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Mid-weight family of operating systems From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
MX Linux is a Linux distribution based on Debian stable and using core antiX components, with additional software created or packaged by the MX community.[2] The development of MX Linux is a collaborative effort between the antiX and former MEPIS communities. The MX name comes from the "M" in MEPIS and the "X" in antiX — an acknowledgment of their roots. The community's stated goal is to produce "a family of operating systems that are designed to combine elegant and efficient desktops with high stability and solid performance".
Developer | MX Dev Team |
---|---|
OS family | Linux (Unix-like) |
Working state | Current |
Source model | Open source |
Initial release | 24 March 2014 |
Latest release | 23.4[1] / 15 September 2024 |
Available in | Multilingual |
Update method | APT |
Package manager | Apt |
Platforms | x86-64, i686 |
Kernel type | Monolithic (Linux) |
Default user interface | Xfce, Fluxbox & KDE |
License | Linux Foundation Sublicense No. 20140605-0483 |
Official website | mxlinux |
MX Linux uses Xfce as the main desktop environment, to which it adds a free-standing KDE Plasma version and, in 2021, a stand-alone Fluxbox implementation. Other environments can be added or are available as "spin-off" ISO images.
MX Linux began in a discussion about future options among members of the MEPIS community in December 2013.[3] Developers from antiX then joined them, bringing the ISO build system as well as Live-USB/DVD technology. To be listed on the Linux distribution clearinghouse Web site DistroWatch, MX Linux was initially presented as a version of antiX. It received its own DistroWatch page with the release of the first public beta of MX-16 on 2 November 2016.[citation needed]
MX Linux has four desktop editions:
A table of current MX Linux Development Team supported releases and how long Debian will provide Long Term Support.[28]
Version | Release | Kernel[29] | Kernel (AHS)[30] | Notes | Debian LTS support[31] ends: |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[1] | MX-23.4 all DE's15 September 2024 | 6.1.106 | 6.10.10 Liqourix | 4th refresh of MX 23. Bugfixes, kernel updates, application updates, updated firmware packages and updated Xfce 4.18 core packages. | Debian 12.7 December 2026 |
[20] | MX-23.3 all DE's19 May 2024 | 6.1.90 | 6.8.9 | 3rd refresh of MX 23. AHS now has the 6.8.9 Liquorix Kernel. | Debian 12.4 December 2026 |
[19] | MX-23.2 all DE's21 January 2024 | 6.1.x | 6.6 | 2nd refresh of MX 23. AHS now has the 6.6 Liquorix Kernel. | Debian 12.4 December 2026 |
[18] | MX-23.1 all DE's15 October 2023 | 6.1.x | 6.5 | All ISOs updated to the newest 6.1 Kernel and AHS now has the 6.5 Kernel. | Debian 12.2 [32] December 2026 |
[17] | MX-23 all DE's31 July 2023 | 6.1.0[33] | 6.4.0 | Xfce Desktop Environment upgraded to 4.18 | Debian 12 "Bookworm" [34] December 2026 |
[35] | MX-21.3 all DE's15 January 2023 | 5.10 | 6.0 | Debian 11 "Bullseye" To be defined; roughly July 2024 to June 2026 | |
[15] | MX-21.2.1 all DE's18 September 2022 | 5.18 | 5.19 & 6.0 kernel are in the AHS repo.[36] | ||
[13] | MX-21.2 all DE's28 August 2022 | 5.18 | |||
[12] | MX-21.1 all DE's9 April 2022 | 5.16 | 5.14 & 5.16 Kernel available in Package Manager[37] | ||
[38] | MX-21 AHS22 November 2021 | 5.14 | |||
[39] | MX-2121 October 2021 | ||||
MX-19.4.1 | 8 April 2021 | Debian 10 "Buster"[40] 30 June 2024 | |||
[41] | MX-19.431 March 2021 | 4.19 | |||
MX-19.3 | 11 November 2020 | ||||
MX-19.2 KDE | 16 August 2020 | ||||
[42] | 19.231 May 2020 | ||||
MX-19.1 | 14 February 2020 | ||||
MX-19 | 21 October 2019 | ||||
MX-18 | all releases | Debian 9 "Stretch" 30 June 2022 | |||
Legend: Old version, not maintained Old version, still maintained Latest version |
MX Linux has basic tools like a graphic installer that handles Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) computers, a GUI-based method to change a Linux kernel and other core programs.
It includes MX Tools,[43] a suite of user-oriented utilities, many of which were developed specifically for MX, while some were forked from existing antiX applications or are existing antiX applications; a couple were imported with permission from outside sources. These tools are also available in Debian Stable-based Linux distributions, and some of the main tools are as follows:
A particularly popular one is MX-snapshot,[44] a GUI tool to remaster a live session or installation into a single .ISO file.[45] The "cloned" image is bootable from a disk or USB flash drive, maintaining all settings, allowing an installation to be completely backed up, and/or distributed with minimal administrative effort, since an advanced method of copying the file system developed by antiX Linux uses bind-mounts to perform the "heavy lifting".[citation needed]
Minimum
Recommended
The developers of MX Linux also have been releasing "Community Re-spins" which are treated as unofficial releases. There are MX-Workbench, MX_Minimal, MX_CLI and so on.[46]
MX users can further customize these re-spins by using a software application called "MX Snapshot". Some community members exchanging posts at MX Forum and distribute their custom respins.[47] AV Linux[48] is one of well-known respins.[49]
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