this post was submitted on 22 Sep 2024
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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by Steamymoomilk to c/[email protected]
 

So i recently learned about a distro that has popped up called venom linux. It's a sourced based distro using the package manager called "scratch"

I am very familiar with gentoo linux and this seems like it has heavy inspiration from the gentoo project. Its very cool to see another source based distro come into the picture. The unique part is it has 2 init systems currently, which are neither systemd or openrc?!?!

They are S6 and sysv Which i have never heard of until now. The install looks via similar to gentoo/classic distro install. Which consists of creating partition schemes and filesystems then extracting a archive of the base file.

Some of the main taking points are

"Minimal as possible

Customizable

No systemd (elogind or any part from it)

Centered Around smaller software

That means the lack of huge software like Gnome"

I thought this was a pretty neat project and wonder what other gentoo users think aswell as binary distro users

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[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

sysV is the init system linux distributions used before systemd, openrc, upstart, runit, smf etc. It’s pretty much the old daddy and comes from Linux unix roots. Even MacOS used it before they made their own called launchd.

S6 sounds like a update to it since the capital V in sysv stands for the Roman numeral 5.

[–] nyan 3 points 2 months ago

To be exact, OpenRC was developed to be run on top of sysV init, and still can be. (Many distros had their own "on top of sysV" things, but most of them stopped being maintained as systemd became common. OpenRC started its life as Gentoo's "on top of sysV", but was then cleaned up and made distro-agnostic.)

s6 is apparently a daemontools-like process supervisor that can be run as an init or in company with some other init.

Gentoo's comparison of init systems lists Artix as the preferred service file supplier for s6 (although that may be outdated), so I expect it is or was used extensively by that distro.