HACKER Q&A
📣 laserstrahl

Which distro do you use? (2023)


What are your daily used distros?


  👤 rvdginste Accepted Answer ✓
Debian at home and at work.

Been using Debian since Potato. Stable on servers. Testing or unstable on laptops and desktops: quite often a testing base with selected packages from unstable.

Debian just works, and is popular enough that it often has packages for third-party software. And it supports a lot of different architectures, I used it on i386, amd64, powerpc and armhf.


👤 ranaexmachina
I use Arch Linux on my personal machines since I left macOS in 2015ish. I briefly tried Ubuntu before but I wanted some newer versions of some software and I thought Arch would be a good way to learn about Linux (whatever that means). Since it worked for me I never really bothered trying anything else.

At work I basically have to choose between Ubuntu, Debian, and CentOS. Everyone else seems so use Debian or Ubuntu. I gave Ubuntu another try but snap was acting up so now I'm using Debian.

I don't really have any strong opinions on various distros. I'm just happy I don't have to deal with WSL anymore which I had to for my previous job. :D


👤 notacoward
Pop!_OS. I really really wanted to use Fedora, because I once contributed to it and still have lots of friends in that community, but it wasn't doing well in terms of video drivers, codecs, and (especially) sleep/wakeup. Pop!_OS just handled all of those things right out of the box. Bit slow waking up, runs the fans more than it seems it should, switching between touchpad and touchscreen sometimes takes a few moments, but those are all things I can live with. This is on a super-common Lenovo laptop (Yoga 6 a.k.a. 13ALC6) BTW.

👤 MountainMan1312
Gentoo + EXWM is my daily driver. I'm trying to develop a comprehensive Emacs-based desktop environment on it.

My servers run Proxmox with a mix of Debian, Gentoo, OpenBSD, and FreeBSD.

I have one gaming laptop with Ubuntu on it, and it's the bane of my existence. Ubuntu sucks and just keeps getting worse as time goes on. Every decision they make is a bad one, and Ubuntu is now an disorganized and unmanageable heap of trash.



👤 ryapric
I run Debinan Sid/Unstable, both as my home desktop (with XFCE as a DE) and as my headless WSLv2 OS on my work machine. I've had it on the desktop for something like, 4 years now? Before that, I ran Manjaro on the desktop since something like 2017, and Xubuntu on the work laptop (as its own partition).

I've only ever had one problem with Debian Sid, which was this year I believe when a `libssl` update broke a lot of things (git, ssh, etc). Other than that, anecdotal smooth sailing.


👤 aquova
I was using Ubuntu until about 2021 or so when I started to become frustrated with it and switched to Arch. Not only did it solve my complaints, but I think using Arch has made me more knowledgeable about my systems as a whole. It's now what I use on my desktop, laptop, and even my home server. I do still use other distros for other things, like Ubuntu for my web server or Raspbian for RPi devices.

👤 the_third_wave
Debian, stable on servers, unstable on workstations and laptops. Using the cloud variant on containers running on Raspberry Pi 4s running Proxmox (well, 'Pimox' but that is just Proxmox tailored to the RPi) since the default version fails to boot.

Using Mate where desktop environments are 'needed' for those not used to 'Linux', Xmonad otherwise.

Having used Linux from 1993 (SLS -> Slackware -> Redhat -> Debian -> Ubuntu -> Mint -> Debian) I have come to appreciate the longevity of a Debian installation, especially the way in-place upgrades tend to work mostly reliably. Debian stable may be somewhat stodgy but for those occasions where newer versions of packages are required there is always the possibility of pulling in some from unstable or testing. Even though this is 'officially' discouraged I have yet to encounter stability problems with such installations.


👤 gautamcgoel
I've run Fedora for many years; I think my first install was Fedora 22. Pro: my distro looks good, is easy to manage and never feels dated. Con: stuff breaks. I'm still annoyed about the time Fedora reconfigured the DNS resolution service of systems and I lost Internet for a few days until I could figure out what the hell is going on.

👤 glimmung
Ubuntu Mate LTS editions, and ChromeOS if you count that - which I do.

Mate "just works" on my old Lenovo T430, I use Ubuntu on my servers, and both are solid.

Most of the time I'm on ChromeOS on a Pixelbook Go, with Thunderird, Terminator, VSCode and Joplin running on the Debian side, but there is the odd thing that is not happy on that setup.


👤 hollerith
Fedora Workstation 38.

I switched from Arch (which I like a lot) to Fedora to become less vulnerable to attackers and might move to ChromeOS or Qubes to become even less vulnerable.

"Vulnerable" is my amateur estimation of the security landscape.

The key quality I want in my OS is as much security ("attack resistance"?) as practical while retaining sufficient customizability to accommodate my disabilities. I've mostly given up on MacOS because unless I turn off its System Identity Protection, MacOS cannot be customized in ways beneficial to me that most of the other choices (including Windows) can be.


👤 heywoodlh
I use NixOS, Arch as a backup and Ubuntu is usually what I am assigned at work. If I had it my way, it'd be NixOS everywhere.

On my non-NixOS builds (including MacOS) I still use Nix the package manager and I use Home-Manager to manage my dotfiles.


👤 KentGeek
Mint, for the last few years. I honestly don't remember why I chose Mint after using Ubuntu previously. In any case, I'm not shopping for a change. It does exactly what I need.

👤 4gotunameagain
Debian testing on my workstation. An install that has been there for around 5 years, and which only broke down like 3-4 times, always related to nvidia shenanigans.

👤 GloomyBoots
Having hopped around for years, I finally came back to Linux Mint with Cinnamon. My setup had become so opaque to anyone but me that I was concerned about my wife not being able to actually get into my stuff if something happened to me. Plus, I share this machine with my daughter and use it for teaching her, and the extra polish makes it more accessible to her.

My servers all run Debian. Keeps things consistent, stable, and boring.


👤 birdplanellama
PopOS! has worked OOB on a Razer laptop and I'm thrilled with it. Buggy at times, feature-barren at times (filebrowser is a joke) but otherwise it's good.

I switched from kde-neon to EndeavourOS with KDE Plasma, and I love it. Arch-based distros that handle things for me, and let me type "yay" and be fine? Bless. Linux is in a beautiful place, UI/UX is quickly overtaking Windows.


👤 me_bx
Bunsenlabs [0], which is based on Debian stable, with a nicely configured Openbox window manager on top.

Debian stable as a base because it's reliable, rock solid, and has long term support.

Openbox because it's lightweight whereas fully featured.

Highly recommended if you want productivity and hate bloat.

[0]: https://www.bunsenlabs.org/


👤 b1476
Fedora on home desktop, Fedora on work Thinkpad. I’ve also got an M1 MacBook Air that I’m probably going to replace with a Framework laptop soon and run Fedora on that too. It’s just rock solid and any issues I do encounter I can easily fix myself. OSX on the other hand is an inconsistent mess that seems to get buggier with each release as of late.

👤 Gualdrapo
Gentoo. I'm using it to write this comment! It's been my daily driver since 2009 - sans a brief period of stupidity two years ago when for some reason thought that using FreeBSD could be a good idea only to learn the hard way pkg/pkgsrc doesn't comes near to Portage about letting to fine tune your installation.

👤 ComputerGuru
FreeBSD on any headless machine (my servers, my IoT nodes, my build machines, etc) and Debian on my laptop.

👤 akerl_
I use Arch, but I have a mix of VMs, Intel hardware, and Raspberry Pis and have been running into issues with Archlinux ARM due to stale packages and gaps in the kernel config.

I’ve been trying to decide if it’s worth trying to fork my own updates to deal with it, or switch to Ubuntu or something else.


👤 ntw1103
Right now i'm using what was manjaro, but has become more Arch after all the changes I've made. It was installed 4 years ago. I've been looking at getting a Freebsd install setup for laptop use, but haven't gotten it working enough to make the switch.

👤 mapierce2
GalliumOS, running on two machines I keep in sync. Debian/Ubuntu based distro, but customized for Chromebooks. Tried to get arch running on a Chromebook, but couldn't get it working before I needed a functional machine ;)

👤 statenjason
I migrated to Alpine for my laptop this year after an extended attempt of NixOS. For development, I’ve found I’m more productive in that I don’t go down the rabbit hole of finding the “Nix way” of using a language/tool. The speed of apk is refreshing for my older machine, and APKBUILDs are intuitive after my past experience with Arch PKGBUILD.

Drew DeVault has a decent write up on Alpine that’s worth a read. https://drewdevault.com/2021/05/06/Praise-for-Alpine-Linux.h...


👤 danbulant
Arch on 2 laptops, 2 VPSes and a minitower desktop (used as a home server).

So far everything good. On the servers, everything runs under docker, I just installed docker, nomad, consul and tailscale, which I'd have to add custom repositories for ubuntu anyway for basically the same end (except now I also have newer kernel).

Tried Debian and Ubuntu in the past, old packages (especially GUI applications, but other stuff too) often broke, and it sucked to just find that there's a fix but not in the repos - and so I had to add custom repositories for every other thing anyway.


👤 newsyish
Ubuntu LTR for work. Soon reformatting home machine to same from Win10.

👤 pietro72ohboy
Fedora Kinoite, an immutable desktop operating system built on Fedora with the KDE desktop environment. Most applications are flatpaks and I use toolbox for development.

👤 workfromspace
Arch Linux since early 2010s for both home and work (however recently had to switch to M1 Macbook for work - which is simply perfect)

👤 mduggles
Debian at home, Debian at work.

👤 retrocryptid
Debian, because I hate myself (but not as much as when I used Ubuntu.)

I also have some virtual machines running OpenBSD and some real machines running FreeBSD.


👤 sdumi
Void linux: very simple and easy to use, fast boot, runit instead of systemd, user packages (via xbps-src)... it's simply a joy to use.

👤 c0l0
Debian GNU/Linux (a mix of stable and oldstable) on all my personal servers, the work desktop and laptop, and servers at work (I am responsible for that part of the compute env at $dayjob).

Arch Linux on my personal desktop(s) and laptop.

openSUSE Tumbleweed on my wife's desktop, which I co-admin.

OpenWrt on my personal network devices.

LineageOS on my personal phone.

LibreELEC on the Raspberry Pi 4 used as a media center at home.


👤 znpy
currently fedora 38.

i've started on debian, then ubuntu for a long time, then when it became unsufferable i went back to debian, then when i couldn't stand the old packages i finally gave up and switched to fedora.

It's been a lovely experience so far. Everything works (including the mic on the bluetooth headsets, that never worked on debian/ubuntu), the system i very stable, i have nice guis for advanced security features (my laptop runs with SELinux enabled and firewalld on) and i get fresh software regularly.

And XFCE as a desktop environment is not a second class citizen, so i can keep using a sane minded desktop environment.

on my servers... two machines runs RHEL flavors: my main home server is running RHEL8 via the developer subscription. It's been rock solid for the last ~3 years. The backup server is running Rocky Linux 9, no issues so far. A remote server (small dedicated server) is running debian, because that was one of the few options available.

edit: add servers.


👤 cyphax
My daily used distros are Fedora on my home laptop (x270) and Pop!_OS on my work laptop (t14). Also a hp microserver and an x230, both with Proxmox (Debian) and one gaming PC with Windows (I would love to migrate this to a Linux machine also but my Oculus Rift prevents this as they stopped supporting Linux early on).

👤 GlumWoodpecker
I use KDE neon user edition, which is basically the latest Ubuntu LTS base + rolling release KDE packages on top. That way I get a rock solid LTS core with the added benefit of always getting the freshest KDE Plasma updates, which is definitively my favourite DE.

Details about my installation: It has proven to be quite resilient. The installation's life started as Kubuntu 18.04 in late 2018, then upgraded to 20.04, then, using some nifty tricks from a Gist I found, I migrated my Kubuntu install to KDE neon a couple of years ago, which I then eventually upgraded to the 22.04 rebase when that came out. I've had a package conflict here and there and the occasional issue due to this migration path, but always been able to rectify it fairly easily. The installation has also survived a full system upgrade, first migrating from HDD to SDD for the system disk, and during 'rona, a full upgrade of motherboard, processor and RAM, all with no issues. Just booted without any complaints. That was nearly never the case when I was a Windows user, if I changed anything, it would throw a hissy fit. Needless to say, I'm happy with the status quo :)


👤 Apreche
I only use Linux from the CLI these days. Usually in containers and WSL. So any kind of Debian or Ubuntu is fine.

👤 huijzer
NixOS for 3 years but unfortunately switched to Mac now for the M1 and love the speed.

I can’t wait for great SoC Linux laptops.


👤 marianord
I do Debian for my personal workstation.

For Cloud, Debian containers, with Ubuntu and Amazon Linux VMs as we run in AWS.


👤 h0p3
NixOS with Distrobox, JuNest, and VMs.

👤 catlover76
I was using WSL until I spilled a beverage on my Windows laptop and killed the graphics card (it actually still works fine for work purposes with the internal fallback I guess). Been using a System76 Ubuntu box I already had for the past 2-3 weeks.

👤 random42_
In 2011 I moved to Fedora (v16 at the time) and have been using it since then. This year I stopped using GNOME and moved to KDE, seeing if I'll make the switch permanent.

👤 fotcorn
Ubuntu 22.04 LTS with Regolith Desktop on top, which is a great pre-configured i3 desktop environment. Not sure if there is something similar for sway yet, but stuck on X11 anyway thanks to Nvidia.

👤 mepian
Ubuntu in WSL for Windows 11 right now. I'm also considering a native Linux partition, and I need something that can handle GPGPU applications for a combo Nvidia/Intel discrete GPUs setup.

👤 cjbprime
I'm using Arch as the base distro, but spend increasing time inside (mostly Ubuntu) Docker containers, and using remote VSCode (whole window remote, via ssh) to a more powerful machine.

👤 minimaul
Debian on servers. Boring and predictable.

Arch on desktops. Recent versions of packages is usually more important for me on a desktop.

Has served me well for a long time at this point - in excess of a decade.


👤 hummerbliss
Debian at home. Ubuntu at work(hoping to switch to Debian soon). Both of them are headless (so not as Desktop Environment but ssh to for development work).

👤 kkfx
NixOS, I'd like Guix System since I live in Emacs, but so far Guix zfs support and few minor things are a bit too long for my taste so I'll keep NixOS...

👤 nendndmx
UBlue - Bluefin DX edition. It is chef’s kiss perfect.

👤 jamesponddotco
openSUSE Tumbleweed for my wife and I, openSUSE Leap on servers. Will probably migrate to Alpine at some point, but openSUSE treats me pretty well.

👤 fsflover
Qubes OS, which runs Debian and Fedora in VMs.

👤 vlark
Linux Mint on my old Dell E6350 (workhorse home machine that never leaves the desk).

Pop!_OS on my regular grab-and-go laptop.


👤 0xbadc0de5
Fedora since v1. Although their recent fiasco taking about adding telemetry had me reconsidering.

👤 PrimeMcFly
Alpine as my main / Playing with Void / NetBSD for some side projects

Plan on playing with Nix at some point.


👤 irongeek
Debian 12 at home. RHEL at work.

👤 jayski
FreeBSD, servers and desktop.

👤 Tcepsa
Ubuntu for work

Manjaro for personal

(Oh and some Raspbian but I hardly have had any time for that this year ^_^; )


👤 CSDude
Arch btw

👤 julianeon
Ubuntu.

👤 fanf2
macOS with Homebrew on my laptop

Debian on my servers and dev box

FreeBSD on servers at work

QMK with chibios on my keyboards


👤 nanna
Debian with Guix for packages I want the latest releases of.

👤 Tommstein
Still running an Arch install from over 12 years ago.

👤 wooque
Debain 12 Bookworm. Both on desktop and server.

👤 dvh
Ubuntu latest lts 22.04, jwm desktop manager.

👤 laserstrahl
to the arch users: Is there a encrypted, hardenend install you can recommend besides the default one in the archwiki? ty.

👤 aborsy
Ubuntu, Fedora and Arch.

👤 cx0der
Fedora since Fedora Core 1

👤 nathants
arch if i need nvidia drivers, alpine otherwise.

👤 smitty1e
Arch

👤 sys_64738
Windows 11.