SliTaz, a GNU/Linux distribution which weighs in at only 25 megabytes, recently caught my eye and as a fan of light-weight distributions I had to check it out.
Everything is fairly straight forward. During the boot process it asks you a few simple questions regarding your preferred locale, keymap setting, audio card, and finally the resolution and color depth that you wish to use. Unfortunately for me (and not surprisingly), Dvorak was not among the items that were offered in the keymap prompt so I had to settle for the US (Qwerty) option and attempt to remember the layout.
After a moment, X fired up and I was greeted with JWM (Joe's Window Manager) and LXpanel upon logging in. Even though I personally have a preference for Openbox I have to say that the combination worked well and it was a fairly decent choice for a small distribution.
I pleased to see that a lot of my favorite applications were installed by default. One thing that you quickly realize is that even though the overall footprint is much smaller than the more well known light-weight contenders such as Damn Small Linux and Puppy, SliTaz still manages to deliver a reasonable selection of software for you to use.
SliTaz also provides a installer and package manager called tazpkg in case you decide to run it off of your hard drive.
If you do not want to install SliTaz to your hard drive and you find yourself wishing that the LiveCD had more software or used your favorite window manager instead you can use tazlito to create a personalized LiveCD.
In my case, issuing tazlito get-flavor openbox && tazlito gen-distro gave me a new ISO file that contained the one thing that I wanted on the system.
You can read more information on regenerating the LiveCD via the SliTaz Handbook's entry on the subject.
In conclusion, if you are in need of a distribution that does not require a lot of resources, SliTaz is definitely worth checking out. It is in active development and worth watching to see what the future has in store for it.
Quick Image Tour:
The boot screen you are greeted with:
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SliTaz asking for your preferred locale setting:
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Comments
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
Nice review.
The link is http://www.slitaz.org/en/doc/handbook/gen-livecd.html
Paul
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
Thanks for the compliment and for the heads up.
The link has been fixed and I am kind of surprised that I managed to mess up the last half of the link.. haha.
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
There's now a new 'Cooking' version with openbox as default, if you wish to take a look Morphax.
Paul
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
Hi Paul,
Thanks for the heads up. I'll check it out in the next few minutes. :)
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
Hi,
Nice review! We are now improving i18n and keymaps support, witch Dvorak do you use: dvorak, ANSI-dvorak, dvorak-r or dvorak-l ?
- Christophe
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
Thank you. I personally use the 'dvorak' keymap.
It is great to see how active the SliTaz team is so keep up the good work.
I am looking forward to your future releases.
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
A new Cooking LiveCD ISO image became available 18 May 2008.
Please go and check it out. It has lots of goodies.
Announcement:
http://www.slitaz.org/en/
Download:
ftp://download.tuxfamily.org/slitaz/iso/cooking/
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
Great news! I'll check it out as soon as possible.
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
It's looking pretty awesome, keep up the good work.
And now to go just a little offtopic:
Moparx, I'm sorry if this info is somewhere on the site, but what's the OpenBox theme you use? I really love the way you have your things organized and I'm going to try and duplicate it, even though I'm a legitimate Linux noob (a few months of dual-boot ubuntu usage, meaning I have little experience with "real" linux).
What I would really like most is a Linux desktop that is cutting edge and lightweight. I stumbled upon your site looking for OpenBox screenshots (which would satisfy the lightweight requirement), and really liked what I saw. So I went and checked out the ArchLinux site. And saw that the last (stable) release was somewhere in 2007, this did not satisy my lust for cutting edge (latest kernel and preferably packages).
Ofcourse SliTaz seems real nice, but my distro needs are not _that_ lightweight, I mean, my laptop has 512 MB RAM and a 1.60 Ghz pentium M (yet standard ubuntu is massively sluggish on it). So I guess my question is:
What would you advise me to do:
1) Get SliTaz and try to build up a larger system (OpenOffice.org, ...)
2) Start from ArchLinux (possibly RC's)
Oh, and another of my nagging needs is that I feel 100% more comfortable with a system when I know what's running and what's not (one of the reasons my windows boot has only 24 processes running, which ofcourse also makes it damn snappy).
Thanks in advance and kind regards,
Sector
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
Hi there.
Thanks for the comment. The Openbox theme that I use is called Carbon.
As far as your other question goes.. a distribution really is a personal choice. You should try a few out and see what works the best for you. Arch Linux is my distribution of choice and I run it on almost every computer. However, I run the SliTaz LiveCD on some older hardware that Arch will not install on.
If you feel that SliTaz is too light-weight for your tastes, then I would highly recommend using Arch Linux as long as you feel comfortable with the command line (at least initially). It follows the KISS philosophy, it is fast, runs only four daemons at boot unless you tell it to run more, and would probably be perfect for what you want to do.
If you plan on using it, you will want to use the RC build because there have been far too many changes since the one from 2007.
Let me know if you have any further questions or need help setting things up. If you have a jabber account you can IM me at the jabber address listed in the Contact page.
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
It's settled then,
First thing I'll try when I get rid of these pesky exams (a little more than a month), is mold an ArchLinux RC (or possibly even release by then) into something I like.
This would preferably look like one of the screenshots on your site, or like this: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/9/95/Openbox_desktop.png <--- too bad the submitter failed to mention what that simplistic yet wonderfully looking underbar is.
I will try to setup as much as possible myself, but it might be that I have some troubles. If so, it's likely I'll take you up on that contact over, very generous by the way.
Kind regards, Sector
GRML
Sector:
You want grml.org. It is cutting edge with lightweight window managers only (full X.org and drivers though).
In some days (maybe ~2 weeks), there will be a 2.6.26 kernel beta test version.
Re: SliTaz: A light-weight GNU/Linux distribution
try sidux. it's bleeding edge apps.
or, build your own debian:
http://wiki.dennyhalim.com/debian-minimal-desktop-installation