I recently ran across SpiralLinux - GitHub page, and found the concept of how the maintainer is packaging it very cool.

The maintainer has been maintaining Gecko Linux for a while now - it has the same underlying concept.

The gist is - you’re basically installing Debian, but with customizations that the maintainer(s) thought would be very helpful. Basically - better out of the box experience for new users, but also less work to do even for experienced users, and it comes with different download flavors - Gnome, Plasma, XFCE, Mate, etc.

Bit more detail by the maintainer in this Reddit comment:

Exactly. It’s like I went over to your house and installed and configured Debian on your computer, and then you kicked me out of your house as soon as I finished. ;-) The installed system no longer has any connection whatsoever with me or the SpiralLinux project, which is good because you wouldn’t want your entire system to depend on a random single developer maintaining it.

(original Reddit comment has more details).

I thought this was pretty cool. I’m still trying to read up online on trying to find how the package lists are maintained, etc., and I might be interested in contributing if I’m able to in the future.

Just wanted to share!

  • dai@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    1 year ago

    That’s why I love Nix, moving my hyprland configuration from my laptop to my desktop was almost seamless. All my keybinds, wallpapers and applications were up and running with a couple of commands.

    There are a couple of hardware specific configs for my laptop and desktop but once I split those out it’s smooth sailing.

    • GravelPieceOfSword@lemmy.caOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      I have Nixos on a laptop, and have a love//hate relationship with it.

      I love the customizability and declarative setup.

      I hate the number of times I’ve sunk down rabbitholes trying to set specific things up on it.

      The updates being done via switch are a bit inconvenient, but cool enough.

      The fact that I can’t customize everything, particularly on kde, is slightly sad.

      All in all, I really like it, but wouldn’t recommend it for my less technical friends, who I’d normally install Ubuntu for. This has gone up my list, close to Opensuse slowroll and Linux mint Debian edition now.

      • dai@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        1 year ago

        Yeah since using NIX for a couple of months now I moved away from KDE, you could customize KDE with home-manager however you would be writing out stacks of home.file lines as KDE is all over the shop when it comes to configuration. IIRC there is a module for KDE to help however it looked like a bigger time sink than I wanted.

        For example my hyprpaper config is as such:

        home.file."dots/config/hypr/hyprpaper.conf" = {
            text = ''
              preload = ~/nixos/wallpaper/1.jpg
              preload = ~/nixos/wallpaper/2.jpg
              preload = ~/nixos/wallpaper/3.jpg
              preload = ~/nixos/wallpaper/4.jpg
              wallpaper = eDP-1, ~/nixos/wallpaper/1.jpg
            '';
          };
        

        Same can be done for KDE’s config however you’ll run into issues changing settings manually from memory. I’m quite happy with hyprland as there are less moving parts compared to a complete package (gnome / kde), everything that’s installed (probably) has a purpose for my use-case.