DistroWatch Weekly |
DistroWatch Weekly, Issue 1008, 27 February 2023 |
Welcome to this year's 9th issue of DistroWatch Weekly!
Technology is constantly changing, evolving, even accelerating as people strive to find new ways to solve problems. Some developers seek to simplify software, removing variables, choices, and complexity while others strive to provide more flexibility, solve more corner cases, and automate features. This week we look at a number of new developments and changes, from all over the spectrum. In our News section we talk about Purism selling a lapdock for their Librem 5 smartphone which strives to make the mobile device look and act more like a laptop. We also discuss Haiku's robust package management system and new beta test releases coming out of the SUSE community. This week we also talk about Canonical directing its community flavours to drop Flatpak support in favour of Snap packages in order to streamline users' options and experiences. Plus Christine Hall takes elementary OS 7.0 for a test run and talks about how this distribution strives for a minimal, simplified interface and package management. Then, in this week's Questions and Answers column, we talk about boot environments, why they are useful, and why so few Linux distributions have adopted this handy feature. Does your operating system supply boot environments out of the box? Let us know in the Opinion Poll below. Plus we're pleased to share the releases of the past week and list the torrents we are seeding. This past month we were thrilled to receive more support and donations than usual and we share the details below - thank you to everyone who helps keep our website running. We wish you all a wonderful week and happy reading!
Content:
- Review: elementary OS 7.0
- News: Purism unveils new lapdock for the Librem 5, an overview of Haiku package manager, openSUSE and SUSE test beta releases, Ubuntu community flavours scrap Flatpak in favour of Snap
- Questions and answers: The benefit of boot environments
- Released last week: Athena OS 2023.02.20, TrueNAS 22.12.1 "SCALE", GParted Live 1.5.0-1, Ubuntu 22.04.2
- Torrent corner: Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Ubuntu, Ubuntu MATE, Xubuntu
- Upcoming releases: FreeBSD 13.2-RC1
- Opinion poll: Does your main operating system offer boot environments?
- Site news: Donations and sponsors
- New distributions: Luberri Linux
- Reader comments
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Feature Story (by Christine Hall) |
elementary OS 7.0
Although elementary OS was first released a dozen years ago, back in 2011, I've paid it scant attention. Like many other Linux distributions, the project introduced itself as an entry level platform for those making the move to Linux from Windows or macOS. It also planned on being a commercial distribution that would pay its bills, and hopefully turn a profit, by selling downloads and software on a "pay what you want" basis.
Surprisingly, this plan worked, and both of the project's co-founders were eventually able to leave their day jobs to work full time on the distro, until the pandemic came along and the money stream went dry. Last year, that lead to a very public breakup within the organization, with one co-founder, Cassidy James Blaede, walking away from the project, leaving ownership in the hands of the other co-founder, Danielle Foré.
The brouhaha also led to a very late arrival for elementary OS 7.0, the first major release under the new ownership, which was originally scheduled to ship many months ago. It was finally released on January 31st under the codename "Horus."
The 'Pay What You Can' Model
When downloading Horus from elementary's website, it's not readily apparent that "pay what you can" means that the software is available for free for those who don't want to pay anything, and I've seen confusion over this on Twitter and Mastodon.
The download section on elementary's homepage says, "Pay what you can," and offers buttons for $10, $20, and $30, and "Custom" as choices, with $20 selected by default, and the button that leads to the download page is labeled, "Purchase elementary OS." Clicking that button opens a payment page for entering payment information. Payment can be made by credit card or using Alipay, a China-based payment system associated with Alibaba.
To download the software for free requires selecting "Custom" and entering "0" into the field that opens. This causes the download link button to relabel as "Download elementary OS," and prompts you to either download from a mirror or via torrent. Having fiber to the door and and excess of bandwidth, I chose to download from a mirror.
Installation
Installation was pretty straight-forward and much like it is with other distros. At disk partitioning time, however, the installation software didn't note the distro already on the machine and offer the user the option to install the distro alongside an existing installation without the user needing to know anything about partitioning, a pretty common option with Linux installation media. Instead, the user is offered the choice to run the distro live, erase the disk and install the distro, or "Advanced Custom Install," which requires the user to partition the disk manually using an included partitioning tool.
This surprised me, because most new-to-Linux users coming from Windows or macOS are likely not going to know how to partition a hard drive manually, no matter how easy the installation medium makes it.
This was made more worrisome by what seems to be a glitch in the installer's partitioning software.
When I initially looked at the "custom install" feature, I was brought to a screen that showed no graphical representation of the current partitions on the machine, just a partial representation of a GParted screen with no instructions for the user, which I found confusing and backed down from the install completely. Later, on the same machine (and with the same underlying Linux Mint taking up the entire hard drive), choosing "Custom Install" brought up something more familiar -- a screen showing colour-coded sliders for sizing partitions.
Keep this in mind before you hand a bootable elementary OS USB drive to a friend who's not tech-savvy if they're going to want to keep Windows installed as training wheels.
First Look
On first login I found the distro to be snappy and responsive, which I expected since it uses Ubuntu as its base. I also didn't find any obvious bugs or glitches; everything worked well out-of-the-box. elementary's homegrown, GNOME-based Pantheon desktop environment's default wallpaper is attractive, and the DE looks and feels enough like vanilla GNOME to make any Linux user feel at home.
elementary OS 7.0 -- A view of the default desktop
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The apps that are installed by default all employ a basic interface design that, while not unattractive, looks somewhat dated and reminiscent of Windows in the 1990s. However, they're all legible, functional, and intuitive and work as intended.
Wireless connected seamlessly, and Bluetooth found and paired with my BOSE speakers without issue, which is not always a given with those speakers.
Default Software
elementary OS installs very little software by default. There's no LibreOffice, Firefox, or Thunderbird. Instead, there are some home grown apps, such as a calculator, calendar, file manager, a simple text editor (called "Code"), terminal emulator, music player, email client, and the like, which I presume are based on GNOME projects. In a sense, these apps are generic, since looking through the apps' settings doesn't bring-up an "about" option with information such as the name and version of the software being used. This even includes the web browser, which is GNOME Web, the browser formerly known as Epiphany.
For anything other than these default system apps the user must turn to AppCenter, the distro's Flatpak-based app store, or open a terminal and use APT. No graphical app for installing software natively, such as Synaptic, is included.
Software Management
According to elementary's developers, the preferred way to install software on Horus is through Flatpaks, although packages from Ubuntu's repository can be installed using APT, which I did when I first installed the distro to get LibreOffice on the test machine. This makes AppCenter, the distro's app store and the easiest way to find and install Flatpaks, an indispensable part of the operating system for most users.
elementary OS 7.0 -- The software centre
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It appears that elementary OS 7 was released before its AppCenter was fully ready for prime time, however.
When I first installed the distro a few days after its release, AppCenter was pretty empty. Searching through the store's 17 categories revealed a paltry number of apps under each category. In the "Finance" category there were two apps, for example. One was a pay-what-you-want app for monitoring cryptocurrencies, and the other was a free app for monitoring exchange rates. Conspicuously missing were well known open source financial apps such as GnuCash or HomeBank.
This is what had necessitated my use of APT to download LibreOffice. Under "office" there were 24 apps listed, all little-known apps, with essential applications such as LibreOffice, Calibre, and Evolution nowhere to be found. Using AppCenter's search function to find these apps produced the result: "No apps found. Try changing search terms. You can also sideload Flatpak apps e.g. from Flathub."
elementary OS 7.0 -- Sideloading a package
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I noticed a change a couple of days later, just as I was preparing to submit this overview. Suddenly, when bringing up a category in AppCenter, in addition to sections headed "recently updated," "paid apps," and "free apps," which had been there since I installed the distro, there was a new section called "non-curated apps," which is filled with all of the apps you'd expect to find in a Linux app store.
I'm assuming that one of two things happened here. Either the developers of elementary OS 7 were scrambling to make AppCenter software able to use Flathub's APIs, or a glitch in the software had gone unnoticed for a week or longer. The latter is a distinct possibility. On January 8, eight days after elementary 7 was released (and after I was already evaluating the software), the elementary team posted the following to Mastodon:
A new release of AppCenter has been published that resolves a reported crash and adds a Flatpak Repair feature. Plus a new Files [elementary's file manager] release is out with fixes for reported issues. Grab those now! And keep sending us your feedback so we can keep making elementary OS better.
Either way (or if it's for some other reason) this doesn't reflect well on elementary OS.
Software Installation
The big bugaboo with elementary OS 7 among many Linux users will be its reliance on Flatpaks, which although gaining acceptance, remains somewhat controversial.
Personally, I have no problem with Flatpak. Although elementary's almost total reliance on them probably means I wouldn't consider the distro as my daily driver, I think that putting "containerized" schemes such as Flatpak or Snap front and center is a smart move for a distribution that wants to compete directly with Windows and macOS.
Not only does this mean that new-to-Linux users won't have to learn the intricacies of finding and installing software using a traditional package manager, Flatpak and Snap also offer a solution to what's been the biggest stumbling block to widespread Linux adoption since desktop Linux started to become easy-to-use 15 or so years ago, and that's the availability of software.
Flatpak and Snap also ease security concerns overall, even though they bring new security issues to the table that are already being addressed. In addition, they do away with most issues having to do with dependencies, making it less likely that installing an app will create the situation known as "dependency hell."
Installing free software from AppCenter is an easy one-click affair. Simply find the software you want to install, click the "free" button at the top of the screen (clicking on the software's name brings you to a page with a description of the software, including versioning, along with a screenshot), and the software is installed.
To "sideload" a Flatpak from Flathub or another Flatpak repository, click "install" in the repository and the file will download to elementary's "Downloads" folder. In the file manager, find the file and double-click on it, which will bring up a warning that the app hasn't been checked for "security, privacy, or system integration." Tic "I understand," then click "install anyway," and the application is installed.
The process for installing paid software varies only slightly. Here, the labeling of the installation button has been changed from "free" to a dollar amount, with prices ranging from $1-$25 dollars.
elementary OS 7.0 -- Purchasing software from AppCenter
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Clicking the dollar amount button calls a pop-up, with the default amount already populating a price field that includes plus and minus buttons for adjusting the price to any price the user desires. This price field sits alongside three buttons to adjust the "pay what you want" amount to fixed prices, in the amounts of $1, $5, or $10 (these suggested fixed prices remain the same, whether the default price is $1 or $25). Below that is an email field ("only used to send you a receipt -- you will not be subscribed to any mailing list"), and fields for entering payment information. The "payment" button that initiates the download remains deactivated until the payment information is entered.
If the payment amount is reduced to zero using the minus button, the payment button immediately activates, with wording that changes from "Pay X dollars" to "try for free."
Interestingly, nearly all of the "paid" software in AppCenter is labelled "outdated."
GNOME-based Pantheon Desktop
Like most (but certainly not all) desktops based on GNOME, Pantheon is more of a reimplementation of GNOME rather than a desktop of it's own, and any user of GNOME should have no trouble navigating the environment.
The most obvious changes have to do with navigation. For example, hitting the "super" (or "Windows") key, which brings up the Activities Overview on GNOME, brings up a list of keyboard shortcuts on Pantheon. Navigating through workspaces can be accomplished by holding the super key along with a right or left arrow. Many of the keyboard shortcuts are exactly the same as on GNOME, however.
elementary OS 7.0 -- The application menu
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Conclusions
Because elementary OS 7's focus is on relatively unskilled new Linux users, most people who have been using Linux for a while are probably not going to be interested in the distribution. That includes users who prefer so-called easy-to-use distributions such as Ubuntu, Linux Mint, or Pop!_OS, mainly because of the distribution's almost total reliance on Flatpaks for software packaging.
This release also has some rough edges that need to be refined, which isn't necessarily surprising since this first of the 7.x series was developed during a time when the elementary project was going through turmoil. Hopefully, most of these issues will be gone by the time version 7.1 is released, likely later this year.
However, if they get the installer fixed so that the OS can be easily installed alongside an existing OS by a novice user, this release might be just the thing for not only for those new to Linux, but for casual users in general who just want to use a computer for fun or work, without having to understand what's going on under the hood.
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Christine Hall is a writer and the Managing Editor for FOSS Force, a publication dedicated to covering news and events in the software world, with a focus on open source software.
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Visitor supplied rating
elementary OS has a visitor supplied average rating of: 5/10 from 148 review(s).
Have you used elementary OS? You can leave your own review of the project on our ratings page.
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Miscellaneous News (by Jesse Smith) |
Purism unveils new lapdock for the Librem 5, an overview of Haiku package manager, openSUSE and SUSE test beta releases, Ubuntu community flavours scrap Flatpak in favour of Snap
Purism, the organization behind the Librem 5 free software phone has announced the launch of a new accessory for their mobile device called a lapdock kit. "A lapdock is a docking station (or 'dock') combined with a laptop shell. A lapdock has no CPU, RAM or storage, instead, it uses the Librem 5 or Librem 5 USA as the computer. Once docked, the Librem 5's screen extends to the lapdock screen, and you can use the keyboard and mouse on the lapdock to drag windows back and forth between screens. All of the applications are running on the Librem 5 and once docked, it behaves like a laptop running PureOS. Even better, the lapdock's battery charges the Librem 5 while it's docked, extending its run time." Further details on this laptop-like experience can be found in the announcement.
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The Haiku project does not attract the same level of attention as its open source peers in the Linux and BSD communities. However, Haiku offers a lot of polished and modern features on a platform that is remarkably responsive. One rarely talked about feature of Haiku is its package management system. Mark Dastmalchi-Round takes us on a tour of Haiku package management, exploring what makes the lightweight operating system interesting and robust. "The way Haiku handles package management and its alternative approach to an 'immutable system' is one of those ideas I find really cool. Here's what it looks like from a desktop user's perspective - there's all the usual stuff like an 'app store', package updater, repositories of packages and so on. It's all there and works well - it's easily as smooth as any desktop Linux experience. However, it's the implementation details behind the scenes that make it so interesting to me. Haiku takes a refreshingly new approach to package management...."
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Development work is heating up in the SUSE community this week. openSUSE's stable branch, Leap, has entered its beta testing phase for version 15.5 with updates to the kernel, Plasma desktop, and Mesa codecs. "An update for KDE users will happen with the Desktop Environment for Leap 15.5 set to have Plasma 5.27, Plasma 5.27 is a Long Term Support version until the next LTS rolls around in 2024. It provides excellent stability along with bug fixes."
Meanwhile, SUSE Linux Enterprise (SLE) is also testing a new update. The fifth service pack for SLE 15 is now available for customers to test. "SLE 15 SP5 is a 'Consolidation' Service Pack. And so, the focus is on bug/security fixes as well as improving our existing features however you will find new selected features in this release but we have not made any major updates of our stacks compared to SP4."
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Around the same time Flatpak portable packages landed in the Linux ecosystem, Canonical announced their own portable package format: Snap. The two package formats basically provide the same solution: portable, dependency-bundled packages. Flatpaks have typically focused on desktop software, supporting multiple repositories, and being more cross-platform compatible. Snap packages are more focused on offering both desktop and server packages, are all supplied by one repository run by Canonical, and only run on Linux distributions that use the systemd init implementation. Thus far, Canonical's Ubuntu distribution is one of the few places support for Snap packages has been enabled by default while most of the rest of the Linux community, including Ubuntu community editions, have tended toward supporting Flatpak.
Canonical is working to change this by getting community editions to support Snap packages exclusively out of the box. "As part of our combined efforts, the Ubuntu flavors have made a joint decision to adjust some of the default packages on Ubuntu: Going forward, the Flatpak package as well as the packages to integrate Flatpak into the respective software center will no longer be installed by default in the next release due in April 2023, Lunar Lobster. Users who have used Flatpak will not be affected on upgrade, as flavors are including a special migration that takes this into account. Those who haven't interacted with Flatpak will be presented with software from the Ubuntu repositories and the Snap Store."
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These and other news stories can be found on our Headlines page.
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Questions and Answers (by Jesse Smith) |
The benefit of boot environments
Taking-a-snapshot asks: There is one important Linux functionality that I like very much and I think is very useful, mainly for new people in the Linux environment, that can undo mistakes with its "system recovery". I'm speaking about the Btrfs integration with Snapper or Timeshift and the GRUB boot loader. Some distributions create a very well integrated product that, during the installation, if you choose Btrfs everything will be done automatically for you (sub-volumes, etc) and work out of the box. So if you update your system a snapshot will be made automatically and if your system breaks and doesn't boot, you go to the GRUB menu and boot the operating system from a snapshot. You know much better than me all the possibilities.
Could you make a section considering this subject? From what I know there are only two distros that offer this functionally out of the box, they are Manjaro and openSUSE Tumbleweed. Do you know about others? For sure many users can implement this by themselves with many different distributions, but from my point of view when it works out of the box and you can choose this functionality I see it as a higher quality product.
DistroWatch answers: The feature being discussed here, which describes being able to boot into a snapshot of the operating system from the boot menu, is called boot environments. When the operating system is using an advanced filesystem, such as Btrfs or ZFS, we can take a frozen snapshot of the operating system in its current state. Later (for example, after a package update) we can reboot the operating system and select an older snapshot of the system to boot.
What this does for us is rollback any changes made since the snapshot. It allows us to recover files, undo changes, or attempt to fix configuration problems - especially ones which caused the operating system to no longer boot.
Boot environments have been available on FreeBSD and some of its children for about ten years at the time of writing. FreeBSD uses ZFS snapshots and integrates these snapshots with the boot menu to make it easy to load previous versions of the operating system. openSUSE has offered boot environments for around six years through Btrfs snapshots and this is especially useful when running the distribution's rolling edition, Tumbleweed. openSUSE takes the feature a step further and integrates the filesystem snapshot tool with the YaST control centre. This means any time the user makes a configuration change or updates a package, a new snapshot is automatically created. This is convenient and helps in situations where the administrator forgets to make a snapshot before rebooting.
One of the other rare distributions to include boot environments is Ubuntu and it only works when ZFS is selected as the main filesystem during installation. At the time of writing I haven't confirmed Manjaro Linux offers boot environments, the feature doesn't seem to be documented. However, Manjaro can use tools like Timeshift to create snapshots of systems running on Btrfs.
As the question's author pointed out, the boot environment feature is powerful and useful. It can essentially undo any change to the system that doesn't destroy the boot loader itself or the computer's hardware. Any other change in the operating system should be reversible via rebooting and selecting an older snapshot.
Not many Linux distributions enable automatic snapshots or boot environments. I think there are a few reasons for this and why snapshots have been more widely accepted in the FreeBSD and Solaris communities.
- Linux distributions have generally been reluctant to adopt advanced filesystems such as Btrfs and ZFS. The former mostly because of its perceived instability issues and the latter due to licensing restrictions which prevent it from being included in the Linux kernel source code. Since boot environments rely on advanced filesystems, and most Linux distributions still default to using traditional filesystems such as ext4, this has resulted in most projects ignoring boot environments.
- Most of the time when a configuration change or upgrade breaks a Linux system the issue is a kernel or driver update. Almost all Linux distributions keep old copies of the kernel which can be selected from the boot menu. This usually provides the user with a way to at least get the operating system running with a few minimal tools. It's not as complete or convenient as a boot environment, but being able to boot older versions of the kernel will often get the user to a point where they can recover the operating system.
- Most Linux distributions provide live boot media, such as DVDs or USB thumb drive images. Booting from live media allows the user to recover files, change configurations, usually reset the root password, and rollback package changes. Again, this isn't as convenient or elegant as boot environments, but it's a solution that works for almost any disaster.
In short, while boot environments are very convenient, especially when filesystem snapshots are automated, they require advanced filesystems which the Linux community has been treating with a good deal of caution. Boot environments also provide a way to rescue broken systems which can be achieved in alternative ways, such as using live media. Boot environments are usually easier to use and require fewer steps, but a lot of Linux users see them as just another alternative to live media and booting older kernels.
I am hoping more distributions adopt boot environments. It is one of my favourite features of FreeBSD and openSUSE (especially when running a rolling release flavour). Boot environments make operating systems nearly bulletproof and I'd like to see more projects adopt the concept, especially when paired with a snapshotting tool like Timeshift.
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Additional answers can be found in our Questions and Answers archive.
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Released Last Week |
Athena OS 2023.02.20
The developers of Athena OS, an Arch Linux-based distribution designed for penetration testing, bug-bounty hunting and InfoSec students, have announced the release of version 2023.02.20. The long changelog includes the following items: "Hacking roles - added new roles for your hacking activity, Black Hat Omniscient and OSINT Specialist; integrated Hack The Box VIP contents for playing retired machines; HTB Tools now manage the API key, shell prompt and target host according to user preferences; implemented Tool Recipe viewer for having at hands all the productivity commands; implemented OpenAI ChatGPT Desktop client, mainly intended for users that need to understand how the security tool works; implemented browser choice between Firefox and Brave; implemented browser quick access graphical interface to hacking web resources (Hack The Box, TryHackMe, PWNX, Offensive Security) an online tools (evShell generator, GTFOBins, CyberChef, CrackStation) by NightTab; added more security bookmarks; implemented Penetration Testing Kit in browser; implemented PyWhat; implemented a note-taking app choice (CherryTree, Notion App Enhanced, Obsidian) and a utility app choice at installation time...."
Athena OS 2023.02.20 -- Running the GNOME desktop
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TrueNAS 22.12.1 "SCALE"
iXsystems has announced the release of an update to the company's TrueNAS "SCALE" product, a network attached storage solution based on Debian. "TrueNAS SCALE 22.12.1 is the first maintenance update to 22.12.0, with over 300 improvements and bug fixes. Users still on the previous version (Angelfish) also have a simple update when using the same features and following the release notes. After a couple of weeks of community testing, we expect to recommend users to update their Angelfish and Bluefin systems to this latest release. TrueNAS SCALE Bluefin inherits all the functional capabilities of Angelfish and adds many new features. This first update (22.12.1) includes many significant improvements and bug fixes that are listed in the release notes. Highlights include: Performance improvements to further optimize various storage protocol workloads. SMB Share Proxy provides a redirect mechanism for making many TrueNAS SMB shares available in a common namespace presented by one TrueNAS system. This reduces the configuration needed for each SMB client. Sudo fields are added to replication tasks to provide the correct privileges on remote targets. Kubernetes pass-through is provided with an Enterprise license and enables external orchestrators to control the Kubernetes API functionality within a node. SSH key upload simplifies administration on TrueNAS via multiple users. Rootless login bug fixes & improvements simplify administration by non-root users. Validate host path in the SCALE UI is improved for the specific safety belt that warns of possible conflicts between apps and sharing. ZFS hotplug fixes and other improvements are provided through an update to OpenZFS 2.1.9." The release announcement and release notes offer additional information.
GParted Live 1.5.0-1
GParted Live is a live distribution with a single purpose - to provide tools for partitioning hard disks in an intuitive, graphical environment. The project's latest release is GParted Live 1.5.0-1 and includes fixed for handling Btrfs and NTFS filesystems. The project's release announcement reads: "The GParted team is happy to announce a new stable release of GParted Live. This release includes GParted 1.5.0, updated packages, and other improvements. Items of note include: Includes GParted 1.5.0: Fix path used to resize btrfs needs to be a directory. Fix crash when copying NTFS to starting beyond 2 TiB. Enable repair when checking exFAT file systems. Based on the Debian Sid repository (as of 2023/Feb/223). Linux image updated to 6.1.12-1. This release of GParted Live has been successfully tested on VirtualBox, VMware, BIOS, UEFI, and physical computers with AMD/ATI, NVIDIA, and Intel graphics." The release notes and changelog offer additional information.
Ubuntu 22.04.2
A new point release of Ubuntu 22.04, along with its community editions, have been announced. The release announcement states: "The Ubuntu team is pleased to announce the release of Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS (Long-Term Support) for its Desktop, Server, and Cloud products, as well as other flavours of Ubuntu with long-term support. As usual, this point release includes many updates and updated installation media has been provided so that fewer updates will need to be downloaded after installation. These include security updates and corrections for other high-severity bugs, with a focus on maintaining stability and compatibility with Ubuntu 22.04 LTS. 22.04.2 also brings new RISC-V platform support, providing fresh images for the LicheeRV and PolarFire Icicle Kit boards. Kubuntu 22.04.2 LTS, Ubuntu Budgie 22.04.2 LTS, Ubuntu MATE 22.04.2 LTS, Lubuntu 22.04.2 LTS, Ubuntu Kylin 22.04.2 LTS, Ubuntu Studio 22.04.2 LTS, and Xubuntu 22.04.2 LTS are also now available." Additional information is provided in the release notes.
Redcore Linux 2301
Ghiunhan Mamut has announced the release of Redcore Linux 2301, an updated build of the project's "hardened" distribution based on the "testing" branch of Gentoo Linux: "I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Redcore Linux Hardened 2301 (code name 'Sirius') stable ISO image. This cycle was mostly about fixing bugs. Since our previous release in October, many of you have flocked to our bug tracker and reported many issues, which I appreciate. Sisyphus, our package manager, saw a massive benefit and it is now more reliable than ever. We also added minor features, such as coloured output support. Changelog: resync with Gentoo Linux testing tree as of 2023-02-23; Linux headers 6.1, glibc 2.36, GCC 12.2.1, Binutils 2.39, LLVM/Clang 15.0.7 toolchain; improved hardening; Mesa 23.0.0, X.Org Server 21.1.7, Xwayland 22.1.8 graphics stack; Linux kernel 6.1.12 LTS as default (6.0.19, 5.15.95 LTS, 5.10.169 LTS available in the repositories, if you need an older kernel); KDE Plasma 5.27.1, KDE Gear 22.12.2, KDE Frameworks 103 default desktop stack...." See the release announcement for a compete changelog.
TUXEDO OS 2
Vinzenz Vietzke has announced the release of a new version of TUXEDO OS, an Ubuntu-based distribution tailor-made for TUXEDO Computer's line of laptop and desktops. The new version upgrades the Linux kernel to version 6.1 and the KDE Plasma desktop to version 5.27.1: "TUXEDO OS 2 finished and ready for use. The version impresses with consistent continuation of development work. This includes the latest version 5.27.1 of Plasma Desktop as well as the current Linux kernel 6.1 with long-term support. Further innovations are: KDE Applications 22.12.2, KDE Frameworks 5.103.0, Mesa graphics stack 22.3.6, Firefox 110.0, PipeWire audio 0.3.66, Qt libraries 5.15.8; functional settings for a desktop firewall; extended range of functions of TUXEDO Autorepair. The new version of TUXEDO OS is automatically installed via continuously provided updates. There is no need to back up data or go through a lengthy installation process. TUXEDO OS has a hybrid release model consisting of rolling and point releases, the classic versioning model." Further information is provided in the release announcement, available in German and in English.
TUXEDO OS 2 -- Running the KDE Plasma desktop
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EasyOS 5.0
Barry Kauler has announced the release of EasyOS 5.0, code-named "Kirkstone", a major update of the project's lightweight, experimental Linux distribution: "EasyOS 'Kirkstone' series version 5.0. Almost all of the packages in EasyOS 'Kirkstone' series are compiled from source, using a fork of OpenEmbedded (OE) 'Kirkstone' release. Almost all package versions are updated, compared with the 'Dunfell' series. Apart from new package versions, many bug fixes and many improvements, there is one other major improvement - the abandonment of 'langpack' language translation packages, as well as abandonment of language-specific builds. Now, there is just one file to download, the required language is chosen at first bootup, and the user interface is then rendered in that language. More or less, French is just about complete, second is German. MoManager is a GUI translation tool, that has its roots ten years ago in Puppy Linux; it has been extensively rewritten to make it an easy experience for anyone to contribute translations." See the release announcement and the release notes for more details.
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Development, unannounced and minor bug-fix releases
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Torrent Corner |
Weekly Torrents
The table below provides a list of torrents DistroWatch is currently seeding. If you do not have a bittorrent client capable of handling the linked files, we suggest installing either the Transmission or KTorrent bittorrent clients.
Archives of our previously seeded torrents may be found in our Torrent Archive. We also maintain a Torrents RSS feed for people who wish to have open source torrents delivered to them. To share your own open source torrents of Linux and BSD projects, please visit our Upload Torrents page.
Torrent Corner statistics:
- Total torrents seeded: 2,836
- Total data uploaded: 42.9TB
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Upcoming Releases and Announcements |
Summary of expected upcoming releases
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Opinion Poll (by Jesse Smith) |
Does your main operating system offer boot environments?
In this week's Questions and Answers section we talked about boot environments, why they are so useful, and why many Linux distributions do not use them. Does your main operating system offer boot environments out of the box?
You can see the results of our previous poll on where we should place news stories in last week's edition. All previous poll results can be found in our poll archives.
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Does you main OS offer boot environments?
Yes - they are created automatically: | 233 (28%) |
Yes - they are created manually: | 102 (12%) |
No - they are not offered: | 487 (59%) |
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This concludes this week's issue of DistroWatch Weekly. The next instalment will be published on Monday, 6 March 2023. Past articles and reviews can be found through our Weekly Archive and Article Search pages. To contact the authors please send e-mail to:
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Reader Comments • Jump to last comment |
1 • Poll (by Friar Tux on 2023-02-27 01:43:15 GMT from Canada)
My OS uses Timeshift and, by default, it is turned on. HOWEVER, it is the first thing I remove as I find it totally useless - my opinion, folks. I find it just as quick, but easier, if my OS goes belly-up, to simply reinstall it and pull the files I'm working with/on from my external backup - notice I did not say cloud backup - which I also strongly dislike due to having had too many issues there, too. Jesse, you're right about elementary OS not making it obvious that it's free. I tried to download it to try out but cancelled when the "give us money" dialogue popped up. I may give it another try, though. If I use it I can always donate.
2 • Timeshift (by Ingkata on 2023-02-27 02:11:37 GMT from Australia)
I had to use Timeshift today because of a flaky install I did last week. It's got me going again perfectly.
3 • Garuda boot environments (by Heinrich on 2023-02-27 02:16:07 GMT from United States)
Garuda also offers BTRFS boot environments out of the box.
4 • Haiku (by Toran on 2023-02-27 03:13:19 GMT from Belgium)
Very interesting OS and easy to install. Works perfect. But lacks my main software being OBS-studio. What a pity. I was told Haiku has no drivers for webcams either. I use my webcam a lot.
5 • NixOS and boot environment (by sumire on 2023-02-27 04:36:00 GMT from France)
NixOS natively supports ZFS & boot environment and works out of the box. You can roll back the previous system at any time, and you can select the previous system configuration in grub without worrying about the system rolling failure.
6 • deb packages (by Kleer Kut on 2023-02-27 04:38:54 GMT from United States)
As far as I know, Ubuntu isn't using 100% purely snaps, they still use deb packages out of the box. Before the people of the Ubuntu podcast went their separate ways, they explained the reason they haven't opened up the snap store is because of their experience with Launchpad. It was initially meant to be in house, people wanted it open, people wanted everything fixed, and after they spent substantial money paying people to do that few people used it. Probably because the people crying the loudest weren't even Ubuntu users, much like the vocal minority of people against snaps.
Canonical would be more than happy to open source the snap store if someone else pays for the labor to clean up the code and make it user friendly. I'm not particularly for or against snaps, but subtle disingenuous phrases like "community editions to support Snap packages exclusively" is unnecessary.
7 • Boot environment (by Bobbie Sellers on 2023-02-27 05:34:01 GMT from United States)
I use PCLinuxOS and every version even the community versions will come up in a boot environment. It can be used to fix boot problems with the installed systems and recover backup files to the main install. One can hardly afford to be without such a valuable tool.
bliss - on the ever-faithful Dell Latitude E7450, PCLinuxOS 2022 KDE Plasma 5.27.1 Kernel Version: 6.1.14-pclos1 (64-bit) KDE Frameworks 5.103.0 - Qt Version: 5.15.6 Graphics : X11 - Mesa Intel® HD Graphics 5500 15.5 GiB of RAM CPU 4 × Intel® Core™ i7-5600U CPU @ 2.60GHz Actually 2 real cores and 2 virtual cores.
8 • No Snaps on Red Hat’s distros, no Flatpaks on Canonical’s (by Heinrich on 2023-02-27 05:34:09 GMT from United States)
Until Red Hat starts supporting Snaps on Fedora and its spins and on RHEL, I won’t be casting any stones at Canonical for not including Flatpaks out of the box. They’re easy to enable for anyone who wants them, and Snaps are easy to remove.
9 • Boot environments on Manjaro (by Captainkats on 2023-02-27 06:10:14 GMT from Greece)
Manjaro does use boot environments on its GRUB menu, didn't have a chance to use it though just yet.
10 • Boot environment (by Dr.J on 2023-02-27 07:58:58 GMT from Germany)
If they work, I think boot environments are a good idea - even if they are very rarely used. I have built something similar myself for my host system - in the rare case an upgrade really destroys the entire system and a software downgrade is no longer enough. I have a second operating system installed and regularly make images of the partition with the operating system from there. So if something goes completely wrong, I can restore the image, it only takes a few minutes. But this happens very very rarely, mostly a software downgrade or a correction of configuration files is enough. In addition my main system runs in a virtual machine and I take a snapshot of it before every upgrade/update.
11 • snapshots in mint (by bingus on 2023-02-27 08:04:56 GMT from United States)
doesn't Linux Mint have a snapshots feature that it asks the user to set up upon the first boot? not sure how it's implemented.
12 • Canonical is hillarious (by Unpleasant truth on 2023-02-27 08:14:13 GMT from Ireland)
Still waging losing war with flatpaks. Not with Redhat anymore. Flatpak is universally accepted but Canonical is like a small child doing things just in spite. Losers.
13 • Boot environments (by Romane on 2023-02-27 08:15:01 GMT from Australia)
AS @1 says, often it is easier and simpler and quicker just to do a re-install. Even booting to an "older" working environment doesn't solve the issue at hand - why did ir go belly-up? - and relies on either the developers doing the "fix" (relatively quickly, one would hope) or the user applying certain technical know-how to fix it; nether of which option suites me.
I always have another dual-boot system on hand, so if my primary system goes whoopsie I know not to update this alternate desktop yet. I keep all my data files on their own partition, so it is a very simple case on a re-install, to mount this under my /home// placement, and all my data files are as I left them, ready for use. If the re-install imports the same "oops", there are other distros which can be installed as a temporary replacement till the issue is fixed
When a new Kernel is installed, I make sure I can boot into it first and that all works as expected, If OK, then immediately delete the previous Kernel - no point hanging onto it if the new one is fine.
As an example, my preferred desktop environment is KDE Plasma. I run Debian Testing. For the first time in just over a decade, Plasma on Testing has remained functional. Every other time, I have simply swapped to my Xfce environment when Plasma became non-functional and continued as normal. When the Plasma environment is working properly again, I swap back.
14 • 11, timeshift and GRUB (by Someguy on 2023-02-27 08:39:21 GMT from United Kingdom)
Yes, Mint now has Timeshift (manual) and always has had GRUB via On/Shift (albeit needing a tedious, not to say knowledgeable, deployment beyond many punters). Sometimes use the Timeshift but, thanks to Jesse, delete old bootcode with apt autoremove. None of the above was useful when an electrical glitch destroyed both disks during a Clonezilla operation! Notwithstanding, never had need for a reversion. Just want stuff that works - lost interest in background code in '80's with 8-bit machines; prefer to leave the internals to the experts to get on my work!. Notwithstanding, still preserve interests in the HW.
15 • BE alternatives (by AdamB on 2023-02-27 09:18:52 GMT from Australia)
I voted 'no' in the poll because I don't use any Boot Environment equivalent on Linux.
For the last couple of years, I have had an experimental installation of GhostBSD. In that time, GhostBSD has managed to kill itself a couple of times during major updates, and its Boot Environments didn't help, so I had to re-install. GhostBSD did survive the last major update, so I will observe it with interest - I like to have alternatives.
For Linux, I always keep my data on a separate partition; server applications will have their data files on a separate partition also. I sometimes back up a system partition to a separate drive, using fsarchiver for an ext4 source partition, and btrfs send|receive for a btrfs source.
As a previous poster has said, if your data files are on a separate partition, it is likely to be quicker to just re-install the operating system - or even install a different distro.
16 • Snapshots (by PJ on 2023-02-27 10:02:22 GMT from Ireland)
I'm accustomed to boot environments with FreeBSD on my TrueNAS box and would like very much if the Linux had this built-in so it came with my preferred distribution: Linux Mint. I stopped distro-hopping years ago and don't need it badly enough to switch to OpenSuse.
Meanwhile, Timeshift works perfectly as an equivalent to a Windows system restore (for those not familiar with it). I was already using it and considered it essential when Clement Lefebvre opted to include in the Mint distribution.
Sometimes I try out a few packages and rather than uninstall them all one by one and trust that nothing got left behind I just run Timeshift to put the clock back. It's fast and has always worked for me. I make sure there's a current snapshot before doing anything on any computer I work on for friends and family.
It's worth trying out even if you don't run Mint.
17 • Haiku (by pedal-to-the-bare-metal on 2023-02-27 10:51:10 GMT from Germany)
Many promising alternative OSs have ended up in the dustbin. Some of their devs die trying, some go crazy, some turn to religion. Even Google dropped its Vault "secure OS on-an-SD-Card", and has recently cut back on Fuchsia development.
So what is there for Haiku? The devs want it to be a legacy OS compatable with the old BeOS. But they also want it to be the next public use OS after Windows, Mac, and Linux. However, when ppl suggest a "modern" feature, it is met with the "legacy" mindset that says "we can't have that yet". e.g., non-native apps, multi-user system, AI, security, etc. This is a recipe for s-l-o-o-o-w and troubleprone development.
Linus showed us the right way: you have to curse and swear a lot to get things done!
18 • @ #1: Let's give credit where credit is richly deserved. (by R. Cain on 2023-02-27 10:56:48 GMT from United States)
In comment #1, it is stated, "...Jesse, you're right about elementary OS not making it obvious that it's free..."
Jesse Smith did not write this story / review; Christine Hall, THE driving force (no pun intended) behind FOSS Force, did.
At the very beginning of the review, it is clearly stated: “Feature Story (by Christine Hall)”
At the very end of the review, it is clearly stated, “Christine Hall is a writer and the Managing Editor for FOSS Force, a publication dedicated to covering news and events in the software world, with a focus on open source software.”
And, from FOSS Force itself: “Christine Hall has been a journalist since 1971. In 2001, she began writing a weekly consumer computer column and started covering Linux and FOSS in 2002 after making the switch to GNU/Linux.”
Very good review, Christine; very thorough and very well written, as usual. ...And an outstanding job of partnering, Jesse. I sincerely hope this relationship with FOSS Force continues.
19 • boot environments (by frc_kde on 2023-02-27 12:57:40 GMT from Brazil)
I voted "Yes", because I have openSUSE Tumbleweed.
Running openSUSE (Leap, Tumbleweed) for 6 years now, and I have booted into a previous "snapshot" 3 or 4 times. - It was wonderful.
But my real insurance is to "multiboot" a few distros. - If some distro breaks, just restart and run another distros, in one minute.
Arch, Debian testing, Mageia, Manjaro and MX Linux (all with KDE and the same configurations) are 100% functional just now. - Still exploring and learning more on Slackware and Redcore, but they are useful too.
20 • Boot Environments & Snap (by dragonmouth on 2023-02-27 13:11:50 GMT from United States)
Boot Environments: Since my /home directory resides on its own partition (separate disk), like Friar Tux, I find it easier to re-install rather than restore. That is not to say that I do not appreciate automatic backups.
Snap: Ever since Canonical came into being, they have tried to become the controlling force in and of Linux. Unfortunately, their efforts such as Unity, Mir, etc have been rejected for the most part by the Linux community. Now they are attempting to force Ubuntu and Ubuntu-based distro users to use Snap packages by offering nothing but. Unfortunately (luckily), Canonical is not Microsoft and Mark Shuttleworth is not Bill Gates so they cannot "mandate" anything. Linux ethos to the rescue.
21 • Ooops (by Friar Tux on 2023-02-27 13:27:45 GMT from Canada)
@18 (R, Cain) I stand corrected. Not sure why I said Jesse... it WAS Christine that wrote it. My apologies to both Christine and Jesse.
22 • Flatpaks (by unpacker on 2023-02-27 13:50:29 GMT from Germany)
Recently looked into installing an alternative browser. Deb package from the repository was 200-300 MB in size, as usual. Corresponding Flatpak alternative was over 3 GB!!! No thanks. If anything is bloat and a waste of bandwidth, then this.
23 • Flatpak vs Snap (by Jesse on 2023-02-27 14:27:57 GMT from Canada)
@8: "Until Red Hat starts supporting Snaps on Fedora and its spins and on RHEL, I won’t be casting any stones at Canonical for not including Flatpaks out of the box. "
There are two main differences here. 1. On the Fedora side it's just one distro. Red Hat isn't preventing other distros or spins from using Snap, only its own. On the Ubuntu side, Canonical is dictating that other distributions, with their own governing bodies, are not allowed to ship Flatpak support.
2. Several of the Ubuntu community editions (at least four of them, so half of them) chose to use Flatpaks over Snaps because that is what both the users and developers wanted. Canonical is now telling them they're not allowed to ship Flatpak support anymore and must ship Snap, even though the users don't want it. There is no equivalent in the Red Hat community of spin-offs or clones adopting Snap and Red Hat demanding those projects drop Snap is favour of Flatpak.
24 • @23 (by Denethor on 2023-02-27 14:45:54 GMT from Greece)
I have to disagree with you Jessie on this, although I have no love for Canonical (nor Redhat). First I want to clarify that I don't use neither snaps nor flatpak. I use kubuntu mainly as well as some pure debian installations and when there is no .deb package to find for a particular program, I use appimage (very rare case). Anyhow, the official ubuntu distributions are those who requested to be "official" and thus benefit in so many ways from Canonical's ubuntu brand, the infrastructure and what not. Therefore, there are not completelly independent distros and Canonical has a saying about them. If they don't like it, they can go really independent and loose all the benefits from Canonical, they do have a choice. Redhat does not support any other distros as Canonical does so its their attitude cannot be compared. In addition, I would like to note that I am not sure the users, as you claim, chose flatpak on those community editions...I would rather think its the developers decision more. Finally, as I read in numerous sources, snap is deemed to be a superior system in comparison with flatpak. The fact that Redhat has more resources and thus influence on FOSS, does not make it better. Anyhow, they both suck in my mind for so many reasons...
25 • @23 - bloat vs bloat (by Andy Prough on 2023-02-27 15:01:48 GMT from United States)
@Jesse - "On the Fedora side it's just one distro. Red Hat isn't preventing other distros or spins from using Snap, only its own. On the Ubuntu side, Canonical is dictating that other distributions, with their own governing bodies, are not allowed to ship Flatpak support."
It's like watching a sumo wrestling match. May the fattest and most resource wasting distro/universal package manager combination win. None of it really has much of anything to do with GNU/Linux - just massive amounts of duplicative libraries and services bolted on top of it.
26 • ElementaryOS (by Don S on 2023-02-27 15:05:02 GMT from United States)
I decided to give ElementaryOS a try when it was released via KVM. Initially, I was really surprised with it. Fast install; great "First time" screen; snappy. Updating was quick, but still kept having a notification for "System updates are available" (there were none). When I noticed their browser wasn't Firefox, I thought I'd install it.
I kid you not, a simple 'sudo apt install firefox' took just over seven minutes. The VM was allocated 4-cores (on an AMD 3600); 6gb ram; sitting in my VM folder on a NVME Samsung 970 drive. Most other distributions I try with lower resources have it installed within seconds.
It was so bad, I thought there was something wrong, and wiped the vda and re-installed Elementary again, same result. I don't know if it's Snap (probably) or something wrong with the system, but I tried another non-Snap package and it was installed within a few seconds. If that's the case with a common program like Firefox, they have some serious work to do.
27 • Boot environments (by grraf on 2023-02-27 15:26:42 GMT from Romania)
There is no point for it, I have my data backed up and keep 2 kernel versions and a live usb the most i ever had to do was chroot and fix my issues from the terminal usually either 'downgrade' a kernel or gpu driver causing issues and at one time had to manually edit some grub files... I'm using an EFI bios &EXT4 partitions and despite often occurring power outages i never had problems with data loss/corruption unlike back in my windows usage days or that one stupid attempt to use the back then heavily praised BTRFS that resulted in actual data corruption due to a power outage.
28 • My vote was no... (by tom joad on 2023-02-27 16:29:34 GMT from Sweden)
I use Mint Cinnamon. It doesn't have to my knowledge any boot environment options. Whatever.
After I finish doing a complete, with updates, install or re-install I immediately setup Timeshift, I set it to two monthly, two weekly and one daily. Some might think that is over kill so to speak. Maybe. Next I do an on demand right then of the brand new install. I save that on demand to another separate location; hard drive, zip drive, the cloud. And along the way I will copy various timeshifts to a separate location. I do that once a week or when I think of it.
That takes very little time and it is easy to do.
I have cloud storage for the rest of it. There is always a Mint boot drive with me too.
Can I recreate everything? No. But I can get 99% of it back. And I am ok with that.
29 • Boot environment (by David on 2023-02-27 18:12:53 GMT from United Kingdom)
PCLinuxOS provides a tool to make your own installation medium with just the things you have in the versions in which you have them. Run that and put the result onto a USB stick and you have the solution on hand to any disaster. You can decide whether to include /home, but I backup that with rsync regularly. In fact, if you behave sensibly, updates seldom cause trouble. The latest Python required two programs to be re-compiled, and that was done within 24 hours.
30 • Snapshots (by Robert on 2023-02-27 19:14:49 GMT from United States)
On my main system I use LVM snapshots for when an upgrade goes wrong. Had to use it a couple times. Not as convenient or powerful as btrfs/zfs snapshots are supposed to be, but it works.
My server runs Opensuse Leap with automatic btrfs snapshot, but I have not had to use them. I hope I never do, since on a previous desktop install of Tumbleweed attempting to restore from a snapshot left the system more broken than when I started.
31 • Berryboot, a boot environment/ARM minidistro for launching other distributions (by K.U. on 2023-02-27 20:31:50 GMT from Finland)
In the context of boot environments, I would like to mention Berryboot, which provides install, boot, backup and filesystem check&repair of Linux distributions on some ARM devices.
Berryboot makes it possible to install multiple Linux distributions on an sd-card and provides boot menu on ARM computers which don't natively support installing multiple distros on the same device.
In the past, I used to recommend Berryboot as an easy to use tool to transform any Allwinner A10 based Android tablets and netbooks to Linux devices. Unfortunately, we losed this opportunity, because support for this was discontinued due to lack of popularity and developer power. I blame missing publicity on Linux mainstream media for this.
Currently, Berryboot supports only Raspberry Pi devices. I would welcome to see a review of Berryboot here in DW.
See more info here: https://github.com/maxnet/berryboot
32 • Boot Environments (by Reyfer on 2023-02-27 21:46:32 GMT from Venezuela)
May I ask, what happens to your boot environments when the drive is not accessible, or dies, or breaks or whatever? That is why I have actual backups on an external drive.
33 • Expanded AppCenter content (by Shadow53 on 2023-02-28 04:10:24 GMT from United States)
I didn't see a comment mentioning this -- I think what Christine ran into was that installing a package from Flathub adds the new remote to AppCenter, and subsequent refreshes will include all of those packages in the "store" view.
34 • boot environments (by fenglengshun on 2023-03-01 06:23:18 GMT from Indonesia)
I first encountered it on Garuda Linux and liked it quite a lot. The problem was that when grub broke last year, you still need to use the ISO to chroot and fix the boot environment.
For that reason I went to Manjaro, and they do have boot environment with btrfs-snapshot if you use btrfs when you install (though they don't show grub by default).
I think this has started to spread more and more, and it seems be strongly adopted by many Arch-based distro. It's an interesting development that's probably needed for Arch-based given how sometimes things break (last time I had openssl breaking, had to revert to a btrfs snapshot and redo the update).
35 • boot flatpack snap (by Trihexagonal on 2023-03-01 08:06:51 GMT from United States)
I use UFS file system with FreeBSD and it doesn't offer boot environments, neither would I use them if it did. I used ZFS once and it was more trouble than it was worth IMO.
I rebuild FreeBSD from scratch when there is a version bump and have never had a problem I couldn't fix with an update or ports/pkg when I mix them..
I'm still using the initial build of Kali Linux 2021.3 build from almost 2 years ago on that box, never had a problem I couldn't fix with rolling updates, update at least twice a week, enjoy using apt/apt-get and wouldn't use anything else.
Default configurations work for me and I can work with default configurations.
36 • Spiral offers boot enviroments too (by aasami on 2023-03-01 15:03:56 GMT from Slovakia)
I was surprised to see that Jesse didn't mention more distors supporting boot enviroments out of the box. One that wasn't mentioned still is relatively new SpiralLinux, that Jesse has reviewed few months ago. Althought he didn't mention this feature in his review and even wondered what sets it apart from LinuxMInt, MX Linux or SolydXK. So there you have the distinction. Boot enviroments are very usefull, when you experiment with different settings in your system or some customization turns unexpected ways. I'm glad i have it.
37 • Haiku (by Dave Postles on 2023-03-02 18:32:00 GMT from United Kingdom)
I'm running Haiku from a USB stick as an experiment. I've downloaded some useful apps that I use in Linux (including QGIS). I have two principal issues: there is no antivirus app like Clam(TK) and the version of LyX doesn't have export to .pdf (but that's true of MXLinux too). It's quite useful, but I wouldn't use it for downloads.
38 • Under-rated distros (by Gary W on 2023-03-03 01:38:09 GMT from Australia)
I missed the cutoff last week, so I'm posting today :-)
I agree with people's perception of Void, an interesting and well-performing distro. But its repo doesn't have all the creature comforts of Debian-based distros, so it's not really for me.
No one mentioned PCLinuxOS, which had its place in the sun but is now overshadowed. It's my fallback when I can't enjoy MX (which is definitely not under-rated).
But the most under-rated distro I've tried is EXE GNU/Linux, packaging Devuan with the Trinity Desktop Environment. Memory used is 51Mb before logging in to the GUI, and only 99Mb after, making it particularly suitable for under-spec hardware like my original eee701 laptop. A great effort deserving more attention (for people who can do without bleeding edge DE like GNOME and KDE).
Number of Comments: 38
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Archives |
• Issue 1090 (2024-09-30): Rhino Linux 2024.2, commercial distros with alternative desktops, Valve seeks to improve Wayland performance, HardenedBSD parterns with Protectli, Tails merges with Tor Project, Quantum Leap partners with the FreeBSD Foundation |
• Issue 1089 (2024-09-23): Expirion 6.0, openKylin 2.0, managing configuration files, the future of Linux development, fixing bugs in Haiku, Slackware packages dracut |
• Issue 1088 (2024-09-16): PorteuX 1.6, migrating from Windows 10 to which Linux distro, making NetBSD immutable, AlmaLinux offers hardware certification, Mint updates old APT tools |
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• Issue 1086 (2024-09-02): Vanilla OS 2, command line tips for simple tasks, FreeBSD receives investment from STF, openSUSE Tumbleweed update can break network connections, Debian refreshes media |
• Issue 1085 (2024-08-26): Nobara 40, OpenMandriva 24.07 "ROME", distros which include source code, FreeBSD publishes quarterly report, Microsoft updates breaks Linux in dual-boot environments |
• Issue 1084 (2024-08-19): Liya 2.0, dual boot with encryption, Haiku introduces performance improvements, Gentoo dropping IA-64, Redcore merges major upgrade |
• Issue 1083 (2024-08-12): TrueNAS 24.04.2 "SCALE", Linux distros for smartphones, Redox OS introduces web server, PipeWire exposes battery drain on Linux, Canonical updates kernel version policy |
• Issue 1082 (2024-08-05): Linux Mint 22, taking snapshots of UFS on FreeBSD, openSUSE updates Tumbleweed and Aeon, Debian creates Tiny QA Tasks, Manjaro testing immutable images |
• Issue 1081 (2024-07-29): SysLinuxOS 12.4, OpenBSD gain hardware acceleration, Slackware changes kernel naming, Mint publishes upgrade instructions |
• Issue 1080 (2024-07-22): Running GNU/Linux on Android with Andronix, protecting network services, Solus dropping AppArmor and Snap, openSUSE Aeon Desktop gaining full disk encryption, SUSE asks openSUSE to change its branding |
• Issue 1079 (2024-07-15): Ubuntu Core 24, hiding files on Linux, Fedora dropping X11 packages on Workstation, Red Hat phasing out GRUB, new OpenSSH vulnerability, FreeBSD speeds up release cycle, UBports testing new first-run wizard |
• Issue 1078 (2024-07-08): Changing init software, server machines running desktop environments, OpenSSH vulnerability patched, Peppermint launches new edition, HardenedBSD updates ports |
• Issue 1077 (2024-07-01): The Unity and Lomiri interfaces, different distros for different tasks, Ubuntu plans to run Wayland on NVIDIA cards, openSUSE updates Leap Micro, Debian releases refreshed media, UBports gaining contact synchronisation, FreeDOS celebrates its 30th anniversary |
• Issue 1076 (2024-06-24): openSUSE 15.6, what makes Linux unique, SUSE Liberty Linux to support CentOS Linux 7, SLE receives 19 years of support, openSUSE testing Leap Micro edition |
• Issue 1075 (2024-06-17): Redox OS, X11 and Wayland on the BSDs, AlmaLinux releases Pi build, Canonical announces RISC-V laptop with Ubuntu, key changes in systemd |
• Issue 1074 (2024-06-10): Endless OS 6.0.0, distros with init diversity, Mint to filter unverified Flatpaks, Debian adds systemd-boot options, Redox adopts COSMIC desktop, OpenSSH gains new security features |
• Issue 1073 (2024-06-03): LXQt 2.0.0, an overview of Linux desktop environments, Canonical partners with Milk-V, openSUSE introduces new features in Aeon Desktop, Fedora mirrors see rise in traffic, Wayland adds OpenBSD support |
• Issue 1072 (2024-05-27): Manjaro 24.0, comparing init software, OpenBSD ports Plasma 6, Arch community debates mirror requirements, ThinOS to upgrade its FreeBSD core |
• Issue 1071 (2024-05-20): Archcraft 2024.04.06, common command line mistakes, ReactOS imports WINE improvements, Haiku makes adjusting themes easier, NetBSD takes a stand against code generated by chatbots |
• Issue 1070 (2024-05-13): Damn Small Linux 2024, hiding kernel messages during boot, Red Hat offers AI edition, new web browser for UBports, Fedora Asahi Remix 40 released, Qubes extends support for version 4.1 |
• Issue 1069 (2024-05-06): Ubuntu 24.04, installing packages in alternative locations, systemd creates sudo alternative, Mint encourages XApps collaboration, FreeBSD publishes quarterly update |
• Issue 1068 (2024-04-29): Fedora 40, transforming one distro into another, Debian elects new Project Leader, Red Hat extends support cycle, Emmabuntus adds accessibility features, Canonical's new security features |
• Issue 1067 (2024-04-22): LocalSend for transferring files, detecting supported CPU architecure levels, new visual design for APT, Fedora and openSUSE working on reproducible builds, LXQt released, AlmaLinux re-adds hardware support |
• Issue 1066 (2024-04-15): Fun projects to do with the Raspberry Pi and PinePhone, installing new software on fixed-release distributions, improving GNOME Terminal performance, Mint testing new repository mirrors, Gentoo becomes a Software In the Public Interest project |
• Issue 1065 (2024-04-08): Dr.Parted Live 24.03, answering questions about the xz exploit, Linux Mint to ship HWE kernel, AlmaLinux patches flaw ahead of upstream Red Hat, Calculate changes release model |
• Issue 1064 (2024-04-01): NixOS 23.11, the status of Hurd, liblzma compromised upstream, FreeBSD Foundation focuses on improving wireless networking, Ubuntu Pro offers 12 years of support |
• Issue 1063 (2024-03-25): Redcore Linux 2401, how slowly can a rolling release update, Debian starts new Project Leader election, Red Hat creating new NVIDIA driver, Snap store hit with more malware |
• Issue 1062 (2024-03-18): KDE neon 20240304, changing file permissions, Canonical turns 20, Pop!_OS creates new software centre, openSUSE packages Plasma 6 |
• Issue 1061 (2024-03-11): Using a PinePhone as a workstation, restarting background services on a schedule, NixBSD ports Nix to FreeBSD, Fedora packaging COSMIC, postmarketOS to adopt systemd, Linux Mint replacing HexChat |
• Issue 1060 (2024-03-04): AV Linux MX-23.1, bootstrapping a network connection, key OpenBSD features, Qubes certifies new hardware, LXQt and Plasma migrate to Qt 6 |
• Issue 1059 (2024-02-26): Warp Terminal, navigating manual pages, malware found in the Snap store, Red Hat considering CPU requirement update, UBports organizes ongoing work |
• Issue 1058 (2024-02-19): Drauger OS 7.6, how much disk space to allocate, System76 prepares to launch COSMIC desktop, UBports changes its version scheme, TrueNAS to offer faster deduplication |
• Issue 1057 (2024-02-12): Adelie Linux 1.0 Beta, rolling release vs fixed for a smoother experience, Debian working on 2038 bug, elementary OS to split applications from base system updates, Fedora announces Atomic Desktops |
• Issue 1056 (2024-02-05): wattOS R13, the various write speeds of ISO writing tools, DSL returns, Mint faces Wayland challenges, HardenedBSD blocks foreign USB devices, Gentoo publishes new repository, Linux distros patch glibc flaw |
• Issue 1055 (2024-01-29): CNIX OS 231204, distributions patching packages the most, Gentoo team presents ongoing work, UBports introduces connectivity and battery improvements, interview with Haiku developer |
• Issue 1054 (2024-01-22): Solus 4.5, comparing dd and cp when writing ISO files, openSUSE plans new major Leap version, XeroLinux shutting down, HardenedBSD changes its build schedule |
• Issue 1053 (2024-01-15): Linux AI voice assistants, some distributions running hotter than others, UBports talks about coming changes, Qubes certifies StarBook laptops, Asahi Linux improves energy savings |
• Issue 1052 (2024-01-08): OpenMandriva Lx 5.0, keeping shell commands running when theterminal closes, Mint upgrades Edge kernel, Vanilla OS plans big changes, Canonical working to make Snap more cross-platform |
• Issue 1051 (2024-01-01): Favourite distros of 2023, reloading shell settings, Asahi Linux releases Fedora remix, Gentoo offers binary packages, openSUSE provides full disk encryption |
• Issue 1050 (2023-12-18): rlxos 2023.11, renaming files and opening terminal windows in specific directories, TrueNAS publishes ZFS fixes, Debian publishes delayed install media, Haiku polishes desktop experience |
• Issue 1049 (2023-12-11): Lernstick 12, alternatives to WINE, openSUSE updates its branding, Mint unveils new features, Lubuntu team plans for 24.04 |
• Issue 1048 (2023-12-04): openSUSE MicroOS, the transition from X11 to Wayland, Red Hat phasing out X11 packages, UBports making mobile development easier |
• Issue 1047 (2023-11-27): GhostBSD 23.10.1, Why Linux uses swap when memory is free, Ubuntu Budgie may benefit from Wayland work in Xfce, early issues with FreeBSD 14.0 |
• Issue 1046 (2023-11-20): Slackel 7.7 "Openbox", restricting CPU usage, Haiku improves font handling and software centre performance, Canonical launches MicroCloud |
• Issue 1045 (2023-11-13): Fedora 39, how to trust software packages, ReactOS booting with UEFI, elementary OS plans to default to Wayland, Mir gaining ability to split work across video cards |
• Issue 1044 (2023-11-06): Porteus 5.01, disabling IPv6, applications unique to a Linux distro, Linux merges bcachefs, OpenELA makes source packages available |
• Issue 1043 (2023-10-30): Murena Two with privacy switches, where old files go when packages are updated, UBports on Volla phones, Mint testing Cinnamon on Wayland, Peppermint releases ARM build |
• Issue 1042 (2023-10-23): Ubuntu Cinnamon compared with Linux Mint, extending battery life on Linux, Debian resumes /usr merge, Canonical publishes fixed install media |
• Issue 1041 (2023-10-16): FydeOS 17.0, Dr.Parted 23.09, changing UIDs, Fedora partners with Slimbook, GNOME phasing out X11 sessions, Ubuntu revokes 23.10 install media |
• Issue 1040 (2023-10-09): CROWZ 5.0, changing the location of default directories, Linux Mint updates its Edge edition, Murena crowdfunding new privacy phone, Debian publishes new install media |
• Issue 1039 (2023-10-02): Zenwalk Current, finding the duration of media files, Peppermint OS tries out new edition, COSMIC gains new features, Canonical reports on security incident in Snap store |
• Issue 1038 (2023-09-25): Mageia 9, trouble-shooting launchers, running desktop Linux in the cloud, New documentation for Nix, Linux phasing out ReiserFS, GNU celebrates 40 years |
• Issue 1037 (2023-09-18): Bodhi Linux 7.0.0, finding specific distros and unified package managemnt, Zevenet replaced by two new forks, openSUSE introduces Slowroll branch, Fedora considering dropping Plasma X11 session |
• Issue 1036 (2023-09-11): SDesk 2023.08.12, hiding command line passwords, openSUSE shares contributor survery results, Ubuntu plans seamless disk encryption, GNOME 45 to break extension compatibility |
• Full list of all issues |
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Linux Lite is a beginner-friendly Linux distribution based on Ubuntu's long-term support (LTS) release and featuring the Xfce desktop. Linux Lite primarily targets Windows users. It aims to provide a complete set of applications to assist users with their everyday computing needs, including a full office suite, media players and other essential daily software.
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View our range including the highly anticipated StarFighter. Available with coreboot open-source firmware and a choice of Ubuntu, elementary, Manjaro and more. Visit Star Labs for information, to buy and get support.
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