I just set mine up to always go into the toolbox image and then I have all the tools I have in there, that way it's transparent and fast, you shouldn't even notice that it's there.
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so you can set the launcher to just launch the toolbox image instead of the regular terminal? And it has access to usual ~/ directories? I wouldn't be using for development, just regular usage. I am a heavy terminal user for normal desktop stuff though
Yeah, here's the instructions I use: https://distrobox.privatedns.org/useful_tips.html#using-distrobox-as-main-cli
super helpful, thanks!
This is the way I set it up or you could have any terminal that supports a custom command on launch do it: https://distrobox.privatedns.org/useful_tips.html#using-distrobox-as-main-cli
I use Fedora Kinoite and I do a mix of Distrobox + layered packages for normal use. For development porpuses I prefer a Distrobox container with its own Home directory and it works nice.
As a Fedora Silverblue user, if I'm understanding your question, using toolbox run
you don't have to enter a toolbox to run a command from it, then I just alias my most commonly used commands to avoid having to keep typing it.
As a Fedora Silverblue user, I never use toolbox. I'm a bit sloth when learning this new tool. I just use rpm-ostree, then reboot
MicroOS user here. Honestly I love the workflow of using distrobox for about everything I need.
Essentially I have distrobox images setup for specific development workflows. I just hop into the one that is suited for the task I'm doing. It automatically sets up icons in the Gnome menu if you don't want to use the cli commands.
Between flatpaks and containers I couldn't be happier with my setup. Combine that with the fact I can potentially trust the underlying OS to not crap the bed via updates (and when it does I can roll back my filesystem snapshots) is a win/win.
Same thing with Silverblue. I just created aliases for the hoping into the containers