- Feb 4, 2003
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Basically I want just plain, minimal linux without any distro specific stuff. I know there's probably no distro completely like this because they all want to stand out from the rest of the distros, but what comes closest?
Originally posted by: phisrow
http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/
Edit: Come to think of it, if you really want "standard" linux, distros are for wimps. Just use any liveCD to boot the system, then download the source for the kernel and apps. Any decent general purpose liveCD should give you the tools you need to build a fully functional Linux system entirely from source, without any distro at all. Of course, you'd need to have a gluttonous lust for pain to do that.
Probably a dumb question, but do yum and apt-get work with any distro?
Originally posted by: Brent of Liquid5th
There's no real 'standard' for linux. However, if you want to operate in an environment that is most like what enterprise Linux looks like, you will want to use Redhat or SUSE.
Personally, I love Slackware and have heard great things about Ubuntu.
Originally posted by: Sureshot324
Originally posted by: Brent of Liquid5th
There's no real 'standard' for linux. However, if you want to operate in an environment that is most like what enterprise Linux looks like, you will want to use Redhat or SUSE.
Personally, I love Slackware and have heard great things about Ubuntu.
I guess what I mean is a distro that uses the most common software packages for everything, and doesn't use any package that has been created by the maker of the distro.
I guess what I mean is a distro that uses the most common software packages for everything, and doesn't use any package that has been created by the maker of the distro.
Originally posted by: Brent of Liquid5th
There's no real 'standard' for linux. However, if you want to operate in an environment that is most like what enterprise Linux looks like, you will want to use Redhat or SUSE.
Personally, I love Slackware and have heard great things about Ubuntu.
Originally posted by: Nothinman
I guess what I mean is a distro that uses the most common software packages for everything, and doesn't use any package that has been created by the maker of the distro.
Huh? All packages are created by the distro maintainer, it's the only way to get good integration and QA. If all distro maintainers did was download RPMs and put them on a CD we'd be back in 1992.
Just download a few and try them, they're free.
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Originally posted by: Brent of Liquid5th
There's no real 'standard' for linux. However, if you want to operate in an environment that is most like what enterprise Linux looks like, you will want to use Redhat or SUSE.
Personally, I love Slackware and have heard great things about Ubuntu.
Linux standards.
So every Linux distro listed here will look, feel, and act the same? They all have the same filesystem layouts and identical binary/library/config locations?
Originally posted by: Nothinman
So every Linux distro listed here will look, feel, and act the same? They all have the same filesystem layouts and identical binary/library/config locations?
If they did, they would be the same product and that would be stupid. They're LSB-compliant, meaning they follow a number of standards, sort of like Win2K and WinXP are compatible but still not exactly the same.
Originally posted by: Brent of Liquid5th
Originally posted by: Nothinman
So every Linux distro listed here will look, feel, and act the same? They all have the same filesystem layouts and identical binary/library/config locations?
If they did, they would be the same product and that would be stupid. They're LSB-compliant, meaning they follow a number of standards, sort of like Win2K and WinXP are compatible but still not exactly the same.
Your lack of knowledge is spreading to other threads now. Having the same filesystem layout and binary/library/config locations does not mean that the product is the same in any way. It only means the products are highly compatible with each other. Which is the point of wanting a standard in the first place. You should really think before you click Reply.
It seemed pretty clear that Nothinman's reply related to the first of the two questions. As in... if they were exactly alike in function, look, and feel then there would be no product differentiation. You're looking for arguments where they don't exist.Originally posted by: Brent of Liquid5th
Originally posted by: Nothinman
So every Linux distro listed here will look, feel, and act the same? They all have the same filesystem layouts and identical binary/library/config locations?
If they did, they would be the same product and that would be stupid. They're LSB-compliant, meaning they follow a number of standards, sort of like Win2K and WinXP are compatible but still not exactly the same.
Your lack of knowledge is spreading to other threads now. Having the same filesystem layout and binary/library/config locations does not mean that the product is the same in any way. It only means the products are highly compatible with each other. Which is the point of wanting a standard in the first place.
As should you.You should really think before you click Reply.