Spyke

Literally nothing happens.

Linux init conservatives: Alright that's the final straw, systemd!

27
feddit.org

Nah, artix. Although I did try gentoo out a while back on a spare laptop, I enjoyed it!

2
lemmy.world

Nice, another OpenRC distro I really like and have been daily-driving is Alpine Linux Damn thing is so snappy

2
lemmy.world

Not everyone approves of it, not everyone likes it, and if you do have a Nvidia GPU, you might want to skip Alpine

But it is a good distro, small to the point you can easily memorize every part of the system and how things click together

OpenRC in it, as everything else, does the bare basic. RC only runs and manages your services and that's it. It doesn't try to be your DNS provider, it doesn't try to be your logs manager, it only deals with the services(which are bash scripts btw), and that's it

I rock Alpine with XFCE4 and Pipewire, and its the most usable distro I've ever had There is also GNOME and KDE, but haven't tried them

Only main issue with it, is that it uses MUSL instead of GlibC which, makes some softwares not work or must be compiled from source

2
JackRiddlereply
sh.itjust.works

I'm now using s6, which is great because nobody is using it so the best documentation is some random github page for running daemons with nix using various init programs.

13
Cralderreply
lemmy.world

Nothing I can find. The latest release has a "breaking changes" section but that is nothing unusual. All software has breaking changes from time to time and should be addressed by your distro maintainers.

34
Lucy :3reply
feddit.org

I guess it's that the versions aren't in ${major}.${minor}.${patch} format, but just a continuous number. But who tf cares, it's human readable and any competent version comparing tool (eg. pacman's vercmp, I use arch btw) should handle it fine, considering they also need to handle git's much more annoying commit version thingy.

11
lemmy.zip

Openrc is kind of painful. I would go normal busybox init over openrc.

-1

You reached the end

low hanging fruit | Spyke