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๐Ÿง A list of awesome projects and resources that make Linux even more awesome. ๐Ÿง Credits to: aleksandar-todorovic/awesome-linux

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awesome Linux

We Thank aleksandar-todorovic/awesome-linux and all his fellow contributors for their contribution to help us get this awesome repository.

We all know that Linux is awesome, but here's a list of especially awesome things related to the Linux ecosystem.

linux graphic


You might also want to check awesome-c, awesome-shell, awesome-sysadmin, and awesome-security.


Table of Content

Distributions

Distributions are organized into three different categories: for beginners, for intermediate users and for advanced users. In those categories, the distributions are organized in the alphabetical order.

Beginners

elementary OS is an Ubuntu-based desktop distribution. Some of its more interesting features include a custom desktop environment called Pantheon and many custom apps including Photos, Music, Videos, Calendar, Terminal, Files, and more. It also comes with some familiar apps like the Midori web browser and Geary mail.

Latest version: elementary OS Loki (0.4)

Default Desktop Environment: Pantheon

default look

Fedora (formerly Fedora Core) is a Linux distribution developed by the community-supported Fedora Project and owned by Red Hat. Fedora contains software distributed under a free and open-source license and aims to be on the leading edge of such technologies. Fedora has a reputation for focusing on innovation, integrating new technologies early on and working closely with upstream Linux communities. The default desktop in Fedora is the GNOME desktop environment and the default interface is the GNOME Shell. Other desktop environments, including KDE, Xfce, LXDE, MATE and Cinnamon, are available. Fedora Project also distributes custom variations of Fedora called Fedora spins. These are built with specific sets of software packages, offering alternative desktop environments or targeting specific interests such as gaming, security, design, scientific computing and robotics.

Latest version: Fedora Twenty Five (25)

Default Desktop Environment: GNOME

default look

Linux Mint is an Ubuntu-based distribution whose goal is to provide a more complete out-of-the-box experience by including browser plugins, media codecs, support for DVD playback, Java and other components. It also adds a custom desktop and menus, several unique configuration tools, and a web-based package installation interface. Linux Mint is compatible with Ubuntu software repositories.

Latest version: Linux Mint Sarah (18)

Default Desktop Environment: Cinnamon and MATE

default look

Ubuntu is a complete desktop Linux operating system, freely available with both community and professional support. The Ubuntu community is built on the ideas enshrined in the Ubuntu Manifesto: that software should be available free of charge, that software tools should be usable by people in their local language and despite any disabilities, and that people should have the freedom to customise and alter their software in whatever way they see fit. "Ubuntu" is an ancient African word, meaning "humanity to others". The Ubuntu distribution brings the spirit of Ubuntu to the software world.

Latest version: Ubuntu 17.04

Default Desktop Environment: Unity

default look

Intermediate

CentOS as a group is a community of open source contributors and users. Typical CentOS users are organisations and individuals that do not need strong commercial support in order to achieve successful operation. CentOS is 100% compatible rebuild of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux, in full compliance with Red Hat's redistribution requirements. CentOS is for people who need an enterprise class operating system stability without the cost of certification and support.

Latest version: CentOS 7.1611

Default Desktop Environment: GNOME

default look

The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system is called Debian GNU/Linux, or simply Debian for short. Debian systems currently use the Linux kernel. [...] Debian comes with over 50,000 packages (precompiled software that is bundled up in a nice format for easy installation on your machine) - all of it free. It's a bit like a tower. At the base is the kernel. On top of that are all the basic tools. Next is all the software that you run on the computer. At the top of the tower is Debian -- carefully organizing and fitting everything so it all works together.

Latest version: Debian Jessie (8.6)

Default Desktop Environment: GNOME

default look

Mageia is a fork of Mandriva Linux formed in September 2010 by former employees and contributors to the popular French Linux distribution. Unlike Mandriva, which is a commercial entity, the Mageia project is a community project and a non-profit organisation whose goal is to develop a free Linux-based operating system.

Latest version: Mageia 5

Default Desktop Environment: KDE

default look

Manjaro Linux is a fast, user-friendly, desktop-oriented operating system based on Arch Linux. Key features include intuitive installation process, automatic hardware detection, stable rolling-release model, ability to install multiple kernels, special Bash scripts for managing graphics drivers and extensive desktop configurability. Manjaro Linux offers Xfce as the core desktop options, as well as a minimalist Net edition for more advanced users. Community-supported GNOME 3/Cinnamon and KDE flavours are available. Users also benefit from the supportive and vibrant Manjaro community forum.

Latest version: Not applicable (Rolling Release system)

Default Desktop Environment: XFCE, KDE

default look

The openSUSE project is a community program sponsored by SUSE Linux and other companies. Promoting the use of Linux everywhere, this program provides free, easy access to openSUSE, a complete Linux distribution. The openSUSE project has three main goals: make openSUSE the easiest Linux for anyone to obtain and the most widely used Linux distribution; leverage open source collaboration to make openSUSE the world's most usable Linux distribution and desktop environment for new and experienced Linux users; dramatically simplify and open the development and packaging processes to make openSUSE the platform of choice for Linux developers and software vendors. It also offers a rolling release version called Tumbleweed for experienced users.

Latest version: openSUSE Leap 42.1 and openSUSE Tumbleweed (Rolling Release system)

Default Desktop Environment: KDE, GNOME, XFCE, LXDE (Choose on installation)

default look

Advanced

Arch Linux is an independently developed, i686- and x86_64-optimised Linux distribution targeted at competent Linux users. It uses 'pacman', its home-grown package manager, to provide updates to the latest software applications with full dependency tracking. Operating on a rolling release system, Arch can be installed from a CD image or via an FTP server. The default install provides a solid base that enables users to create a custom installation. In addition, the Arch Build System (ABS) provides a way to easily build new packages, modify the configuration of stock packages, and share these packages with other users via the Arch Linux user repository.

Latest version: Not applicable (Rolling Release system)

Default Desktop Environment: Not applicable (there's no default Desktop environment)

Special Purpose

CoreOS is a Linux-based operating system for servers. Built from the ground up and designed primarily for the modern data centre, CoreOS provides specialist tools for making the system secure, reliable and up-to-date. Some of the more interesting features of the distribution include reliable updates and patches via FastPatch, a dashboard for managing rolling updates via CoreUpdate, a docker for packaging applications, as well as support for bare metal and many cloud providers.

Specialty: Clusters

Kali Linux (formerly known as BackTrack) is a Debian-based distribution with a collection of security and forensics tools. It features timely security updates, support for the ARM architecture, a choice of four popular desktop environments, and seamless upgrades to newer versions.

Specialty: Penetration testing

Puppy Linux is yet another Linux distribution. What's different here is that Puppy is extraordinarily small, yet quite full-featured. Puppy boots into a ramdisk and, unlike live CD distributions that have to keep pulling stuff off the CD, it loads into RAM. This means that all applications start in the blink of an eye and respond to user input instantly. Puppy Linux has the ability to boot off a flash card or any USB memory device, CDROM, Zip disk or LS/120/240 Superdisk, floppy disks, internal hard drive. It can even use a multisession formatted CD-RW/DVD-RW to save everything back to the CD/DVD with no hard drive required at all.

Specialty: Low system requirements

Ubuntu Studio is a variant of Ubuntu aimed at the GNU/Linux audio, video and graphic enthusiast as well as professional. The distribution provides a collection of open-source applications available for multimedia creation.

Specialty: Multimedia creation

Learning Resources

Books

This is a great introduction to the Linux command line. - @4iar

You've experienced the shiny, point-and-click surface of your Linux computerโ€”now dive below and explore its depths with the power of the command line.

Good book that teaches you the basics of Debian GNU/Linux administration. - @elninosi

It covers all the topics that a competent Linux administrator should master, from the installation, update of the system, up to the creation of packages and the compilation of the kernel, but also monitoring, backup and migration. Plus advanced topics to secure services, automated installations, or virtualization.

Courses

Organized by the Linux Foundation, it's a great free course to learn basics about Linux. - @aleksandar-todorovic

If you used Windows and decided to switch to Linux, this course should help you to find their alternatives. It's pretty short and you can finish it in a day. - @aleksandar-todorovic

X Desktop Environments

You cannot talk about a unified Linux look because there is no such thing.

relevant XKCD

GNOME 3 is an easy and elegant way to use your computer. It is designed to put you in control and bring freedom to everybody. GNOME 3 is developed by the GNOME community, a diverse, international group of contributors that is supported by an independent, non-profit foundation.

screenshot

The KDEยฎ Community is an international technology team dedicated to creating a free and user-friendly computing experience, offering an advanced graphical desktop, a wide variety of applications for communication, work, education and entertainment and a platform to easily build new applications upon. We have a strong focus on finding innovative solutions to old and new problems, creating a vibrant atmosphere open for experimentation.

screenshot

Xfce is a lightweight desktop environment for UNIX-like operating systems. It aims to be fast and low on system resources, while still being visually appealing and user friendly.

screenshot

The "Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment" is an extremely fast-performing and energy-saving desktop environment. Maintained by an international community of developers, it comes with a beautiful interface, multi-language support, standard keyboard short cuts and additional features like tabbed file browsing. LXDE uses less CPU and less RAM than other environments. It is especially designed for cloud computers with low hardware specifications, such as netbooks, mobile devices (e.g. MIDs) or older computers. LXDE can be installed on many Linux distributions including Debian, Fedora, OpenSUSE and Ubuntu. It is the standard for Knoppix and lubuntu. LXDE also runs on OpenSolaris and BSD. LXDE provides a fast desktop experience; connecting easily with applications in the cloud. LXDE supports a wealth of programs that can be installed locally with Linux systems. The source code of LXDE is licensed partly under the terms of the GNU General Public License and partly under the LGPL.

screenshot

Other Desktop Environments

  • Cinnamon - Cinnamon strives to provide a traditional user experience. Cinnamon is a fork of GNOME 3.
  • EDE - EDE is a small desktop environment built to be responsive, light in resource usage and to have a familiar look and feel.
  • LXQt - LXQt is the Qt port and the upcoming version of LXDE, the Lightweight Desktop Environment. It is the product of the merge between the LXDE-Qt and the Razor-qt projects: A lightweight, modular, blazing-fast and user-friendly desktop environment.
  • MATE - Mate provides an intuitive and attractive desktop to Linux users using traditional metaphors. MATE is a fork of GNOME 2.
  • Pantheon - Pantheon is the default desktop environment originally created for the elementary OS distribution. It is written from scratch using Vala and the GTK3 toolkit. With regards to usability and appearance, the desktop has some similarities with GNOME Shell and Mac OS X.
  • Unity - Unity is a shell for GNOME designed by Canonical for Ubuntu.

X Windows Managers

  • 9wm - X window manager which attempts to emulate the Plan 9 window manager 8-1/2 as far as possible within the constraints imposed by X.
  • awesome - Highly configurable window manager for X. Fast and extensible.
  • Blackbox - Fast, lightweight window manager for the X Window System, without annoying library dependencies. Built with C++.
  • bspwm - Tiling window manager that represents windows as the leaves of a full binary tree.
  • Compiz - OpenGL compositing window manager. It has a plug-in system to be changed at runtime.
  • dwm - Dynamic window manager for X. It manages windows in tiled, monocle and floating layouts. All of the layouts can be applied dynamically, optimising the environment for the application in use and the task performed.
  • Enlightenment - Not just a window manager for X11 and others, but also a whole suite of libraries to help you create beautiful user interfaces with much less work than doing it the old fashioned way and fighting with traditional toolkits.
  • Fluxbox - Window manager for X that was based on the Blackbox 0.61.1 code. Very light on resources and easy to handle but yet full of features to make an easy, and extremely fast, desktop experience. Built using C++. MIT-licensed.
  • FVWM - Extremely powerful ICCCM-compliant multiple virtual desktop window manager for the X Window system.
  • i3 - Tiling window manager. The target platforms are GNU/Linux and BSD operating systems. BSD-licensed. Primarily targeted at advanced users and developers.
  • IceWM - Window manager with the goal of being fast, simple, and not getting in the user's way
  • JWM - Lightweight window manager for X11. Written in C and uses only Xlib at a minimum. Good choice for older and/or less powerful systems, such as the Raspberry Pi, though it is perfectly capable of running on modern systems.
  • Matchbox - Base environment for X running on non-desktop embedded platforms such as handhelds, set-top boxes, kiosks and anything else for which screen space, input mechanisms or system resources are limited.
  • Mutter - Window manager for X. Default window manager in GNOME 3.
  • Openbox - Highly configurable window manager with extensive standards support.
  • ratpoison - A simple window manager with no fat library dependencies, no fancy graphics, no window decorations, and no rodent dependence. It is largely modeled after GNU Screen which has done wonders in the virtual terminal market.
  • Sawfish - An extensible window manager using Lisp-based scripting language. Its policy is very minimal compared to most window managers. Its aim is simply to manage windows in the most flexible and attractive manner possible.
  • wmii - A small, scriptable window manager, with a 9P filesystem interface and an acme-like layout.
  • xmonad - Dynamically tiling X11 window manager that is written and configured in Haskell. In a normal WM, you spend half your time aligning and searching for windows. xmonad makes work easier, by automating this.

Applications

The list of awesome Linux applications that you should be using.

GUI-based Applications

GNOME-based

  • Builder - Builder is an IDE for GNOME that is focused on bringing the power of the GNOME platform to more developers than ever before.
  • Evince - The most popular document viewer on the GNOME platform.
  • Gedit - Gedit is the GNOME text editor. While aiming at simplicity and ease of use, gedit is a powerful general purpose text editor.
  • Polari - IRC client built to be easy to use.
  • To Do - Minimalistic personal task manager designed to fit right into your GNOME desktop.

For more GNOME-based apps, visit: https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps

Pantheon-based

  • FeedReader - RSS desktop client able to integrate with multiple online services.
  • Go For It! - To-do list with built-in productivity timer.
  • NaSC - Intelligent calculator app.
  • Spice-Up - Desktop presentation app
  • Vocal - Podcast client for the modern desktop.

For more Pantheon-based apps, visit elementary-apps.

KDE-based

  • Dolphin - File manager for KDE focusing on usability.
  • Krita - Painting program.

For more KDE-based apps, visit: https://www.kde.org/applications/

Not based on any desktop environment

  • Atom - Hackable text editor for the 21st century.
  • ghostwriter - Distraction-free Markdown editor.
  • GParted - The most popular disk partitioning software out there.
  • Kodi - Most popular entertainment center.
  • Zathura - Highly customizable document viewer. It provides a minimalistic and space saving interface as well as an easy usage that mainly focuses on keyboard interaction.

Third-party clients for online services

Q: Why third-party apps? Why not the official clients?

A: Because, in 99% of the cases, official clients are proprietary.

  • Corebird - Twitter client.
  • GNOME Twitch - Twitch player.
  • Caprine - Facebook's Messenger client with some added privacy features.
  • PB for Desktop - Pushbullet client.
  • ramme - Instagram client.
  • ScudCloud - Slack client with additional features (compared to the original Slack client).
  • Whatever - Evernote client based on the web version.

To add new content to this section, please refer to the CONTRIBUTING.md file.

Package management and creation tools

Distro-oriented:

  • Y PPA Manager (Ubuntu) - Manage PPAs and search for packages.
  • pirut (Fedora) - Provides a set of graphical tools for managing software.
  • Synaptics (Debian and .deb users) - Graphical package management program for apt.
  • YaST (openSUSE) - Main package management tool on openSUSE.
  • YumEx (Fedora) - A GUI for the dnf package manager.
  • Yaourt (Arch) - A wrapper for pacman which adds automated access to the AUR using the same syntax as pacman.
  • Aura (Arch) - Secure, multilingual package manager.

Distro-independent:

  • AppImageKit - Using AppImageKit you can package applications in the AppImage format that runs on common Linux-based operating systems, such as RHEL, CentOS, Ubuntu, Fedora, debian and derivatives; one app = one file.

Console-based Applications

  • cmus - Small, fast and powerful console music player.
  • fuck - Command line tool which corrects your previously mistyped command.
  • git - Free and open source distributed version control system designed to handle everything from small to very large projects with speed and efficiency.
  • glances - Cross-platform system monitoring tool.
  • htop - Nice looking, customizable task manager.
  • nano - Simple to use text editor.
  • photorec - Useful tool for restoring deleted files.
  • ranger - Vim-inspired file manager for the console.
  • screenFetch - Fetches system/theme information in terminal.
  • speed-test - Test your Internet connection speed and ping using speedtest.net.
  • testdisk - A tool for disk partition recovery.
  • tig - Text-mode interface for git. It functions mainly as a Git repository browser.
  • vim - Advanced text editor that seeks to provide the power of the de-facto Unix editor 'Vi', with a more complete feature set.
  • vtop - Easily-extendable activity monitor.
  • wavemon - Monitoring application for wireless network devices.
  • youtube-dl - A tool to download videos from YouTube and other video sites.

Useful Websites

A friendly place to start for the Free & Open Source Software and Linux curious.

Find better alternatives to the software you already use or a replacement for software you cannot or do not want to use.

The Linux Foundation is a non-profit consortium dedicated to fostering the growth of Linux. Founded in 2000, The Linux Foundation sponsors the work of Linux creator Linus Torvalds and is supported by leading Linux and open source companies and developers from around the world.

For the community, by the community, Linux.com strives to be the central source for informed, reasonable, and intelligent Linux information, software, documentation and answers across the server, desktop/netbook, mobile, and embedded areas.

Although its design is outdated, Linux.org is (probably) the most popular forum and it's full of awesome Linux tutorials categorized by their difficulty. - @aleksandar-todorovic

The Linux Kernel Organization is a California Public Benefit Corporation established in 2002 to distribute the Linux kernel and other Open Source software to the public without charge.

Opensource.com is an online publication focused on how open source is applied to different areas including business, education, government, health, law and other disciplines of life.

Our goal is to further the open source way by sharing the open source movement. Our community of readers is made up of those who believe that open participation and sharing can tackle the business, social, environmental, and technological challenges facing us today.

License

This repository is licensed under the Do What the Fuck You Want to Public License. Its full content is located in the LICENSE file.

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๐Ÿง A list of awesome projects and resources that make Linux even more awesome. ๐Ÿง Credits to: aleksandar-todorovic/awesome-linux

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