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30p87, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Probably Debian. It’s basically the most used distro, and therefore has many online resources.

  • Old software, but very stable.
  • No bloat, very clean.
  • No custom programs interfering with any configurations etc.
  • Support for many server software etc.

If you want an even cleaner OS, where (nearly) everything is under your control and as lightweight as possible, Arch would be for you. There’s the bonus of the AUR, but the huge problem of newest, “unstable” software, though I’ve yet to experience any problem on testing repos, except for the Nvidia drivers. In general, Debian should be enough of lightweightiness and control.

bear, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Adding my voice to the Debian choir.

Evil_Shrubbery, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Debian or Ubuntu Server (or something specific to servers purpose, like OMV, etc).

… but ProxMox (a hypervisor, Debian based) doesn’t have much overhead & runs on old PCs pretty well. And with that, you can pretty much try any distro (as a full virtual machines, perhaps with dockers within it, or as a lightweight containers that are really resource efficient). Or separate containers for each purpose (for beginners, there are like TurnKey solutions to stuff like NAS, it takes literally a few minutes to set up).

Backups (snapshots) are easy too, and a later migration to a better/next server is basically two clicks away.

kraniax, in Any advice on running a pubnix/tilde?

XMPP is a must. I automatically discard tildes that host matrix but not XMPP.

BastingChemina, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Did someone suggested Debian already? If not I would suggest Debian.

possiblylinux127,

Has anyone heard of debian?

MangoKangaroo, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Since nobody has said it yet: Ubuntu server or Debian. /s

In seriousness, I use both. They’re pretty great. Note that if you use Ubuntu server you can get Ubuntu Pro free for up to three devices. This comes with ten years (!) of security patches. Great if you aren’t keen on upgrading anytime soon.

ultra, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Debian is perfect for this.

Guenther_Amanita, in Is there a safe way to run multiple desktop environments on Ubuntu 22.04?

Containerization!

Use either Nix (the package manager) or Distrobox.

With Distrobox, you can create a few containers, install the favoured DE in each one separated, and use the “distrobox-export -a your-DE” function.

But I don’t know how seamless it will work, you might have to read into it.

d3Xt3r,

Seconded, Distrobox is the way to go.

Here’s how you can actually make it work seamlessly @Macaroni9538 :
github.com/…/run_latest_gnome_kde_on_distrobox.md

velox_vulnus, in Is there a safe way to run multiple desktop environments on Ubuntu 22.04?

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  • Macaroni9538,

    Nix has intrigued me, a bit of a learning curve though. maybe i’ll dive in further

    RotatingParts, in Is there a safe way to run multiple desktop environments on Ubuntu 22.04?

    I believe you can do this (and more) with Blend OS blendos.co

    Macaroni9538,

    I have read a little bit about this interesting distro. Haven’t explored it much, though have read a ton of negative and mixed reviews. Isn’t Rhino Linux sorta similar?

    RotatingParts,

    They are both rolling releases. Rhino is based on Ubuntu and BlendOS is based on Arch. The difference is that Blend OS lets you install software from supported distributions (Arch, Fedora, and Ubuntu) into containers. Rhino (as far as I know) out of the box doesn’t do that.

    Macaroni9538,

    good to know, thanks. arch is out of my comfort zone lol though I have ambitions to slowly work my way into it with something easy. I used manjaro years ago and loved it. seems to have a bad rep, but I think their distro is most functional and beautiful, but again, i’m no Arch expert

    ElRenosaurusReg, in Is there a safe way to run multiple desktop environments on Ubuntu 22.04?
    @ElRenosaurusReg@hexbear.net avatar

    Install the DEs manually instead of from metapackages so ,out don’t end up with their entire software suites being installed. Additionally, probably use Debian instead of Ubuntu if you’re gonna be doing stuff like that, less fingers in the pie make for an easier tinkering experience.

    dalingrin,

    In my experience the main issue are configuration conflicts not package issues. They’re usually just annoying issues not breaking issues.

    ElRenosaurusReg,
    @ElRenosaurusReg@hexbear.net avatar

    Have you considered doing stupid shit and used Bedrock Linux?

    It’s great, but it’s still baking

    Macaroni9538,

    thanks, I’m currently on Debian 12 and tried the whole tasksel method and it’s really neat and all, but it still doesn’t separate all the DE’s. they are all mish mashed and intermingled with each other’s software.

    eoli3n, in Lightweight distro for home server?
    @eoli3n@lemmy.ml avatar

    what you ask is Debian what you need is FreeBSD

    neurospice, in Lightweight distro for home server?

    I use Debian for one and Arch for another. Debian is probably a better option, but I’ve had no issues with my arch server. Just use what you’re most comfortable with

    virtualbriefcase, in Lightweight distro for home server?

    Debian or Alpine would be perfect. Debian has bigger repos, better hardware compatibility, and maybe a bit more stability. Alpine is scary lightweight and a small ISO download.

    Kushia, in Happy 19th Birthday, Ubuntu!
    @Kushia@lemmy.ml avatar

    I miss the days of Ubuntu being a new upstart and Mark Shuttleworth going into space and being cool. I was involved with the project a bunch back then and even talked to him briefly once online.

    There’s been a lot of poor decisions honestly since then unfortunately and I haven’t used Ubuntu in a while.

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