Can’t speak for every aspect of config, like extensions, but I do know that chromium (and derivatives) can export bookmarks to standard HTML. On Wed, Jan 20, 2021 at 14:12 Mike Cloaked via arch-general < arch-general@lists.archlinux.org> wrote:
On Wed, Jan 20, 2021 at 6:15 PM Javier via arch-general < arch-general@lists.archlinux.org> wrote:
On 1/20/21 10:02 AM, Geo Kozey via arch-general wrote:
---------------------------------------- From: Eli Schwartz via arch-general <arch-general@lists.archlinux.org
Sent: Wed Jan 20 02:09:17 CET 2021 To: <arch-general@lists.archlinux.org> Cc: Eli Schwartz <eschwartz@archlinux.org> Subject: Re: [arch-general] On arch-dev-public: Chromium losing Sync support on March 15
The current maintainer of chromium no longer wishes to be the maintainer -- without this feature, he does not consider Chromium to be a competitive, useful software. Fair enough -- no one is ever by any means forced to maintain anything they don't want to.
It would be easier to understand if maintainer explain this themselves. This is second time he stated plans about dropping chromium because upstream removed some api from public use. At first time those plans were aborted after users feedback which showed that removed api isn't crucial for using the app for them and this time it looks similar.
It's ok to stop packaging something that maintainer doesn't like anymore even without waiting for excuse but stopping it only because lost feature that most users can deal without just fine is weird unless maintainer himself relied on it.
If a chromium user, after the loss of the sync api, would like to transition their setup from one computer to another, such as when a new arch install has been done on a new computer, is there a mechanism to transfer the bookmarks and passwords from one machine to the other if sync is not available? Even now if you rsync the config directory then the browser does work as it did on the original machine - and getting passwords into the new browser on a different machine does not seem to be something that is easy unless a clean profile is started, and the old and new browser synced by logging in to the same account. Can someone say how that would be achieved when sync to the cloud is no longer available?
Yours sincerely
G. K.
Totally agree with Eli, in that the devs are the ones deciding chromium fate in Arch.
BTW, another dev has already mentioned he would adopt it, if dropped by its current maintainer, and keep it without sync if required. So, I guess it's a matter of time now, to see what'll happen.
-- Javier
-- mike c