this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2025
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To be fair, that's why they said
I'd say that yay encourages checking the PKGBUILD or its diff more than the average "curl xy | sudo sh" instruction, but considering most people see yay just as yet another package manager, instead of an AUR helper, that's probably true for most people
That's why it's one step above. The user is given an option to read the PKGBUILD (or a diff with the cached copy if it exists), but beyond that, it's still unverified arbitrary code from an external source (the project's actual source, binaries, or packages from another repository). Packages in the official Arch repos are verified by the downstream packagers. For AUR packages, it's up to the community to moderate itself, and the user to determine whether the package is trustworthy, and I'm willing to bet that not many people do it. I certainly don't vet everything I install.
That's probably the "just one step above" part. You do have the option to inspect the script you're executing before you do so with
curl | sh
too, if you know what you're doing. If you don't, then you'd be pretty likely to just skip the prompt fromyay
as well. (Automatic diffs are nice tho.) Note: I useparu
instead so I don't know whatyay
does.