Quirky is a "quirky" Linux distribution created
by Barry Kauler, that forked from Puppy Linux a few years ago. The
original intention was to experiment with new ideas, and Quirky has
evolved into an exciting and unique distribution.
Overview
The Puppy family are built by a tool named Woof, with divergence as projects have forked. A precursor to Woof, named Puppy Unleashed, became the build system for Fatdog. Woof2
was the last Woof maintained by the creator of Puppy Linux, Barry
Kauler, before he retired from the Puppy project -- the "Puppy
community" forked Woof2 as woof-CE (Community Edition) circa 2013, and Puppy continues to strongly evolve.
Barry created Quirky as something to keep playing with Linux and to try
new ideas. The main conceptual differences with Puppy have emerged as
Quirky being a "full installation" only, special snapshot and recovery
features, and Service Pack upgrades.
For Quirky, Barry forked Woof2 into woofQ, which has steadily diverged as new ideas have been experimented with.
In a nutshell, Woof enables Puppy (or Puppy-like distro) to be built
from the binary packages of any other distribution. Historically, these
distributions have been mostly Debian, Ubuntu, or Slackware. Also, T2
has been used to compile packages from source, the resulting binary
packages used as input for a Woof build
Early Quirkies were the April series, created from binaries compiled in T2. Later Quirkies were built from Ubuntu binary DEBs, the most recent named the Xerus series. A ballpark conceptualization of the timeline is that Quirky version 7.0+ was April and 8.0+ was Xerus.
Quirky Xerus is built for x86_64 PCs and armv7 Raspberry Pi3. In 2016,
i686 support was dropped. Further information on the Xerus series is here.
In December 2016, Barry suddenly decided to build Quirky from Slackware 14.2 binary packages, and SlaQ was created.
SlaQ 8.1.6
The predecessor Woof2 had been used to build Puppy from Slackware packages, the most famous of these being Slacko, created by Mick Amadio. Slacko continues to this day as one of the official Puppy builds, created via woof-CE.
woofQ required a lot of work to build a sane SlaQ. Many improvements
were made, and packages carefully configured, and in some cases
recompiled, with an aim to create a very compact distribution. The first
release of SlaQ is version 8.1.6.
Here are the highlights of SlaQ 8.1.6, in no particular order:
- System infrastructure and utilities improved and fixed 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
- Easyinit, a tiny ramdisk Quirky for f.s. check and recovery 1 2 3
- Linux kernel 4.4.40 1, SeaMonkey 2.46
- New "peachy-red" theme for GTK, JWM, icons and wallpaper
- Small download, yet has huge selection of packages
At the time of writing, there are some known issues, only minor. For
example, SeaMonkey is stuck on using DuckDuckGo as the search engine.
See the forum link below for updates on issues and resolutions.
Download
The recommended file to download is 'slaq-8.1.6-amd64-8gb.img.gz', which
is an image that can be written to an 8GB (or greater) USB Flash
stick.
Ibiblio is the primary download site:
http://distro.ibiblio.org/quirky/quirky6/amd64/releases/slaq-8.1.6/
For instructions on how to write the image file to a Flash stick, see
the above link. This is easy to do for Linux and Windows users.
Quirky can run very happily from a USB stick, especially if it is a
reasonably fast one (some el-cheapo sticks are incredibly slow). Note:
if you have USB2 sockets, consider a USB3 stick -- Barry has found these
to run about twice as fast as most cheap USB2 sticks, even in a USB2
socket.
Alternatively, a full install to internal hard drive can be made. You
first need to be running Quirky from a Flash stick, then read these
instructions:
http://barryk.org/news/?viewDetailed=00475
There is a single "devx" PET package with everything needed to turn
Quirky into a compile environment (including compilers, svn, git):
http://distro.ibiblio.org/quirky/quirky6/amd64/packages/pet_packages-sq142/
Kernel source and patches can be found here:
http://barryk.org/sources/kernel-4.8.15/
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For those who want an ISO file, 'slaq-8.1.6-amd64.iso' is on the
download site. This is a live-CD and can be burnt to a CD or written to a
Flash stick.
More information
The place to go for news about Quirky is Barry's blog:
http://barryk.org/news/
To read about user experiences with SlaQ and post your own questions:
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=109378
Other announcements
Quirky Xerus 8.1.5 for x86_64 CPUs: http://barryk.org/news/?viewDetailed=00482
Quirky Xerus 8.1.4 for Raspberry Pi2: http://barryk.org/news/?viewDetailed=00473
Disclaimer
All releases of Quirky, including SlaQ, are provided in good faith, but
there is a disclaimer of any responsibility for unexpected or adverse
behaviour. Usage implies acceptance of this complete disclaimer.
Date: January 9, 2017
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