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> These next generation systems, on the other hand, don't pretend that you can build a host OS in any shape or form you want (hence very few base packages) but rather that you build "just enough of Linux to run containerd" -- the rest of what you would typically put into your baseOS goes into various containers. This is a very different approach to constructing the bootable system, but subtly so -- which I don't think a lot of people on either side of this debate appreciate.

This is a valid approach if you want to build something that can only run containers, but IMO is somewhat orthogonal to the Yocto and Buildroot goal of building distros for embedded platforms.

It's awesome that people are making new tools to do similar things to Yocto and Buildroot in this post-container world, but I don't think it's really fair to say that bottlerocket is a direct competitor to Yocto/Buildroot. It's probably fairer to say that bottlerocket makes it easier to do things that Yocto/Buildroot aren't really designed to do. Hopefully both live on, serving their own niche! I'm all for specialised tools rather than generic 'do it all' tools.




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