Which OS has the steep learning curve and is considered hardest?

  • Gentoo ( I have been using it for 3 years now, until I have to switch to Ubuntu for research sake. I love it’s philosophy and I kinda feel even my lifestyle changed after Gentoo. Tried it’s successors, redstar, cosmic mod didn’t liked much.)
  • Arch Linux ( when I got into Linux, everyone was like, I use arch btw. So tried it first with gnome, then kde, then i3, then i3 gaps and tui, then used openrc, then used runit. Helped me lot to install Gentoo. But Gentoo transformed me into something else)
  • Nix OS ( I was hearing about it since 2022. I wanted to try, and now I am gonna install and use it. I’m planning)

My question is, which among these is considered to be hardest and thus by mastering it, one can master linux to atleast some part? (excluding network management, ofsec, netsec, forensics, etc)

  • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I think Gentoo and Arch are quite similar but Gentoo needs more work. Not harder, but more annoying and time-consuming.

    • CheshireSnake@iusearchlinux.fyi
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      1 year ago

      Haven’t tried Nix OS yet, but yeah I can see the similarities in Gentoo and Arch. I think Gentoo with its compilation times is more of a headache (with better(?) rewards?). I think the last time I had to compile on Arch was for a kernel I wanted to try.

      • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        On recent hardware compiling everything from source doesn’t give that much a of a performance boost. On older hardware (i586/i686 era) this was different. But in my opinion the hassle simply doesn’t worth it anymore. My machine has plenty of unused resources and compilers nowadays do a really good job in optimizing the result.

        Can’t say anything about Nix OS. As far as I know it does some things different when it comes to configuration.

        • CheshireSnake@iusearchlinux.fyi
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          1 year ago

          On recent hardware compiling everything from source doesn’t give that much a of a performance boost.

          Agreed. The only reason I considered Gentoo is because my laptop is a potato.

          • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Is it just a potato, or is it an ancient potato? Arch runs on fairly old hardware as long as it’s 64 bits hardware. The oldest device I have must be from around 2014 and it runs okay.

      • Corngood@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        IMO NixOS has all the benefits of Gentoo. I can quite easily:

        • build everything in my system with custom compiler flags
        • patch/reconfigure my kernel
        • change how a specific package (say openssl) is built

        But at the same time, anything I don’t customise is pulled from the shared binary cache instead of being built locally.

        • CheshireSnake@iusearchlinux.fyi
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          1 year ago

          But at the same time, anything I don’t customise is pulled from the shared binary cache instead of being built locally

          This sounds pretty good. Like Gentoo and Arch mixed depending on what you’re installing? Gonna read up more on it when I have time. I just scanned their website quickly and they did sound a lot like Gentoo.

          • Corngood@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Yeah, I mean I switched to it from arch because it felt so messy doing upgrades, testing graphics drivers, kernel patches, etc on a mutable system. I would have to use filesystem snapshots to have any chance of rolling things back sanely.

            NixOS makes it very low risk and easy to do system changes like that.

        • Elmiar@lemmygrad.mlOP
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          1 year ago

          Ohh. Ok.

          And they say that in nix os we can have different versions and builds of same software, driver or even kernel (kernel, we can do that in Gentoo too). Is that true?

          • Corngood@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Yeah, it’s great for testing kernels because you can build a customised one and then immediately roll back (previous configs can be selected in the bootloader)