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Inno Setup is a free software [1] script-driven installation system [2] created in Delphi by Jordan Russell. The first version was released in 1997. The first version was released in 1997. History
By using the GUI system-config-kickstart tool. By using the standard Red Hat installation program Anaconda. Anaconda will produce an anaconda-ks.cfg configuration file at the end of any manual installation. This file can be used to automatically reproduce the same installation or edited (manually or with system-config-kickstart).
A system installer is the software that is used to set up and install an operating system onto a device. Windows Setup is the system installer of Microsoft Windows. Examples of Linux system installers: Anaconda: used by CentOS, Fedora; Calamares: used by multiple Linux distributions (incl. some Ubuntu flavors, Debian, and derivates)
Snap is a software packaging and deployment system developed by Canonical for operating systems that use the Linux kernel and the systemd init system. The packages, called snaps, and the tool for using them, snapd, work across a range of Linux distributions [3] and allow upstream software developers to distribute their applications directly to users.
While both Ångström and Poky Linux are based on OE-Core, mostly utilize the same toolchain and are both officially "Yocto compatible", only Poky Linux is officially part of the Yocto Project. Ångström primarily differs from Poky Linux in being a binary distribution (like e.g. the Debian , Fedora , OpenSuse or Ubuntu Linux distributions ...
The Linux operating system is based on this kernel and deployed on both traditional computer systems such as personal computers and servers, usually in the form of Linux distributions (including Ubuntu and its derivatives), and on various embedded devices such as routers, wireless access points, PBXes, set-top boxes, FTA receivers, smart TVs ...
The init system is the first daemon to start (during booting) and the last daemon to terminate (during shutdown). Systemd load is a runlevel target to get the system in working condition. Running the command systemctl get-default will show the default target. [21] Historically this was the "SysV init", which was just called "init".
Linux (operating system) Apache (web server) Smalltalk (programming language) Seaside (web framework) LAMP [10] Linux (operating system) Apache (web server) MySQL or MariaDB (database management systems) Perl, PHP, or Python (scripting languages) LEAP [11] Linux (operating system) Eucalyptus (free and open-source alternative to the Amazon ...