• Akatsuki Levi
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      2 months ago

      For nvidia? Alpine Linux. It’s so hard there is 0 support outside of nouveau

      (I mean, Alpine uses MUSL instead of GLIBC, so expected)

      For AMD? doas apk add linux-firmware-amdgpu mesa mesa-tools vulkan-loaders xf86-video-amdgpu There, you’re good to go(wiki also tells you that)

      • Luffy
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        122 months ago
        • Use a DIY distro made for containers
        • Cry about having do DIY

        Merkste selber

        • Akatsuki Levi
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          12 months ago

          Cry? I friggin prefer to just have everything small AF, it’s extremely easy to know exactly what your system is doing

          I’ve been daily driving Alpine for nearly an year now, and I’m just in love with it.

    • @MyNamesTotallyRobert@lemmynsfw.com
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      2 months ago

      idk about 2025 but as of a few years ago, Slackware used to not have a dependency resolver in whatever it uses to download packages. You had to resolve dependencies manually.

      Luckily I switched to Gentoo and 3 years later after my system was done compiling, it was already out of date so when I used emerge to update my system, it borked itself because it was so out of date.

      • exu
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        132 months ago

        Yes, but Slackware. That’s obviously intentional

        • Lucien [he/him]
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          2 months ago

          And OP did specify “popular”, which Slackware hasn’t been since the late 90s

      • Eager Eagle
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        2 months ago

        popular

        if you’re using any of those you can’t complain about having to run a few command lines

      • @superkret@feddit.org
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        82 months ago

        Slackware’s package manager is extremely easy to use:

        slackpkg upgrade-all upgrades all installed packages
        slackpkg install-new installs all packages that were added to the repo
        slackpkg clean-system uninstalls all packages that were removed from the repo

        And that’s all.

        • macniel
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          42 months ago

          That reads easy but what’s with installing all packages that were added to a repo? How does that help anything?

          • @superkret@feddit.org
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            2 months ago

            It’s Slackware’s approach to dependency resolution. You don’t need to resolve dependencies on your system if you just install every package in the repo.

            The installed size is under 15 GB, and you get a system that works equally well for a desktop as for a server with lots of app choices out of the box.

            (Throwing the kitchen sink at you was the common way to install Linux in the old days, before quick Internet)

            • Natanox
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              72 months ago

              That’s a horrendous approach since probably two decades. They shouldn’t slack so hard.

        • DefederateLemmyMl
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          32 months ago

          That’s not really the point. The point this post is making is that third party software is often not available as a package for your distro. It’s been a minute since I used Slackware, but I doubt you can find neatly built tgz slackware packages of Steam or the Nvidia drivers.

          I know Slackware has slackbuilds and you can install sbopkg to search for packages and automatically build them, but that goes a bit beyond “just use your package manager”.