試す - 無料

Creating custom ISO images - DIY Imager

Linux Magazine

|

#272/July 2023: Open Data

If you are looking to customize your Linux distribution, we show you three graphical front ends for creating bootable ISO images.

- Erik Bärwaldt

Creating custom ISO images - DIY Imager

Specialized Linux distributions exist for virtually any imaginable use case. However, much like the typical all-rounders for daily use, these distributions often come with many superfluous applications. These apps consume disk space and – if they happen to run in the background – CPU resources as well. Some users want a lean basic system without additional software, which they can customize with the programs they actually need. This article looks at graphical front ends that give users a DIY Linux image quickly without too much overhead.

Strategies

Customizable Linux distributions are usually based on a conventional ISO image. Ideally, the image will already contain a graphical user interface or offer a simple approach to installing a graphical desktop at the prompt. You also need an integrated package manager. A customizable system image often comes with a choice of multiple kernel versions. Standard applications like LibreOffice, Firefox, Gimp, or VLC may be missing, but they can be installed via the package manager if necessary. To be able to use a system like this on several computers later, you need the ability to create ISO images of the system by deploying a handy tool, one that is easy to use and not just for Linux gurus.

Approach

Linux Magazine

このストーリーは、Linux Magazine の #272/July 2023: Open Data 版からのものです。

Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、9,500 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。

すでに購読者ですか?

Linux Magazine からのその他のストーリー

Linux Magazine

Exercise Place

The GRUB 2 boot manager might seem intimidating at first glance. All the more reason to spin up a virtual playground so you can practice.

time to read

10 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Terminal Mosaic

What's better than one command line? Many command lines that never die. Take the terminal to new places with Zellij.

time to read

9 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Linux Magazine

MakerSpace

Build a Long-Range Sensor Network with ChirpStack Sensor Symphony

time to read

14 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Linux Magazine

How Flatpak, AppImage, and Snap are changing software distribution Ship It!

Modern-day package systems solve some problems posed by classic formats like DEB and RPM. We look at Flatpak, AppImage, and Snap and describe how they differ.

time to read

12 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Linux Magazine

Dashboard Delight

Simplify the chaos of self-hosted services with Homepage, a customizable dashboard with widgets that put service statistics at your fingertips.

time to read

9 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Linux Magazine

MADDOG'S DOGHOUSE

Free software, and the FOSS community, can help technology students get the education they desire in Brazil and elsewhere.

time to read

3 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Linux Magazine

Rethinking the Terminal

The Warp AI agent takes the guesswork out of working at the command line. We show you how to build a simple website with one prompt.

time to read

4 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Just in Time

Just is a command runner that lets you define project-specific tasks in a declarative justfile.

time to read

7 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Linux Magazine

The Watcher

This versatile security app checks for vulnerabilities, watches logs, and acts as a single interface for other tools.

time to read

7 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine

Linux Magazine

NO INTERNETREQUIRED

This new utility lets you update a system that is notconnected to the Internet.

time to read

4 mins

#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size