The website
DistroWatch lists many Linux distributions and displays some of the ones that have the most
web traffic on the site. The
Wikimedia Foundation released an analysis of the browser
User Agents of visitors to WMF websites until 2015, which includes details of the most popular Operating System identifiers, including some Linux distributions. Many of the popular distributions are listed below.
Widely used GNU-based or GNU-compatible distributions •
Debian, a non-commercial distribution and one of the earliest, maintained by a volunteer developer community with a strong commitment to free software principles and democratic project management. •
Ubuntu, a desktop and server distribution derived from Debian, maintained by British company
Canonical Ltd. • Several distributions are based on Ubuntu, that mainly replace the
GNOME stock desktop environment, like
Kubuntu with
KDE Plasma,
Lubuntu with
LXQT,
Xubuntu with
XFCE,
Ubuntu Cinnamon with
Cinnamon,
Ubuntu MATE with
MATE, and
Ubuntu Budgie with
Budgie. Other official forks have specific uses, like
Ubuntu Kylin for Chinese-speaking users, or
Ubuntu Studio for media
content creators. •
Linux Mint, a distribution based on and compatible with Ubuntu. Supports multiple desktop environments, among others GNOME Shell
fork Cinnamon and
GNOME 2 fork
MATE. •
Pop!_OS, a Linux distribution based on Ubuntu which is developed by
American Linux computer manufacturer
System76, and features the
COSMIC desktop environment. •
Fedora Linux, a community distribution sponsored by American company
Red Hat and the successor to the firm's prior offering,
Red Hat Linux. It aims to be a technology testbed for Red Hat's commercial Linux offering, where new
open-source software is prototyped, developed, and tested in a communal setting before maturing into Red Hat Enterprise Linux. •
Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), a derivative of Fedora Linux, maintained and commercially supported by Red Hat. It seeks to provide tested, secure, and stable Linux server and workstation support to businesses. Many additional
Red Hat Enterprise Linux derivatives exist. •
Bazzite, an immutable Fedora-based distribution targeted towards
gaming on Linux. Bazzite is designed to be similar to
SteamOS. •
Nobara, a distribution based on Fedora that is also targeted towards gamers, but focuses on a more traditional desktop environment. •
openSUSE, a community distribution mainly sponsored by German company
SUSE. •
SUSE Linux Enterprise, derived from openSUSE, maintained and commercially supported by SUSE •
Arch Linux, a
rolling release distribution targeted at experienced Linux users and maintained by a volunteer community. Arch Linux offers official binary packages, as well as a wide range of user-submitted source packages, which are usually defined by a single
PKGBUILD text file. •
Manjaro Linux, a derivative of Arch Linux that includes a graphical installer and other ease-of-use features for less experienced Linux users. •
EndeavourOS, a distribution that accomplishes a similar goal to Manjaro, but is more terminal-centric and truer to its Arch Linux roots. • CachyOS, an Arch-based distribution with an optimized kernel, designed for maximum performance specifically with gaming in mind. •
Gentoo, a distribution targeted at
power users, known for its
FreeBSD Ports-like automated system for compiling applications from source code •
Alpine Linux, a distribution popular on servers which uses the
musl C standard library and
BusyBox to provide its userland. •
Chimera Linux, a community distribution that utilizes a
FreeBSD userland, musl C standard library,
Alpine Package Keeper (APK) package manager and Dinit init system.
Linux-kernel-based operating systems Several operating systems include the Linux kernel, but have a userland that differs significantly from that of mainstream Linux distributions: •
Android,
Google's commercial operating system based on
Android OSP that runs on many devices such as smartphones, smart TVs, set-top boxes. • There are several third-party distributions of AOSP, in turn, including:
LineageOS,
GrapheneOS and
Android-x86. •
ChromeOS, Google's commercial operating system based on
ChromiumOS that only runs on
Chromebooks,
Chromeboxes and
tablet computers. Like Android, it has the
Google Play Store and other
Google apps. Support for applications that require GNU compatibility is available through a virtual machine called Crostini and referred to by Google as Linux support, see . Whether such operating systems count as a "Linux distribution" is a controversial topic. They use the Linux kernel, so the
Linux Foundation and
Chris DiBona, Google's former open-source chief, agree that Android is a Linux distribution; others, such as Google engineer Patrick Brady, disagree by noting the lack of support for many GNU tools in Android, including
glibc. Other Linux-kernel-based operating systems include
Tizen,
Mer/
Sailfish OS,
KaiOS and
Amazon's Kindle firmware.
Lightweight distributions Lightweight Linux distributions are those that have been designed with support for older hardware in mind, allowing older hardware to still be used productively, or, for maximum possible speed in newer hardware by leaving more resources available for use by applications. Examples include
antiX,
Damn Small Linux (based on antiX),
Tiny Core Linux,
Puppy Linux and
Slitaz.
Niche distributions Other distributions target specific niches, such as: • Routers – for example
OpenWrt •
Microcontrollers with no
memory management unit (MMU) – for example
μClinux •
Internet of things – for example, targeted by Ubuntu Core and Microsoft's
Azure Sphere •
Home theater PCs – for example, targeted by
Plasma Bigscreen,
KnoppMyth,
Kodi (former XBMC) and
Mythbuntu • Specific platforms – for example,
Raspberry Pi OS targets the
Raspberry Pi platform •
Do it yourself, that is distributions manually built from the ground up, such as
Linux From Scratch. • Education – examples are
Edubuntu and
Karoshi, server systems based on
PCLinuxOS • Digital audio workstations for music production – for example, targeted by
Ubuntu Studio • Computer security,
digital forensics and
penetration testing – examples are
Kali Linux and
Parrot Security OS • Privacy and anonymity – for example, targeted by
Tails,
Whonix,
Qubes, and
FreedomBox • Offline use – for example,
Endless OS • Gaming – for example,
SteamOS • For smartphones – for example,
Mobian Obscure distributions Some distros are lesser-known or known for their quirks, such as: •
Hannah Montana Linux – Aimed to bring Hannah Montana fans to Linux. •
Justin Bieber Linux (or Biebian) – A joke distro that is Justin Bieber themed. ==Interdistribution issues==