Hej lemmings! (Hoping this is relevant enough for the selfhosted commjnity)

Quick question for you all: do you stick with the same distro across your PC, laptop, and server, or do you pick different ones based on the device and what you’re doing?

For me, I’ve been mixing and matching depending on the use case, but I’m starting to think it’d be nice to just have one distro (or at least one family like Fedora or Debian) running everywhere. That way I wouldn’t get confused about default settings or constantly have to look up flags for different package managers.

Right now my setup is:

  • Gaming rig: CachyOS
  • Laptop: AuroraOS
  • NAS: Unraid
  • Various project servers: DietPi, Debian, Alpine etc…

I feel like NixOS might be the only distro that could realistically handle all these use cases, but I’m a bit scared of the learning curve and the maintenance work it’d take to migrate everything over.

Am I the only one who feels like having “one distro to rule them all” would be nice? How do you guys handle your setups? All ears! 😊

  • aksdb@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    The machines I use regularly are all some form of ArchLinux (currently mostly CachyOS). Machines I use rarely I stick to LTS distros with few updates. Machines I don’t maintain myself I try to stick to immutable distros that just update themselves every once in a while (less chance of breakage).

  • pentastarm@piefed.ca
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    3 hours ago

    SteamOS on my steam deck. Bazzite on my laptop. And fedora on my home server that I’m still learning how to set up(I have immich running in a container, but that was just following an online tutorial. Still trying to understand docker better.)

  • El Perro Negro@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    For me it depends on computer capability. 3 generations of laptop… Current: PopOS Older: MiniOS Oldest (32bit): AntiX

    • irmadlad@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Oldest (32bit)

      I still have a functional 32 bit laptop. It’s rather slow, but it does work

  • MuttMutt@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Desktop - Ubuntu Cinnamon LTS (I game and edit video this is also currently my Frigate host)

    Laptop - Ubuntu Budgie (It’s basically just a thin client to access my desktop when I want to sit in the livingroom)

    Stepson’s Desktop - ChimeraOS (Because I don’t want to deal with anything in his room)

    Server - TrueNAS (Been using it since the FreeNAS 9 Era)

    Router - OpnSense (Been using that since before I started using FreeNAS)

    Different distro’s suit different needs. Could I use a single one for everything, yeah with a lot of extra work I don’t want to deal with. I’m much more hardware oriented and can make software work tried switching to Linux for everything in the mid 2000’s but couldn’t do things reliably with it till lately.

  • AstroLightz@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Everything but my server uses Arch (BTW). This is so I can have all devices have the same scripts for uniformity.

  • Creat@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 hours ago

    All normal PCs run CachyOS, includes gaming PCs, laptops and media PCs. All servers run some form of Debian (includes Proxmox) or a dedicated distro for their use (TRUE WAS, technically also Debian based).

  • FaygoRedPop@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I love how this post doesn’t even pretend that anyone may use anything but Linux. Classic Lemmy.

  • gurty@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Ubuntu for the main pc and Arch for the filthy weird frankenstein laptop from 2008. Just as god intended.

  • BladeFederation@piefed.social
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    4 minutes ago

    No, and that’s the beauty of Linux.

    Desktop gaming PC: Fedora KDE (might try Bazzite if I stop dual booting Windows, but I already got Nvidia set up and that’s the hard part)

    Old laptop: Zorin OS

    Old as dirt laptop: antiX

    Wife’s Surface: Pop!_OS 22.04. Maybe change it eventually to something lighter.

    I will likely go with Ubuntu Server or Debian when I set up my home server. Ubuntu seems like it has better Docker support.

    • ivn@tarte.nuage-libre.fr
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      3 hours ago

      And it’s very handy for this, I have the same config for all my devices (desktop, laptop and server). Enabling and disabling different modules depending on the host it’s deployed to.

      • smiletolerantly@awful.systems
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        2 hours ago

        Yep, exactly.

        To be fair, if you use Debian, Arch, Fedora,… long enough, you also know how to tweak your machine for every purpose. In Nix, it’s just somewhat of a self-fulfilling prophecy, because you have to know how to tweak your system to achieve… anything, and then it’s the same tweaking mechanics for every other purpose as well.

    • panda_abyss@lemmy.ca
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      38 minutes ago

      What is the learning/on-boarding curve for this?

      I ask because my home folder has a giant just file I use to script everything. I feel like I’m 80% there to just migrating.

      • smiletolerantly@awful.systems
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        33 minutes ago

        It’s a very steep curve to start, with some additional minor steep parts along the way, but it’s not a long curve. Once you got the core concepts and the basic language constructs, you’ve learned most of what you’ll ever need.

        Two nice resources: search.nixos.org is super handy, and you can search GitHub with language:nix and a search term to get tons of examples from other people.

        Oh, and nix and just is actually a pretty common combo!

  • Fierro@piefed.social
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    3 hours ago

    My laptop needs reliability to be fairly certain I’ll have everything working when I use it on poor internet, my desktop is always comnected to high bandwidth and has a decent cpu so I can spare a bit extra time and cycles on updating everything when something breaks

    Different needs

    I did like having the same thing going on on both for the couple months I used mint on both.

  • Lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 minutes ago

    Yep. Debian. I like apt, and I like shit that just…works. Very form after function. So what if a bunch of packages are on “old” versions. They work. The kernel works. KDE Plasma works. I can do everything I want to do without having to constantly be on the bleeding edge. If you prefer newer things, great. I prefer older, proven things. That’s also why I drive Toyota cars and Honda motorcycles.

  • blurry@feddit.org
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    3 hours ago

    I use arch btw (on everything).

    So yes … my laptop, my home server and even my wife’s laptop.