This is a slight aside, but CachyOS is a great example of the failure of Wikipedia politics.
The "CachyOS" page was deleted[1], and replaced with a redirect to the Arch Linux page. But CachyOS is not mentioned anywhere on that page, nor on the "List of Linux distributions § Arch Linux-based" page.
It links to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arch_Linux#Derivatives which indeed lacks any mention of CachyOS. Luckily, Wikipedia is free to register, and you can just edit pages you feel like could be better. Seems like you found the perfect first edit to make for yourself :)
It's an endemic issue on wikipedia, and even editing wouldn't fix this one instance, since someone can (and demonstrably already has) remove whatever you add later on. The issue is wikipedias preference for "deletionism", removing perfectly correct information for no particularly good reason. It's especially pernicious when it comes to short articles, which tend to get deleted with impunity, and redirected to sections of articles, which later get renamed, destroying the link, or removed altogether. Nothing can be done by any individual to fix this issue, since it comes from a wikipedia wide policy, which unfortunately is not one of the things that "anyone can edit".
I have a long Wikipedia history, but that is not the point. There already was a CachyOS page, and it was removed. Why bother contributing stuff that will just be deleted again?
But their differentiation is that to improve performance they compile all the packages with newer instruction sets as the target as well as enabling more optimizations like LTO. And some are even optimized with PGO.
I find it odd to call a specific Linux distribution blazingly fast.
Gentoo with make.conf (/etc/portage/make.conf[1]) having "CFLAGS="-O3 -march=native -flto"" means that Gentoo, a Linux distribution, is performant?
[1] It is not a good idea to build everything with LTO or PGO enabled because not all packages support LTO / PGO cleanly. Do it on the basis of per-package.
That’s just a ranking of subpage hits per day. Not only is that easily gamed, it also says very little about how popular an OS really is.
This is a slight aside, but CachyOS is a great example of the failure of Wikipedia politics.
The "CachyOS" page was deleted[1], and replaced with a redirect to the Arch Linux page. But CachyOS is not mentioned anywhere on that page, nor on the "List of Linux distributions § Arch Linux-based" page.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletio...
It links to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arch_Linux#Derivatives which indeed lacks any mention of CachyOS. Luckily, Wikipedia is free to register, and you can just edit pages you feel like could be better. Seems like you found the perfect first edit to make for yourself :)
It's an endemic issue on wikipedia, and even editing wouldn't fix this one instance, since someone can (and demonstrably already has) remove whatever you add later on. The issue is wikipedias preference for "deletionism", removing perfectly correct information for no particularly good reason. It's especially pernicious when it comes to short articles, which tend to get deleted with impunity, and redirected to sections of articles, which later get renamed, destroying the link, or removed altogether. Nothing can be done by any individual to fix this issue, since it comes from a wikipedia wide policy, which unfortunately is not one of the things that "anyone can edit".
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I have a long Wikipedia history, but that is not the point. There already was a CachyOS page, and it was removed. Why bother contributing stuff that will just be deleted again?
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> Blazingly Fast & Customizable Linux distribution
I love Arch Linux, but please...
(Arch Linux is already "fast" (depends on what you install for your DE, if any) and customizable.)
But their differentiation is that to improve performance they compile all the packages with newer instruction sets as the target as well as enabling more optimizations like LTO. And some are even optimized with PGO.
I find it odd to call a specific Linux distribution blazingly fast.
Gentoo with make.conf (/etc/portage/make.conf[1]) having "CFLAGS="-O3 -march=native -flto"" means that Gentoo, a Linux distribution, is performant?
[1] It is not a good idea to build everything with LTO or PGO enabled because not all packages support LTO / PGO cleanly. Do it on the basis of per-package.
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