Regular
Intro
The regular image builds are intended to aid those interested in ALT Sisyphus and the current state of Linux desktop environments (at least as packaged there).
These are not the fully fledged properly tailored distributions but rather targeted technology demos that can happen to be useful either (the release manager's current laptop is installed using one of those -- did I mention these are installable LiveCDs?).
Please note that regular images are built using the unstable development repository (think debian testing) so if you want to install ALT really do consider images which are built and updated using stable branches:
- the official distributions should fit the best, but
- there are also starterkits which are essentially regular image counterparts built using p9/branch.
The rescue image contains console tools for handling and fixing up all of the popular and some less widely known filesystems as well as to perform data recovery, hardware and networking diagnostics, security incident investigation; sometimes it is the most recent versions of kernel, drivers and utilities that are really in need.
NB: if an image looks broken check the hash against MD5SUM/SHA1SUM files. This can happen if your download manager gets the file in chunks or has to resume the interrupted download and the "latest" symlink changes during that (which should not happen more than once a day). The images under snapshots/ directory aren't symlinks but are the files themselves so if this is an issue you might want to choose and download one of those. The other way to fix a corrupted download is to use rsync against nightly.altlinux.org::nightly prefix.
Flavours
There are multiple sets of DE/architecture specific builds (see also dedicated rescue page); note that the manually verified ones are linked from tested directory while current contains automatically updated symlinks.
Starterkits | Regular |
---|---|
quarterly | weekly |
stable | current |
rescue, livecd, installer, server, vm |
rescue, livecd, jeos |
If you encounter any problems with a current image it might make sense to look whether the "a bit more official" tested one behaves better (thank you for still dropping us a note that the latest isn't greatest in your particular case).
The images are autobuilt weekly (on Wednesdays, Moscow time) but we can release updated ones manually as often as daily.
i586 architecture
On May 22, 2024, the latest images were builded on i586, after which they were moved to the archive: https://nightly.altlinux.org/sisyphus/archive/
There are no plans to resume building i586 images on Sisyphus.
non-x86 architectures
Please refer to aarch64 (nee ARMv8), mipsel (MIPS32) and riscv64 (RV64GC) specific pages for more information on running the images in QEMU and on corresponding hardware.
Direct image download links
NB: these lead to fairly large files themselves (see estimation); see the tested/ directory if you'd like to browse things.
There's also a mirror at Yandex.
Note the tips on suitable utilities to write the hybrid ISO image to bootable media; please do not use UNetbootin, Rufus, or UltraISO as those will cripple the result unfortunately.
main
- Cinnamon: x86_64, aarch64
- KDE5: x86_64, aarch64
- MATE: x86_64; aarch64: iso/rootfs, riscv64: rootfs
- Xfce: x86_64; aarch64: iso/rootfs, riscv64: rootfs
auxiliary
- Enlightenment[1]: x86_64
- Gnome: x86_64, aarch64
- IceWM: x86_64
- LXQt: x86_64, aarch64: iso/rootfs,(medium); riscv64: rootfs
experimental[2]
archived
- KDE4: i586, x86_64 (1.5 Gb) 20180418
- TDE: i586, x86_64 (~750Mb) 20170111
- WindowMaker (sysvinit): i586, x86_64 20200115
- LXDE: i586, x86_64 20230913
- IceWM (sysvinit): i586, x86_64 20240103
- GNUstep (sysvinit): i586, x86_64 20240103
non-desktop
Status
Please see ChangeLog and BUGS files for current information.
Discussion
You're welcome to subscribe to our mailing list or join the IRC channel to discuss anything related to these images.
The bugs (unless already known) should be filed against specific products, namely Regular (for image bugs) and Sisyphus (for package bugs).
Tech note
The technology behind these images is aimed at making derivatives easy while requiring the very minimal specification of the difference added.
References
- livecdlist.com entry
- DistroWatch (see the Sisyphus column for versions)