Forum › Forums › General › Other Distros › new release: Slackware Linux 15.0
- This topic has 5 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated Feb 4-4:38 pm by Anonymous.
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February 4, 2022 at 2:53 am #76740
Anonymous
FYI
(and interested in reading feedback from anyone who test drives it…)http://www.slackware.com/announce/15.0.php
BREAKING NEWS, SEBEKA MINNESOTA 2022-02-02:
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.This has been an interesting development cycle (in the “may you live in interesting times” sense). Anyone who has followed Linux development over the years has seen the new technology and a slow but steady drift away from the more UNIX-like structure. The challenge this time around was to adopt as much of the good stuff out there as we could without changing the character of the operating system. Keep it familiar, but make it modern. And boy did we have our work cut out for us. We adopted PAM (finally) as [some] projects we needed [have] dropped support for pure shadow passwords. We switched from ConsoleKit2 to elogind, making it much easier to support software that targets that Other Init System and bringing us up-to-date with the XDG standards. We added support for PipeWire as an alternate to PulseAudio, and for Wayland sessions in addition to X11. Dropped Qt4 and moved entirely to Qt5. Brought in Rust and Python 3. Added many, many new libraries to the system to help support all the various additions. We’ve upgraded to two of the finest desktop environments available today: Xfce 4.16, a fast and lightweight but visually appealing and easy to use desktop environment, and the KDE Plasma 5 graphical workspaces environment, version 5.23.5 (the Plasma 25th Anniversary Edition). This also supports running under Wayland or X11.
We still love Sendmail, but have moved it into the /extra directory and made Postfix the default mail handler. The old imapd and ipop3d have been retired and replaced by the much more featureful Dovecot IMAP and POP3 server.
The Slackware pkgtools (package management utilities) saw quite a bit of development as well. File locking was implemented to prevent parallel installs or upgrades from colliding, and the amount of data written to storage minimized in order to avoid extra writes on SSD devices.
For the first time ever we have included a “make_world.sh” script that allows automatically rebuilding the entire operating system from source. We also made it a priority throughout the development cycle to ensure that nothing failed to build. All the sources have been tested and found to build properly. Special thanks to nobodino for spearheading this effort.
We have also included new scripts to easily rebuild the installer, and to build the kernel packages. With the new ease of generating kernel packages, we went on to build and test nearly every kernel that was released, finally landing on the 5.15.x LTS series which we’ve used for this release. There are also some sample config files to build 5.16 kernels included in the /testing directory for anyone interested in using those kernels.
There’s really just way too many upgrades to list them all here. For a complete list of included packages, see:
ftp://ftp.slackware.com/pub/slackware/slackware64-15.0/PACKAGES.TXTDownloading Slackware 15.0:
—————————The full version of Slackware Linux 15.0 is available for download from the central Slackware FTP site hosted by our friends at osuosl.org
If your machine supports x86_64, it is highly recommended that you use the Slackware64 (64-bit) version for the best possible performance:
ftp://ftp.slackware.com/pub/slackware/slackware64-15.0/The 32-bit x86 version may be found here:
ftp://ftp.slackware.com/pub/slackware/slackware-15.0/The links above are for the Slackware file tree. If you already have Slackware 14.2 installed, you can use these files and follow the instructions in the UPGRADE.TXT document to upgrade your system to Slackware 15.0. Instructions for burning the Slackware file tree onto install discs may be found in the isolinux directory.
If you’re looking for a bootable installer, ISO images are available that can be written to a DVD or (using dd) to a USB stick:
ftp://ftp.slackware.com:/pub/slackware-iso/slackware64-15.0-iso
ftp://ftp.slackware.com:/pub/slackware-iso/slackware-15.0-isoIf the sites are busy, see the list of official mirror sites here: mirrors.slackware.com
We will be setting up BitTorrent downloads for the official ISO images. Stay tuned to slackware.com and the ##slackware IRC channel on
libera.chat for the latest updates.
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Patrick J. Volkerding {email@redact.ed}Visit us on the web at: http://slackware.com
February 4, 2022 at 3:27 am #76742Moderator
Brian Masinick
February 4, 2022 at 3:52 am #76743Memberseaken64
::Great! I’ve been waiting for this update to try Slackware again. And it’s one of the few distros still supporting 32-bit. I’ll check it out. Thanks skidoo.
Seaken64
February 4, 2022 at 1:20 pm #76764Memberolsztyn
::We switched from ConsoleKit2 to elogind, making it much easier to support software that targets that Other Init System and bringing us up-to-date with the XDG standards.
Appears to me they took an opposite direction than antiX…
I do appreciate it is probably the oldest Linux in existence but I am not sure that ten years (14-2012, 15-2022) for updating version can be qualified as active development…- This reply was modified 1 year, 2 months ago by olsztyn.
Live antiX Boot Options (Previously posted by Xecure):
https://antixlinuxfan.miraheze.org/wiki/Table_of_antiX_Boot_ParametersFebruary 4, 2022 at 2:10 pm #76771Moderator
Brian Masinick
::Definitely; Slackware has always been a full-featured distribution, and it’s also a distribution that doesn’t always do everything the same as other distributions.
You can clearly see though that Version 15 has taken on many different features.
Much of the new features are because Slackware can’t keep certain things without taking over maintenance themselves so they keep what they can of their unique identity and go with the flow in new apps and libraries.
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Brian MasinickFebruary 4, 2022 at 4:38 pm #76807Anonymous
::switched from ConsoleKit2 to elogind, making it much easier to support software that targets that Other Init System
Appears to me they took an opposite direction than antiX…
Hmm? Well…
gitlab.com/skidoo/slimski/-/blob/master/doc/ChangeLog_slimski.txt
1.5.0 – 2021.01.01
* forked, w/ name change
* removed console_cmd
* removed consolekit support; libPAM now mandatory (hardcoded)
* significantly expanded (comprehensive?) documentation
* added support for localized theme variants
* removed bundled gtk2 accessory helper programs
* added new sample themes
* nixed testshadow (a msg attribute)
* theme preview (formerly: slim -p /path/to/theme) changed, to “slimski -p themename”gitlab.com/skidoo/slimski/-/blob/master/debian/control
Package: slimski
Architecture: any
Provides: x-display-manager
Recommends: xvkbd, scrot
Suggests: xauth
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, debconf (>= 1.2.9) | debconf-2.0, dbus, lsb-base, libpam-elogind | elogind
Description: desktop-independent graphical login manager for X11 -
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