What are some exciting projects that you follow and hope to see progress on?

I’ll start!

  • Wayland greeter on SDDM
  • rust support on gcc
  • more Wayland adoption (especially VSCodium & Firefox forks)
  • Reproducible Build
  • ReactOS
22 points

Cosmic

permalink
report
reply
4 points

This one is really close!

permalink
report
parent
reply
20 points

NVK drivers for nvidia GPUs

permalink
report
reply
17 points

More nixOS development. It’s the reproducible builds on the OS scale, one configuration file that will always generate exactly the same system when run, and you can update and rebuild from that file without restarting the system in most cases. This should make triangulating and fixing distro issues much easier, as well as making a distro easier to maintain from the user side.

permalink
report
reply
2 points

Wait, it’s like docker, but for entire OS with packages, configuration and stuff like that?

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points
*

Yes, and every package specifically defines the exact version of its libraries that it needs and the system symlinks everything together package by package, so there’s no chance than an update will break something further upstream. The configuration file also controls things like MySQL configuration and user permissions so you can get literally the exact same system. I think even docker doesn’t control for library versions with its regular configuration.

EDIT: And it keeps older versions of the configuration file and its symlink arrangement around, so if something goes wrong, you can reboot the machine and select an older version from the bootloader.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

Definitely docker (well, let’s say containers) control the library version, if you didn’t build the image specifically not to do that (e.g. fetching dependencies at runtime, which is generally a bad practice and not the default).

However, at build time if you use things like “apt install …” You will get different versions depending on when you build the image, but once the image is built, you have always the same software inside. Obviously it is very different from nix as they serve very different purposes (one day I will find the motivation to switch to nixOS!).

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Wow, that’s great! I’m not sure if I need those features, but I’ll check NixOS out, thanks

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Better than Docker in terms of reproducibility. While Docker containers are usually more or less reproducible, Docker images are not as the Dockerfiles depend on lots of external state such as the repositories of the distro used as a base image. This is also partially true for NixOS, but it’s far more realistic to pin a version of nixpkgs (the Nix(OS) repository) than do the same with Debian repositories. The new Flake format even provides a way to pin nixpkgs by default.

permalink
report
parent
reply
14 points
  • I don’t realistically expect to see any progress here but video hardware acceleration gaining first-class support in popular applications would be a nice dream. The one area Linux is complacent to be “inefficient”.
  • One of the KDE devs has been working on some magic that might keep application state even after the desktop crashes.
  • Chimera Linux.
permalink
report
reply
1 point

Is Chimera Linux still under development? I thought that project died a while ago…

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

You must be confusing Chimera Linux with something else. The project had a new release over a week ago. https://chimera-linux.org/news/

permalink
report
parent
reply
13 points

Wayland on Plasma (sure, it works but still work in progress)
Lapce (like vscode but native)
Proper keyboard and screen sharing for Wayland

permalink
report
reply
4 points

So many Wayland…

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points

too many.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Linux

!linux@lemmy.ml

Create post

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).

Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word “Linux” in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.

Rules

  • Posts must be relevant to operating systems running the Linux kernel. GNU/Linux or otherwise.
  • No misinformation
  • No NSFW content
  • No hate speech, bigotry, etc

Related Communities

Community icon by Alpár-Etele Méder, licensed under CC BY 3.0

Community stats

  • 7.5K

    Monthly active users

  • 6.6K

    Posts

  • 179K

    Comments