (or with a 
compiler that can do optimisations selected at runtime depending on the 
architecture).

All the best,
Chris
--
  Chris Samuel  :  http://www.csamuel.org/  :  Berkeley, CA, USA 
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