I suggest you Archlinux[1], highly updated and customizable. But it's not broke by updates day in day out.
2013/11/13 Mandeep Sandhu <mandeepsandhu.chd@xxxxxxxxx>
On Wed, Nov 13, 2013 at 3:40 PM, Naman Shekhar MishraIf you're comfortable with Gentoo then I guess you're ready for kernel
<mishra123.naman@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hi mentors,
> I have been studying the Linux kernel for some time and now I am going to
> try and get my hands hands dirty with the kernel. Can you please tell me
> what is the best distro for this? I have experience with Gentoo and LFS but
development! :P (kidding!) The reason I say this is because I heard
(I've not used Gentoo personally) that you get to build/install all
packages from scratch before using them! :)
You can also have a look at the popular ones like Ubuntu, Fedora or
Mint (dunno much about Mint though). They come with good package
managers and that makes installing stuff easy. So whether you want to
install eg binutils or a new browser or even the kernel sources, the
package manager will help you get all the stuff + it's dependencies.
HTH,
-mandeep
> _______________________________________________
> would they be good if I just want to get involved in kernel development
> (and not the maintenance overhead that comes with these distros)? It would
> be useful for me if you could tell me the distro you use.
>
> Thanks and regards,
> Naman
>
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