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{{Lowercase title|Alpine Linux}}
{{Infobox OS
{{Infobox OS
| name = Alpine Linux
| name = Alpine Linux
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A fork of the distribution, [[postmarketOS]], is designed to run on mobile devices.
A fork of the distribution, [[postmarketOS]], is designed to run on mobile devices.

==History==
==History==
Originally, Alpine Linux began as a fork of the [[LEAF Project]].<ref name="osdir-history">{{cite web|url=http://osdir.com/ml/linux.leaf.devel/2005-08/msg00039.html|title=linux.leaf.devel - Re: [leaf-devel] 2.6.x kernel support? - msg#00039 - Recent Discussion OSDir.com|last=|first=|date=|website=|publisher=|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160514053441/https://osdir.com/ml/linux.leaf.devel/2005-08/msg00039.html|archive-date=14 May 2016|dead-url=|access-date=}}</ref> The members of LEAF wanted to continue making a Linux distribution that could fit on a single floppy disk, whereas the Alpine Linux wished to include some more heavyweight packages such as [[Squid (software)|Squid]] and [[Samba (software)|Samba]], as well as additional security features and a newer kernel. One of the original goals was to create a framework for larger systems; although usable for this purpose, this is no longer a primary goal.{{citation needed|date=November 2015}}
Originally, Alpine Linux began as a fork of the [[LEAF Project]].<ref name="osdir-history">{{cite web|url=http://osdir.com/ml/linux.leaf.devel/2005-08/msg00039.html|title=linux.leaf.devel - Re: [leaf-devel] 2.6.x kernel support? - msg#00039 - Recent Discussion OSDir.com|last=|first=|date=|website=|publisher=|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160514053441/https://osdir.com/ml/linux.leaf.devel/2005-08/msg00039.html|archive-date=14 May 2016|dead-url=|access-date=}}</ref> The members of LEAF wanted to continue making a Linux distribution that could fit on a single floppy disk, whereas the Alpine Linux wished to include some more heavyweight packages such as [[Squid (software)|Squid]] and [[Samba (software)|Samba]], as well as additional security features and a newer kernel. One of the original goals was to create a framework for larger systems; although usable for this purpose, this is no longer a primary goal.{{citation needed|date=November 2015}}

Revisi per 1 Juli 2019 13.58

Alpine Linux
Perusahaan / pengembangTim pengembang Alpine Linux
KeluargaLinux
Status terkiniTersedia
Model sumberSumber terbuka
Rilis perdanaAgustus 2005; 19 tahun lalu (2005-08)[1]
Rilis stabil terkini3.10.0 / 13 Juni 2019; 5 tahun lalu (2019-06-13)[2]
Repositori Sunting ini di Wikidata
Target pemasaranPengembang, power users
Ketersediaan bahasaMultilingual
Manajer paketAPK
Dukungan platformx86, x86-64, ARMhf, AArch64, ppc64le, s390x
Kernel typeMonolithic (Linux)
Ruang penggunaBusyBox (GNU Core Utilities are optional)
Antarmuka bawaanCommand-line interface
Situs web resmialpinelinux.org

Alpine Linux is a Linux distribution based on musl and BusyBox, designed for security, simplicity, and resource efficiency.[3][4][5][6][7] It uses a hardened kernel and compiles all user space binaries as position-independent executables with stack-smashing protection.[8]

Because of its small size, it's heavily used in containers providing quick boot up times.[9]

A fork of the distribution, postmarketOS, is designed to run on mobile devices.

History

Originally, Alpine Linux began as a fork of the LEAF Project.[1] The members of LEAF wanted to continue making a Linux distribution that could fit on a single floppy disk, whereas the Alpine Linux wished to include some more heavyweight packages such as Squid and Samba, as well as additional security features and a newer kernel. One of the original goals was to create a framework for larger systems; although usable for this purpose, this is no longer a primary goal.[butuh rujukan]

Version history

Version Release date[10][11] End-of-life date[12] Kernel release
Old version, no longer supported: 2.0 2010-08-16 2012-04-01
Old version, no longer supported: 2.1 2010-11-01 2012-11-01
Old version, no longer supported: 2.2 2011-05-03 2013-05-01
Old version, no longer supported: 2.3 2011-11-01 2013-11-01
Old version, no longer supported: 2.4 2012-05-02 2014-05-01
Old version, no longer supported: 2.5 2012-11-07 2014-11-01
Old version, no longer supported: 2.6 2013-05-17 2015-05-01
Old version, no longer supported: 2.7 2013-11-08 2015-11-01
Old version, no longer supported: 3.0 2014-06-04 2016-05-01
Old version, no longer supported: 3.1 2014-12-10 2016-11-01
Old version, no longer supported: 3.2 2015-05-26 2017-05-01 3.18.xx
Old version, no longer supported: 3.3 2016-01-06 2017-11-01 4.1.xx
Old version, no longer supported: 3.4 2016-05-31 2018-05-01 4.4.xx
Old version, no longer supported: 3.5 2016-12-22 2018-11-01 4.4.xx
Older version, yet still supported: 3.6 2017-05-24 2019-05-01 4.9.xx
Older version, yet still supported: 3.7 2017-11-30 2019-11-01 4.9.xx
Older version, yet still supported: 3.8 2018-06-26 2020-05-01 4.14.xx
Older version, yet still supported: 3.9 2019-01-29 2021-01-01 4.19.xx
Current stable version: 3.10 2019-06-19 2021-05-01 4.19.xx
Latest preview version of a future release: edge rolling
Legenda:
Versi lama
Versi lebih lama, tetapi masih didukung
Versi terkini
Versi pratayang terakhir
Rilis selanjutnya

Features

  • Alpine uses its own package management system, apk-tools,[13] which originally was a collection of shell scripts but was later rewritten in C. Alpine currently contains most commonly used packages such as GNOME, Xfce, Firefox, and others.
  • Alpine Linux can be installed as a run-from-RAM operating system. The LBU (Alpine Local Backup)[14] tool optionally allows all configuration files to be backed up to an APK overlay file (usually shortened to apkovl), a tar.gz file that by default stores a copy of all changed files in /etc (with the option to add more directories). This allows Alpine to work reliably in demanding embedded environments or to (temporarily) survive partial disk failures as sometimes experienced in public cloud environments.
  • A hardened kernel was included in the default distribution for up to and including Alpine 3.7, which aids in reducing the impact of exploits and vulnerabilities. All packages are also compiled with stack-smashing protection to help mitigate the effects of userland buffer overflows.
  • Alpine Linux by default includes patches that allow using efficient meshed VPNs using the DMVPN standard.
  • Alpine Linux has reliably had excellent support of Xen hypervisors in up-to-date versions, which avoids issues as experienced with Enterprise Distributions. (The standard Linux hypervisor KVM, is also available.)
  • The base system in Alpine Linux is designed to be only 4–5 MB in size (excluding the kernel).[butuh rujukan] This allows very small Linux containers, around 8 MB in size, while a minimal installation to disk might be around 130 MB.[8] The Linux kernel is much larger; the 3.18.16 kernel includes 121 MB of loadable kernel modules (primarily drivers) in addition to the 3.3 MB for the base x86-64 kernel image.[butuh rujukan]
  • Alpine Configuration Framework (ACF): While optional, ACF is an application for configuring an Alpine Linux machine, with goals similar to Debian's debconf. It is a standard framework based on simple Lua scripts.[butuh rujukan]
  • Alpine Linux previously used uClibc as its C standard library instead of the traditional GNU C Library (glibc) most commonly used. Although it is more lightweight, it does have the significant drawback of being binary incompatible with glibc. Thus, all software must be compiled for use with uClibc to work properly. As of April 9, 2014[15], Alpine Linux switched to musl, which is partially binary compatible with glibc.[16]
  • The simple and lightweight OpenRC is the init system currently used by Alpine Linux.[17] Unlike many distributions, including Debian, Ubuntu, RHEL, Arch Linux and CentOS, Alpine does not use systemd.

References


Templat:Linux distributions

Templat:Linux package management systems