If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
What Linux Distribution Should Be Benchmarked The Most?
But why should the people who make those Ubuntu derivatives bother switching? I doubt their users are demanding it. Perhaps they are still happy using Ubuntu. Should they do it to satisfy the whims of Phoronix users? Keep in mind that Xorg isn't being removed on Ubuntu, so any reason you propose has to be better than the default of carrying on using Ubuntu+Xorg. The only possible reason I can see is if Ubuntu ceased as a distribution - but that is unlikely - it is much more likely to morph into something else than to disappear altogether from the face of the earth.
They would because they'll want to move on to Wayland, and Ubuntu doesn't support Wayland. Maybe some niche distros will be happy to stay on plain old Xorg, but as time goes by it will become more and more inconvenient, as most desktops will focus more and more towards Wayland. This time next year, the first mainstream distros running Wayland by default will be out there. Staying on Xorg is not a sustainable long term plan.
Probably what most buntus will do is rebase on Kubuntu, which has taken on itself the task of maintaining Wayland and the necessary libraries. Kubuntu will probably keep on basing itself on Ubuntu as long as it's easy enough, without having to replace too much of the software stack, as long as Ubuntu doesn't patch the graphics stack so much that it breaks compatibility with non-Mir distros (ie. every distro except Ubuntu).
From what some troll was linking it shows Ubuntu is only like .9% of Linux Users...
As for 12/2011
Facebook Shares
Another interesting statistic we can find online is the number of times a distro’s home page has been shared on Facebook. While clearly not an exact indication of a distro’s popularity, it can give us some idea of how many people share a link to their favorite distro with their friends. The following statistics come from the Facebook Graph API and show links to the distro’s homepage. Ubuntu has a clear lead in Facebook shares, with Linux Mint and Fedora fighting for second.
As an independent Benchmark it should be testing as many Distributions as possible!
Despite that I would recommend debian and/or lfs (Linux from Scratch) and as a "Fan boy" openSUSE
Do you realize LFS isn't even a distro, in the traditional meaning, do you? I mean, it's just docs, they don't even keep a central repo of sources (that's what keep it from being a source based distro). Manually built OS can't count as a distribution, because you are not actually *distributing*.
The idea of benchmarks is for users to get an idea of how it will run for them, and LFS is the furthest from something you can extrapolate, it's 100% custom.
Also, Debian unstable, maybe, but stable wouldn't help.
They would because they'll want to move on to Wayland, and Ubuntu doesn't support Wayland. Maybe some niche distros will be happy to stay on plain old Xorg, but as time goes by it will become more and more inconvenient, as most desktops will focus more and more towards Wayland. This time next year, the first mainstream distros running Wayland by default will be out there. Staying on Xorg is not a sustainable long term plan.
Probably what most buntus will do is rebase on Kubuntu, which has taken on itself the task of maintaining Wayland and the necessary libraries. Kubuntu will probably keep on basing itself on Ubuntu as long as it's easy enough, without having to replace too much of the software stack, as long as Ubuntu doesn't patch the graphics stack so much that it breaks compatibility with non-Mir distros (ie. every distro except Ubuntu).
I don't think everyone will necessarily dislike Mir. I think it's Ubuntu Kilyn or something like that who's main focus is just make Ubuntu better for chinese people. I think this distro would probably go with Mir, to keep using Unity, for example.
Flavors, on the other hand, or derivatives based on desktops other than Unity, yeah, they are probably either on the Wayland's wagon or sticking with X.
Ubuntu and Mint or Debian depending on Michells preference.
Ubuntu is and will continue to be the most used Linux distribution.
Stopping benchmarking it would be plain stupid.
Mint and Debian ?r both stable popular distributions that would be
more similar to Linux distributions over all.
I do believe Ubuntu should still be the base, general benchmark platform, because it's the single distro with the most users (so, the benchmarks for Ubuntu extend for more users than to any other distro), but since it uses a different display server (which is quite crucial on any GUI's performance) than anyone else, there should be an alternative (assuming Unity won't be ported to Wayland, and since the desktop might affect, too), for testing graphics performance for everyone else, too.
Fedora and Arch Linux. Ubuntu with his pro-Mir patches that won't be included anywhere else is a distortion to any relevant benchmark of the Linux graphic stack.
Comment