
And overall, I think it is better to guide users better into using the more standard packaging method that Flatpak is coming to be. I think when making recommendations it is important they are made the fit what is best supported by the distro and its community. So I think it would be nice that you present only the official ways for doing it (as described in Fedora doc: ) to avoid such issues and disappointments to new users. To give it an even bigger light, for its steam link app, the valve only officially supports flatpak, no official snap (or any other packages). You are presenting snap as the first alternative for Fedora … But Fedora snap support is dying – never was that hot – ( ) and flatpak is the goto standard nowadays.ītw, Other distros have also begun pulling the plug on snap support, as for example pop_os: (you also have the whole explanation of why others will most likely follow). Hello there, I know the article is old but it still comes in first results (I came here because a friend followed it and it did not start with various snapd related errors). If you have any questions or comments to share, do via the feedback form below. Spotify is a cross-platform freemium audio streaming service that gives access to millions of songs. Once you have installed it, reboot the system (especially if you installed using snap) and search for “ spotify” in the Activities search facility and open it.

Once you have it installed, you can run Spotify with the following command. Then install Spotify using Flatpak by running. To install and enable Flatpak on the Fedora system use the following commands. Installing Spotify using Flatpak in Fedoraįlatpak is another new packaging framework that provides easy installation of many Linux applications on Fedora. $ sudo dnf install /var/lib/lpf/rpms/spotify-client/spotify-client-*.rpm $ sudo -u pkg-build lpf build spotify-client

Then install Spotify using the following commands. $ sudo dnf install $(rpm -E %fedora).noarch.rpm \

To install and enable the RPM Fusion repository on the Fedora system use the following commands. RPM Fusion is a third-party software repository, that provides add-on packages for the Fedora Linux distribution. Installing Spotify via RPM Fusion Repository in Fedora Now that you have snapd installed, you can install Spotify by running the following command.
