Which modern distribuition of linux has minimal graphic requirements? My graphic card has only 64MB of memory.
Linux – minimal graphic requirements linux distribution
distroslinux
Related Solutions
Let's check a few figures for mainstream distributions (i386 binaries):
- Debian lenny:
cdebootstrap -f minimal lenny lenny-minimal
produces 77MB. Add ~30MB for the package lists. About 9MB is documentation (/usr/share/doc
,/usr/share/man
), and about 25MB is locale data; you can remove these (but upgrades will bring the files back). This includes a minimal Perl setup (add 29MB for the standard library). There's no editor (add 2MB for nvi or nano), and no ssh daemon (add 17MB for OpenSSH, 11MB for lsh). Basic FTP daemons start under 1MB. - NetBSD 5.1 starts at about 84MB (about 33MB in a tar.gz) for a kernel plus the base system, which includes a comprehensive network suite (ftpd, sshd, postfix, ...), an X server, but no perl or X client. There's no documentation, but about 10MB of locales.
- OpenBSD 4.8 starts at about 160MB (about 60MB in a tar.gz) for a kernel plus the base system (including perl with the full standard library, but no X server). There are smaller OpenBSD distributions such as Flashdist, though none looks up-to-date.
Going by the BSD figures, compression lets you fit about 120MB of programs in about 50MB of raw storage. At a 250% gain, you're definitely going to want compression. Under Linux, you have a few choices of read-write compressed filesystems, in particular Jffs2. I don't know what the possibilities are under *BSD. If you have a lot of RAM, you don't need to depend on kernel support for a compressed filesystem, you can have a tar.gz or 7z archive that you uncompress into RAM at boot time.
There is a wide range of small Linux distributions, from single floppies to live CDs. You'd want something in the middle. Damn Small Linux and Puppy Linux are two popular choices; both run from RAM, and you'll need to remaster Puppy to take away stuff you don't need (the main distribution is too big for you).
As far as I can tell from your problem description the correct term for what you want is "hybrid graphics" as you only use either adapter to power your monitor (actually any output), not both at the same time.
An overview over tools for what you want can be found (for example) here. You may be looking for the tool bbswitch from the Bumblebee-Project. Yet, you should not put anything about drivers into your xorg.conf. X should find and load the correct drivers itself. Also, I remember reading something about improved support for hybrid graphics in the most recent stable kernel, so you should get/build the most recent stable kernel for your distro. You may find more on the internet by the term "hybrid graphics" anyways.
Hope that helps.
Best Answer
A 64 MB graphics card should be enough to run ANY modern linux distribution. You might find better performance by turning off some of the visual features or using a desktop environment that is lighter weight, but 64 is enough to make even the heavyweights such as gnome and kde run.