Mageia
Unix-like operating system forked from Mandriva Linux From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mageia is a Linux-based operating system, distributed as free and open-source software. It was forked from the Mandriva Linux distribution.[5][6] The Greek term mageía (μαγεία) means enchantment, fascination, glamour, wizardry.[7]
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![]() Screenshot of Mageia 8 KDE | |
OS family | Linux (Unix-like) |
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Working state | Active |
Source model | Open source |
Initial release | June 1, 2011 |
Latest release | 9 / 4 September 2023[1] |
Latest preview | 9 rc1 / July 23, 2023[2] |
Available in | 167 languages[3] |
Package manager | DNF (alternate) and urpmi (legacy) |
Platforms | i586, amd64 |
Kernel type | Monolithic (Linux) |
Userland | GNU |
Default user interface | KDE Plasma Desktop (Live USB/DVD), GNOME 3 Desktop (Live USB/DVD), XFCE (Live USB/DVD)[4]LXDE, LXQt, Cinammon, MATE, Enlightenment |
License | Free software licenses (mainly GPL) and other licenses |
Official website | www |
The first release of the software distribution, Mageia 1, took place in June 2011.[8][9]
History
Mageia was created in 2010 as a fork of Mandriva Linux,[5][6][10] by a group of former employees of Mandriva S.A. and several other members of the Mandriva community.
On September 2, 2010, Edge IT, one of the subsidiaries of Mandriva, was placed under liquidation process by the Tribunal de commerce in Paris;[11][12] effective September 17, all assets were liquidated and employees were let go.
The next day, on September 18, 2010, some of these former employees, who were mostly responsible for the development and maintenance of the Mandriva Linux distribution, and several community members announced the creation of Mageia, with the support of many members of the community of developers, users and employees of Mandriva Linux.[13]
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Desktop environments
Mageia can use all major desktop environments. As was the case with Mandrake and Mandriva Linux, KDE Plasma is the main and the most used environment. End-users can choose from Plasma and GNOME 64-bit live DVD editions, 32-bit and 64-bit Xfce live DVD editions, and any environment in the full DVD installation edition.
It uses Mageia Control Center. LXDE, LXQt, Cinammon, MATE and Enlightenment are also available.
Application repository
Mageia offers a very large repository of software, such as productivity applications and a large variety of games. It was the first Linux distribution in which MariaDB replaced Oracle's MySQL.[14]
Development
Mageia was originally planned to be released on a nine-month release cycle, with each release to be supported for 18 months.[15]
Actual practice has been to release a new version when the Mageia development community feels the new release is ready from quality and stability viewpoints.
The latest stable version is Mageia 9, released on 27 August 2023.
Version history
Version | Release date | End-of-life date[16] | Kernel version |
---|---|---|---|
1[17][18] | 2011-06-01 | 2012-12-01 | 2.6.38.7 |
2[19][20] | 2012-05-22 | 2013-11-22 | 3.3.6 |
3[21][22][23] | 2013-05-19 | 2014-11-26 | 3.8.13 |
4[24][25][26] | 2014-02-01 | 2015-09-19 | 3.12.13 |
4.1 | 2014-06-20 | 3.12.21 | |
5[27][28] | 2015-06-19 | 2017-12-31 | 3.19.8 |
5.1 | 2016-12-02 | 4.4.30 | |
6[29][30] | 2017-07-16 | 2019-09-30 | 4.9.35 |
6.1[31] | 2018-10-05 | 4.14.70 | |
7.0[32][33] | 2019-07-01 | 2021-06-30 | 5.1.14 |
7.1[34][33] | 2019-07-16 | ||
8[35] | 2021-02-26 | 2023-11-30 | 5.10.16 |
9[1] | 2023-08-27 | 3 months after its successor's release date | 6.4 |
Legend: Old version, not maintained Older version, still maintained Current stable version Future version |

See also
- OpenMandriva Lx—a Linux distribution based on Mandriva Linux
- PCLinuxOS—another Linux distribution now independent, but whose start was based on Mandriva Linux
- Unity Linux—Mandriva-based distribution designed to be a base for end-user distributions
References
External links
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