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VOID LINUX: The web pages I used are here first. I really enjoyed installing and looking around in VoidLinux. One might say it has peaked my interest in voids. Any ways I hope this helps and I will be doing a part-2 for more of a comparison of the 2 different type systems. I already know that GlibC supports more software. So look at their available packages first. https://voidlinux.org/ https://docs.voidlinux.org/ https://docs.voidlinux.org/xbps/index... https://docs.voidlinux.org/installati... https://sysdfree.wordpress.com/2018/0... https://wiki.musl-libc.org/functional... Once the live image has booted, log in as root with password voidlinux and run: void-installer Next, you will need to partition your disks. Void does not provide a preset partition scheme, so you will need to create your partitions manually with cfdisk. You will be prompted with a list of disks. Select the disk you want to partition and the installer will launch cfdisk for that disk. Remember you must write the partition table to the drive before you exit the partition editor. If using UEFI, it is recommended you select GPT for the partition table and create a partition (typically between 200MB-1GB) of type EFI System, which will be mounted at /boot/efi. Updating Like any other system, it is important to keep Void up-to-date. Use xbps-install to update: First: # xbps-install -u And then # xbps-install -Su XBPS must use a separate transaction to update itself. If your update includes the xbps package, you will need to run the above command a second time to apply the rest of the updates. Most general package management is done with the following commands: xbps-query searches for and displays information about packages installed locally, or, if used with the -R flag, packages contained in repositories. xbps-install installs and updates packages, and syncs repository indexes. xbps-remove removes installed packages, and can also remove orphaned packages and cached package files. xbps-reconfigure runs the configuration steps for installed packages, and can be used to reconfigure certain packages after changes in their configuration files. The latter usually requires the --force flag. xbps-alternatives lists or sets the alternatives provided by installed packages. Alternatives is a system which allows multiple packages to provide common functionality through otherwise conflicting files, by creating symlinks from the common paths to package-specific versions that are selected by the user. xbps-pkgdb can report and fix issues in the package database, as well as modify it. xbps-rindex manages local binary package repositories. Restarting Services *must install xtools # xbps-install xtools XBPS does not restart services when they are updated. This task is left to the administrator, so they can orchestrate maintenance windows, ensure reasonable backup capacity, and generally be present for service upgrades. To find processes running different versions than are present on disk, use the xcheckrestart tool provided by the xtools* package: *must be installed first as normal user: $ xcheckrestart xcheckrestart will print out the PID, path to the executable, status of the path that was launched (almost always deleted) and the process name. xcheckrestart can and should be run as an unprivileged user. To search available repositories for packages, use xbps-query(1): $ xbps-query -Rs *package_name The -R flag specifies that repositories should be searched. Without it, -s searches for locally-installed packages. If you can't find a file or program you expected to find after installing a package, you can use xbps-query to list the files provided by that package: $ xbps-query -f package_name xbps-install [pkg name] xfce4-whiskermenu-plugin, kdenlive, audacity, ssr (simplescreenrecorder), guvcview, obs, xfce4-pulseaudio-plugin, mugshot