This might be the dumbest stuff anyone has asked here, but has anyone tried running Alpine as a desktop base OS? Seems pretty well stocked when it comes to the repo, and it's light asf.
I did for some time. There's beauty in the simplicity and flexibility of Alpine, plus BusyBox is great once you understand all the weird quirks between it and coreutils. As unpopular as it might be, I actually really like OpenRC. Alpine feels pretty close to BSD if you're familiar with that family of operating systems. These days I use it for just about all my servers save for a few Nix boxes.
If you decide to explore this route, here are a couple tools I found useful at the start:
Conty - A single executable that launches applications in a standalone Linux Container
x11docker - Run GUI apps and desktop environments in docker and podman containers.
Also might behoove you to check out Alpine community's documentation on chroots in case you need specific software that isn't available otherwise.
Alpine works great for the desktop and I'm using it myself for my lower end machine.
Working without glibc and with some strangly named packages is sometimes tricky, but so far I have been able to do anything I'd wanted!
If it can help you in your journey, here is my personal configuration for Alpine, with WMs and DEs on their own branches. Only the 'suckless' (DWM) and 'xfce' are working properly so far: https://gitlab.com/sunoc/als/-/tree/suckless?ref_type=heads
I have been using Alpine as my main desktop system
If you need gaming, or you have a Nvidia GPU, your idea is dead on the water, not having glibc makes nvidia drivers impossible to use.
But that aside, the desktop feels snappy, the system is extremely small so knowing exactly how everything is running/working, and OpenRC is a breath of fresh air compared to the 'do everything' SystemD.
All pieces of Alpine just does one thing, which makes things really predictable.
Albeit, my path isn't without hiccups, for example X11 made suspend when the lid closes outright crash X11, so was forced into Wayland
And Pipewire, I have to restart it whenever I switch from the computer speakers to headphones or vice-versa
You'll find some small bugs and small issues, but if you really want a more spartan and simplistic way to handle your linux box, it is amazing
Also, APK is the best package manager, I felt in love with it
Oh interesting, didn't think of Graphics drivers getting in the way. It'll go on a Framework laptop, most if not everything should work ootb... ~famous last words~
I saw a video on this exact topic a while ago, it was pretty interesting. Not enough to make me move off Arch (BTW), but I could see it used on some old hardware if I felt like tinkerin'.
I almost feel bad that I haven't. I've used their documentation for years but never installed the distro. Most recently I've been having fun with NixOS.
I currently use NixOS and nix-darwin, and I've enjoyed the ride so far. I use flakes with direnv for reproducible development environments, and this has been working out well. I've also been impressed with using Nix to build OCI containers.
The learning curve isn't flat, but the ecosystem is fantastic.
I know! Will definitely try again at the next release. So far I'm running a minimal install of Arch without DE (only running Sway) and it works pretty well, but I'm not a fan of the bleeding edge release schedule. Wouls prefer something more stable, especially for that laptop which I don't plan on using as my daily driver
I've dabbled in it, but not really committed to it. It's a great lightweight server of course. I am a KDE Plasma user so I did a quick test of that and was able to install it via Alpine, but at the time, the support for javaws was not there which I needed at the time for my job, so that killed my plans on using it. I may venture back to it later on .
Iff you're a VSCode user, you might benefit greatly from Dev Containers. You'll basically be running Docker containers, which can run almost anything of course.
I'm also a Plasma user, and I decided to try it out in a vm yesterday after reading this thread. It didn't appear to play nicely in a vm. It was honestly the weirdest thing. Lots of freezes in my plasma session. Not the only distro that has problems in a vm, but still unexpected.
Anyways, there were a lot more packages for it than I initially thought. However, still lacked some things that I wanted to use, and like nixOS it seems different enough that I would need to put in a bit of work to get those things working on alpine.
I tried it and liked that they have quite some documentation for how to do things like get to a desktop. However I couldn't get audio working so I stopped using it, but I am also not really experienced in setting up Desktops so maybe it's easy.