I’m looking into advanced distros (like arch) and slackware is fascinating. Is it still supported/used? If you’d like to comment an alternative distro, please do.
aport ( @aport@programming.dev ) 47•11 months agoI don’t think Slackware was ever widely used
Bezerker03 ( @bezerker03@lemmy.bezzie.world ) 14•11 months agoBack in the day it was THE distro. Not so much these days.
The Doctor ( @drwho@beehaw.org ) 4•11 months agoOne of the first 64-bit capable distros, too.
Spacegrass ( @Spacegrass@artemis.camp ) 12•11 months agoAmong Linux users it was.
☠️
The Doctor ( @drwho@beehaw.org ) 5•11 months agoWas, still is. Slackware users tend to not hype their distro of choice. Because, slack. :pipe:
ninetynine ( @ninetynine@lemmy.film ) 2•11 months agoBy the way I use Slackware doesn’t really roll off the tongue.
The Doctor ( @drwho@beehaw.org ) 1•11 months agoToo many folks just ain’t right with “Bob.”
Hibby ( @hibby@lemmy.ml ) 18•11 months agoSlackware may not be huge, but it is the base distro for Unraid.
HousePanther ( @housepanther@lemmy.goblackcat.com ) English5•11 months agoInteresting! That’s news to me. Does Slackware still use the Sys V style init system or did the devs change it to systemd?
Spacegrass ( @Spacegrass@artemis.camp ) 8•11 months agoSlackware doesn’t use systemd.
Hibby ( @hibby@lemmy.ml ) 4•11 months agoI’ve only barely gone beyond the more “backup + Docker appliance” style front end of Unraid, so I’m not sure. They make it extremely difficult for the untrained to get where you can break stuff. I am mostly an Arch/Debian guy.
HousePanther ( @housepanther@lemmy.goblackcat.com ) English5•11 months agoI haven’t used Debian in eons but I have respect for it as well. I really like anything and everything open source
Hibby ( @hibby@lemmy.ml ) 10•11 months agoI’m a guy who prefers community based distros. They don’t have business decisions get in the way of the needs of the community. It ain’t perfect, but it’s worth the tradeoffs for me. Debian for stuff I don’t want to constantly mess with. Arch for the express purpose of constantly messing with (and sometimes messing up).
HousePanther ( @housepanther@lemmy.goblackcat.com ) English4•11 months agoI actually have yet to break my Arch systems.
The Doctor ( @drwho@beehaw.org ) English4•11 months agoBSD style initscripts.
HousePanther ( @housepanther@lemmy.goblackcat.com ) English2•11 months agoMan, I might have to look into using Slackware again for the first time. No matter how much more comfortable I’ve become with systemd, I still hate it with a passion. If Slackware can handle at least XFCE well, preferably Cinnamon, it’s worth diving back into. Been 25 years though.
The Doctor ( @drwho@beehaw.org ) English2•11 months agoI’m pretty sure it does.
zzzzzz ( @zzzzzz@lemmy.ml ) 1•11 months agoUnraid does not use systemd
Rafael D Martins ( @razieltakato@lemmy.eco.br ) 3•11 months agoNever heard about Unraid, but I hear about Slackware all the time.
Hibby ( @hibby@lemmy.ml ) 5•11 months agoIf you can manage a Linux server, you likely have no use for Unraid. If you want to put together a Synology type appliance out of PC hardware to run Docker containers and uses ZFS for backups, Unraid is a fairly user friendly option.
Case ( @Case@unilem.org ) English2•11 months agoI run a server on unraid.
Honestly, it works as a way to cut your teeth with a type 1 hypervisor.
Fairly user friendly, and the community seems to offer a lot of support.
That being said, I mainly use it as a file server and a place to host containerized stuff that doesn’t need to bog down a gaming rig.
I got the hardware for free, so other than upgading the CPU to 10 cores (used, 50 dollars, not bad) and paying for electricity, it just churns along doing its thing.
hugetechnerd ( @hugetechnerd@mastodon.world ) 1•11 months ago@hibby @razieltakato I have an Ubuntu server with ZFS I’ve been using for a while. Haven’t seen the need for unraid personally.
coelhudo ( @coelhudo@lemmy.ca ) 10•11 months agoIt is still supported and used. It’s been my distro of choice for several years.
if you choose the current or the stable stream, last update was yesterday:
- http://www.slackware.com/changelog/stable.php?cpu=x86_64
- http://www.slackware.com/changelog/current.php?cpu=x86_64
If you need help, there are many users that can help you here https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/slackware-14/
Rafael D Martins ( @razieltakato@lemmy.eco.br ) 10•11 months agoTake a look at DistroWatch. I use it when I want to try a new distro, just for fun. Slackware is number 44 in the popularity rank.
downhomechunk [chicago] ( @downhomechunk@midwest.social ) English3•11 months agoIt’ll go back up to the top 20 or maybe top 10 when a new version comes out. 15.1 should be ready soon. People still care.
Iam ( @Iam@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 9•11 months agoDocumentation in the configs is outstanding. Everything is where it should be, file system wise. It doesn’t break very often.
downhomechunk [chicago] ( @downhomechunk@midwest.social ) English8•11 months agoSlackware is the only distro I’ve run since the late 90s. I’m not an IT pro or a programmer or even an advanced user… Slackware just feels right. Give it a shot.
Chewy ( @Chewy7324@discuss.tchncs.de ) 8•11 months agoI don’t know how widely used it is, but it definitely has its fanbase - probably mostly by people who’ve used it since ages ago.
From what I’ve read, “supported” is a difficult term for Slackware. It’s development is mostly done privately and informal by Volkerding. There’s no public issue tracker etc. Releases are done when Volkerding wants to/manages to do them.
It’s not a distro for me and I won’t recommend it as a daily driver, but Slackware is definitely interesting.
PS: I can’t stop me from recommending NixOS/GUIX as another interesting advanced distro. Them being declarative, deterministic and immutable seems to me like the complete opposite to Slackware, which doesn’t even do dependencie management.
mFat ( @mfat@lemdro.id ) English4•11 months agoIs the package manager still too dumb to figure out dependencies automatically?
HousePanther ( @housepanther@lemmy.goblackcat.com ) English4•11 months agoAs much as I Iike and respect Slackware and Patrick Volkerding, I would go with Arch if I were you. According to the change logs, the last commit was June 23rd of this year. Arch is more actively worked on and developed. I learned Linux on Slackware so I will always be partial to it, just like I learned Unix on OpenBSD and will be partial to it as well. But for me, Arch is the way to go for Linux. Arch’s wiki is fantastic.
afb ( @afb@lemmy.ml ) 6•11 months agoNot sure which change logs you’re looking at, but both stable and current were updated yesterday. Current is most days, stable is usually a couple of security patches and bug fixes a week.
Solaire ( @Solaire@kbin.social ) 3•11 months agoim using it now for my personal laptop. I have an alienware. Slackware was the easiest distro to get my NVIDIA cards working for steam. And these steam games run just as smooth as if they were on console. I also love that its pretty involved and have learned a lot between Slackware and Gentoo. I would definitely give it a try; i think it is very underrated today.
Ghost ( @HotBoxghost2743@lemmy.ml ) 2•11 months agoYou should give Gentoo a try. I’m a 12 year arch user. Gentoo is really solid and fun though. Or hell if you wanna go that advanced try LFS :)
regalia ( @regalia@literature.cafe ) 2•11 months agoNo