What Linux Version do you use? - Optimus One, P500, V General

There's allot of linux distro's out there
Such as
ubuntu
Fedora
Kde
Backtracker
Linux mint (as of today by distrowatch) is the top one used Linux distros today.
And as there is so many versions out there i wonder what version you use. Or used and which one was the best !
And yes name the version number also! As ubuntu 12.04 or 11.10 etc etc
//Regards
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I use ...
Slackware64 13.37
With Alien Bob's (Eric Hameleer) patches for 32/64 bit compatibility.

Ubuntu Server 11.10 with LXDE/Gnome (On VMware Workstation 8), altrough the interoperability between my Windows and Linux is a little buggy and uncomfortable. I would have used the native Windows subsystem for UNIX applications but it requires manual configuration and compilation for almost every program.

Backtrack 3/5
Jolicloud
and Android

Debian testing on all my desktops
Chrome os and debian Sid dualboot on my chromebook
Tomatousb (Linux firmware, does it count?) On my wifi router.
Openwrt on my tiny server
Debian testing in a chroot on my phone
I'm not sure if android counts because the only thing Linux about it is a modified Linux kernel and (in many rooted roms) busybox

'only' the kernel?

I used Ubuntu back in 2009 for the G1 but haven't used anything since than
My christmas wishlist: a really kickass computer
Sent from my Optimus One using xda premium

Ok here we go
ive been using Linux Longhorn (Windows Longhorn themed Linux)
Linux Mint 10 GNU
Linux Mint 11
Ubuntu 10.04, 10.10 and earlier versions!
backtracker 5 GNU AND KDE Edition!
(some i dont remember name on)
UbuntuMusic edition *correctly name i dont know*
and many more which i dont remember name's on, but i used ubuntu alot and the best looking one was Linux Longhorn, but the best so far, is Ubuntu
with it's friendly desktop (Plasma desktop, as "KDE", as using in ubuntu is also very nice!

i'm using ubuntu 10.10 (its most compatible to compile android without a lot of system modifications),
nothing is tweaked or enabled but the desktop and a console window
in the last years i was using/testing SuSE 9.x-11.x, Redhat Linux 12-15, Debian 3.x, 4.x and Slackware
but was going back to my self compiled Linux "LinuxFromScratch 6" (can be found on http://www.linuxfromscratch.org).
With this project you can learn how linux works, this makes it easier to understand android

andy572 said:
i'm using ubuntu 10.10 (its most compatible to compile android without a lot of system modifications),
nothing is tweaked or enabled but the desktop and a console window
in the last years i was using/testing SuSE 9.x-11.x, Redhat Linux 12-15, Debian 3.x, 4.x and Slackware
but was going back to my self compiled Linux "LinuxFromScratch 6" (can be found on http://www.linuxfromscratch.org).
With this project you can learn how linux works, this makes it easier to understand android
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Maybe , the only thing is that the tutorial for building ics requires some extract file and we doesn't have that in our phone or repo
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I'm using Xubuntu 10.10, so basicly the same as Andy.
Also using this because it's most compatible for building Android
Further I use Ubuntu Server 10.04 LTS on my server.
In the past worked with Suse, RedHat, CentOS, Slackware and of course Puppy Linux

Ubuntu 11.10
And you?
Using 12.04 as soon as it isn't alpha anymore
Greets
____________
mDroid - Tapatalk
Phone: LG-P500
ROM: Ciaox' openOptimus
Kernel: franco .35
Theme: HoneySandwich (by me)
Tweaks: Turbocharged and Supercharged!
Wishlist: Galaxy Nexus

Ubuntu 11.10

_Arjen_ said:
I'm using Xubuntu 10.10, so basicly the same as Andy.
Also using this because it's most compatible for building Android
Further I use Ubuntu Server 10.04 LTS on my server.
In the past worked with Suse, RedHat, CentOS, Slackware and of course Puppy Linux
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
you are a really copy of me!

andy572 said:
you are a really copy of me!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ill be best osx and windows and linux!
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Related

Linux distro for arm

So everyone wants ubuntu on their tf201, myself included. But currently, the only arm platform is on nexus 7, or by vnc. Would it not be easier to try and port an already existing arm based Linux, such as fedora 17 or puppy linux? All we would need would is to have a working kernel, am I correct?
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http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1603921
That thread has install instructions for Ubuntu on tf201.

[Q] Linux or Android?

I understand this is a UI preview, but will the full build be completly linux and use a linux kernel? I really don't want it to use anything Andrtoid related, otherwise it wouldn't truely be linux. :/
They have said they are only doing it at the start for compatibility.
And technically android is full Linux and therefore Ubuntu is now.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda app-developers app
Forty.Two said:
I understand this is a UI preview, but will the full build be completly linux and use a linux kernel? I really don't want it to use anything Andrtoid related, otherwise it wouldn't truely be linux. :/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello,
To be honest, both Android and Ubuntu are both Linux based Distributions and both use a Linux kernel. In fact, both distributions branch from the same Linux source tree.
With this said, the touch preview uses the CyanogenMod 10.0 Android fork as a base. Ubuntu is ran inside of a chroot, This means that they are both using a shared kernel.
Keith Myers
Forty.Two said:
I understand this is a UI preview, but will the full build be completly linux and use a linux kernel? I really don't want it to use anything Andrtoid related, otherwise it wouldn't truely be linux. :/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
you dont like android ? they both from linux
I think the confusion here is that when most people who have used a Linux system in the past, prior to Android or didn't know that Android used the Linux kernel, they were actually using GNU/Linux, so they think that is what Linux is. Some people may even mix up that the X server is also a part of Linux.
But Android isn't GNU/Linux so when some one says 'Linux distro', they are probably thinking of a GNU/Linux distro, like Debian, Slackware, Fedora, Ubuntu, Red Hat, Mint, etc, and not just an OS that also happens to have the Linux Kernel in it.
So the title of this post probably should have been GNU/Linux or Android.
Findee said:
They have said they are only doing it at the start for compatibility.
And technically android is full Linux and therefore Ubuntu is now.
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Click to expand...
Click to collapse
android is java+linux and ubuntu is fully linux it's big differece
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bobo1337 said:
android is java+linux and ubuntu is fully linux it's big differece
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Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think you are confusing linux and bsd.
http://m.techrepublic.com/blog/10things/10-differences-between-linux-and-bsd/1709
Read #3
In summary- android IS Linux. All the extra stuff you are used to calling Linux is just.... Extra stuff. Linux IS the kernel.
--
Sent from my Kindle Fire 2, CM 10.1
Hey guys, I wanna ask you question, is Ubuntu touch like Ubuntu for arm? i mean it uses the same deb packages or New different OS ?
mindmajick said:
I think you are confusing linux and bsd.
http://m.techrepublic.com/blog/10things/10-differences-between-linux-and-bsd/1709
Read #3
In summary- android IS Linux. All the extra stuff you are used to calling Linux is just.... Extra stuff. Linux IS the kernel.
--
Sent from my Kindle Fire 2, CM 10.1
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
By that logic, technically, Android isn't Linux (since Android isn't a Kernel), rather Android uses Linux.
BukaKing said:
By that logic, technically, Android isn't Linux (since Android isn't a Kernel), rather Android uses Linux.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That would also mean ubuntu isn't Linux
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_____________________________________
"No one lives in the slums because they want to. It's like this train. It can't run anywhere except where its rails take it."- Cloud[FFvii]"​
TingTingin said:
That would also mean ubuntu isn't Linux
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_____________________________________
"No one lives in the slums because they want to. It's like this train. It can't run anywhere except where its rails take it."- Cloud[FFvii]"​
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Click to collapse
Exactly, ubuntu isn't Linux, it is GNU/Linux meaning it runs the Linux kernel (Just like android does), and contains the GNU utilities and software that make the system usable. Android is also GNU/Linux, but android has less GNU software and most "apps" are run using dalvik. So really ubuntu and Linux are both running "Linux Kernel" but aren't just Linux. Pure Linux would just be the kernel as Linux isn't an OS.
TingTingin said:
That would also mean ubuntu isn't Linux
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_____________________________________
"No one lives in the slums because they want to. It's like this train. It can't run anywhere except where its rails take it."- Cloud[FFvii]"​
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
And that is why they are called Linux distribution.
And even calling Android a distribution is kind of a loose definition of what a distribution is and was. It used to be a long time ago that a distribution was intending to distribute Linux, which the only way Linux would be useful is to also have several applications and modules that make a useable operating system, that is what a distribution was. Android doesn't exactly fit that, users are not even really aware of or deal with Linux related things, although some of the apps they use may access parts of the file system (sysfs, procfs, etc), and users can install software that gives them access also. And it could be argued too though that Ubuntu doesn't exactly fit this either, since there are not stripped down versions and they are starting to force dominance of certain packages, but they still allow for low level access.
---------- Post added at 09:32 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:19 PM ----------
This is what Richard Stallman has to say:
http://www.gnu.org/gnu/gnu-linux-faq.html#linuxsyswithoutgnu
Are there complete Linux systems without GNU? (#linuxsyswithoutgnu)
There are complete systems that contain Linux and not GNU; Android is an example. But it is a mistake to call them “Linux” systems.
Android is very different from the GNU/Linux system—because it contains very little of the GNU system, only Linux. Overall, it's a different system. If you call the whole system “Linux”, you will find it necessary to say things like, “Android contains Linux, but it isn't Linux, because it doesn't have the usual Linux [sic] libraries and utilities [meaning the GNU system].” Android contains just as much of Linux as GNU/Linux does. What it doesn't have is the GNU system. Android replaces that with Google software that works quite differently. Thus, what makes Android different is the lack of GNU.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
joshumax said:
Exactly, ubuntu isn't Linux, it is GNU/Linux meaning it runs the Linux kernel (Just like android does), and contains the GNU utilities and software that make the system usable. Android is also GNU/Linux, but android has less GNU software and most "apps" are run using dalvik. So really ubuntu and Linux are both running "Linux Kernel" but aren't just Linux. Pure Linux would just be the kernel as Linux isn't an OS.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
BukaKing said:
And that is why they are called Linux distribution.
And even calling Android a distribution is kind of a loose definition of what a distribution is and was. It used to be a long time ago that a distribution was intending to distribute Linux, which the only way Linux would be useful is to also have several applications and modules that make a useable operating system, that is what a distribution was. Android doesn't exactly fit that, users are not even really aware of or deal with Linux related things, although some of the apps they use may access parts of the file system (sysfs, procfs, etc), and users can install software that gives them access also. And it could be argued too though that Ubuntu doesn't exactly fit this either, since there are not stripped down versions and they are starting to force dominance of certain packages, but they still allow for low level access.
---------- Post added at 09:32 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:19 PM ----------
This is what Richard Stallman has to say:
http://www.gnu.org/gnu/gnu-linux-faq.html#linuxsyswithoutgnu
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I didn't read your u guys comment fully it's like 1 a.m here but anyways my comment was just show that people often use the word Linux loosely when referring to any Linux based operating system they'll call ubuntu Linux but then when it comes android not so because it's further off the tree and not pure Linux but the only pure Linux OS is well Linux (and yes Linux is an operating system though only command line that's all u need to constitute a OS) so I was just pointing out that this is a bit confusing it makes more sense when you refer to a Linux based OS as a distro but that's kinda hazy if simply using the kernel = distro then android is a distro but then same problem as b4 it's further off the tree so then does it mean it isn't a distro because of that which is actually due to differences with mobile phone hardware but we're taking about the os anyways I was just pointing out that this isn't very black and white
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_____________________________________
"No one lives in the slums because they want to. It's like this train. It can't run anywhere except where its rails take it."- Cloud[FFvii]"​
To rephrase the question: Will the apps and system functions use languages other than java? In desktop Ubuntu, there was a wide assortment of languages the could be compiled and run as scripts. Will we see the same multi-language support on the full mobile distributions?
Forty.Two said:
To rephrase the question: Will the apps and system functions use languages other than java?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They already do...QML
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_____________________________________
"No one lives in the slums because they want to. It's like this train. It can't run anywhere except where its rails take it."- Cloud[FFvii]"​
Forty.Two said:
To rephrase the question: Will the apps and system functions use languages other than java? In desktop Ubuntu, there was a wide assortment of languages the could be compiled and run as scripts. Will we see the same multi-language support on the full mobile distributions?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's hard to be completely certain what Canonical will do, but it is very likely it will support multiple languages.
Technically you can build applications on Android in any language you want provided there is a native runtime module or the language compiles to native libraries, but Java always sits in the middle.
From what I have seen with Ubuntu Touch, Java is not even included by default, I saw it pull openjdk when I installed Eclipse, and that Java is not even the same as the one Android uses.
Currently the only API that draws to the display is Qt5 and QML, other APIs like GTK+ and even Qt4 try to use an X server which doesn't exist currently, although you can route to a remote x server and display applications remotely.
But in terms of language support I've tested c, c++, JavaScript, python, bash scripts and java, and I'm almost certain perl will work. Again the problem is though, if they don't have Qt5 bindings they can only display on a remote x server or in a remotely connected terminal and not on the device.
1) Linux is not, I repeat, NOT an operating system. It's a kernel, which is the core coding which an operating system is based around. The kernel acts as a medium between software and hardware.
2) Ubuntu, Android, Fedora, Arch, WebOS , and etcetera are not Linux. They are Linux based operating systems that are built upon the Linux kernel.
3) BSD, Free BSD, Mac OS X+, iOS, and Solaris are all UNIX based operating systems. Linux is a clone of the UNIX kernel.
4) The GUI is not part of Linux. X server is a back end for the X11 window service. And is not included in the core kernel itself.
5) I like tacos.
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TingTingin said:
I didn't read your u guys comment fully it's like 1 a.m here but anyways my comment was just show that people often use the word Linux loosely when referring to any Linux based operating system they'll call ubuntu Linux but then when it comes android not so because it's further off the tree and not pure Linux
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Android is pure linux, with a google init system, rather than a GNU one..
but the only pure Linux OS is well Linux (and yes Linux is an operating system though only command line that's all u need to constitute an OS)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What you are "seeing" when you refer to a comand line is almost enitrely made up of GNU coreutils(bash, ls, cd, rm, cp) running on a linux kernel. Linux is NOT an OS.
so I was just pointing out that this is a bit confusing it makes more sense when you refer to a Linux based OS as a distro but that's kinda hazy if simply using the kernel = distro then android is a distro but then same problem as b4 it's further off the tree so then does it mean it isn't a distro because of that which is actually due to differences with mobile phone hardware but we're taking about the os anyways I was just pointing out that this isn't very black and white
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A "distro" is usually made up of: The kernel (linux), the GNU coreutils, a package manager, a Desktop Environment, and some integrated applications. "linux" is a kernel. You can replace the kernel with any other compatible kernel, as Arch/HURD, Debian/kFreeBSD, and Arch/BSD have proven. Don't confuse linux with GNU/Linux.
Android is merely a distribution of liunx with a different set of coreutils, tablet based applications, and the play store as a package manager, and Dalvik VM.
linux is NOT andoperating system.
crshbndct said:
Android is pure linux, with a google init system, rather than a GNU one..
What you are "seeing" when you refer to a comand line is almost enitrely made up of GNU coreutils(bash, ls, cd, rm, cp) running on a linux kernel. Linux is NOT an OS.
A "distro" is usually made up of: The kernel (linux), the GNU coreutils, a package manager, a Desktop Environment, and some integrated applications. "linux" is a kernel. You can replace the kernel with any other compatible kernel, as Arch/HURD, Debian/kFreeBSD, and Arch/BSD have proven. Don't confuse linux with GNU/Linux.
Android is merely a distribution of liunx with a different set of coreutils, tablet based applications, and the play store as a package manager, and Dalvik VM.
linux is NOT andoperating system.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
...
Wikipedia
Linux is a
Unix-like computer
operating system
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux
How Stuff Works
Linux is an operating system --
very much like UNIX -- that has
become very popular over the last
several years.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
computer.howstuffworks.com/question246.htm
Linux.org
Linux is an operating system that
evolved from a kernel created by
Linus Torvalds
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
www.linux.org/article/view/what-is-linux
getgnulinux.org
Linux is an operating system, a
large piece of software that
manages a computer. It is similar
to Microsoft Windows, but it is
entirely free.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
www.getgnulinux.org/en/linux/
Webopedia.com
The Linux open source operating
system, or Linux OS, is a freely
distributable, cross-platform
operating system based on Unix
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
www.webopedia.com/TERM/L/linux_os.html
Linux.com
What is Linux?
Linux is, in simplest terms, an
operating system.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
www.linux.com/learn/new-user-guides...ere-an-overview-of-the-linux-operating-system
http://bit.ly/13rqRIv
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_____________________________________
"No one lives in the slums because they want to. It's like this train. It can't run anywhere except where its rails take it."- Cloud[FFvii]"​
MikeyCriggz said:
1) Linux is not, I repeat, NOT an operating system. It's a kernel, which is the core coding which an operating system is based around. The kernel acts as a medium between software and hardware.
2) Ubuntu, Android, Fedora, Arch, WebOS , and etcetera are not Linux. They are Linux based operating systems that are built upon the Linux kernel.
3) BSD, Free BSD, Mac OS X+, iOS, and Solaris are all UNIX based operating systems. Linux is a clone of the UNIX kernel.
4) The GUI is not part of Linux. X server is a back end for the X11 window service. And is not included in the core kernel itself.
5) I like tacos.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
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Click to collapse
+1, like, :good:.

Windows vs VM vs Linux

So i been developing actual apps for about 6 months, and want to get into customizing rooms, so i see that alot of you guys use cygwin, a virtual machine or linux and wanted to know if its really worth it running linux natively instead of a vm or cygwin...
if yes, then whats the general opinion on linux vs osx?
I have definitely used all three with good success. If you are RAM limited on your machine, skip the virtual machine option since you need enough RAM to run your base OS and the VM separately. One advantage to running linux natively is that you are forced to think in the linux world, which for an Android behind the curtain point of view is closer to the mentality you need. You might learn some good stuff familiarizing yourself with linux that later applies to your Android exploits!
SuperMiguel said:
So i been developing actual apps for about 6 months, and want to get into customizing rooms, so i see that alot of you guys use cygwin, a virtual machine or linux and wanted to know if its really worth it running linux natively instead of a vm or cygwin...
if yes, then whats the general opinion on linux vs osx?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm using win7 with andLinux installed. Unfortunately andLinux is based on Ubuntu 9.04 so I can't use most toolchains built on newer distro because they need newer versions of glibc.
So I'm forced to use CodeSourcery's toolchain which uses it's own glibc.

Emulate amd64 on aarch64

Hi there!
I would like to compile android apps and ROMs on my nexus 9, but to do so I would need to emulate a 64 bit system like amd64: I know I can use AIDE to create apps but I prefer using Android studio and I would also like to compile multirom for another device, and as far as I know there is no way to run an android build environment natively in android, so I was thinking of emulating an amd64 in my kali nethunter chroot using qemu. I installed qemu-user-static and executed the qemu-debootstrap command to create a basic ubuntu amd64 rootfs, but then the second stage gave me an error that basically meant that qemu couldn't emulate amd64.
Now my question is: does anybody know where can I find the qemu-system-amd64 binary for aarch64 (or how can I build it)?
Thanks in advance,
Daniil Gentili
The nexus 9 can't emulate AMD64
Well as far as I know
I believe there aren't any prebuilt binaries. AArch64 is relatively new in the Linux world.
It's possible, but will be really slow (I don't own a Nexus 9, using common sense and knowledge here)
Doing it won't be easy. You have two options:
- create a proper Linux chroot on your device, then install qemu in it
Previously I created a Gentoo armv7 chroot on a Tegra 3 device. It worked surprisingly well. Things compile, albeit very slowly.
- Compile QEMU directly on Android, however Android uses bionic libc, not glibc. You may need to port it yourself, AFAIK no one's done that.
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Question Virtual Machine to Run Linux/Windows

any there any Virtual machine to run Linux or windows? can someone help me with running win 11 arm version on my Pixel 6?
darkerm said:
any there any Virtual machine to run Linux or windows? can someone help me with running win 11 arm version on my Pixel 6?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not as a virtual machine, but it runs Ubuntu very well:
[GUIDE][NO-ROOT] How to install Ubuntu and other Linux Distros on Your Phone or Android TV Box, using Termux
NOTICE: THIS METHOD IS ONLY FOR NON ROOTED DEVICES PROOT-DISTRO GITHUB PAGE Hello Friends! Today I wanted to start a thread that will house prebuilt Linux environments, as well as instructions for building the Linux environments yourself...
forum.xda-developers.com

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