antiX is a lightweight desktop-oriented systemd-free GNU/Linux distribution based on Debian’s stable branch releases. AntiX Linux uses the lightweight “antiX Magic” IceWM-based desktop which allows for antiX to run smoothly on old and new hardware.
Release | Released | Active Support | Security Support | Latest |
---|---|---|---|---|
21 (Grup Yorum) |
1 year and 1 month ago (31 Oct 2021)
|
Ends
in 1 year and 6 months (30 Jun 2024)
|
Ends
in 3 years and 6 months (30 Jun 2026)
|
22
(19 Oct 2022)
|
19 (Grup Yorum) |
3 years ago (17 Oct 2019)
|
Ended
3 months and 1 week ago (10 Sep 2022)
|
Ends
in 1 year and 6 months (30 Jun 2024)
|
19.5
(25 Jan 2022)
|
17 (Helen Keller) |
5 years ago (24 Oct 2017)
|
Ended
2 years and 6 months ago (05 Jun 2020)
|
Ended
5 months and 3 weeks ago (30 Jun 2022)
|
17.4.1 |
16 (Berta Cáceres) |
6 years ago (27 Jun 2016)
|
Ended
4 years and 6 months ago (23 Jun 2018)
|
Ended
2 years and 5 months ago (30 Jun 2020)
|
16.3 |
15 (Berta Cáceres) |
7 years ago (30 Jun 2015)
|
Ended
4 years and 6 months ago (23 Jun 2018)
|
Ended
2 years and 5 months ago (30 Jun 2020)
|
15 |
There are several releases of antiX supported concurrently. These typically follow Debian’s periods of active development and extended long-term support, which provides security patches to a limited set of packages. Often this equates to ~2 years of active support and 2 years of long-term security patch support.
AntiX officially supports 32-bit non-PAE (i586-compatible), 32-bit PAE (i686-compatible) and 64-bit x86 processors.
More information is available on the antiX website.
You should be running one of the supported release numbers listed above in the rightmost column.
cat /etc/os-release
You can submit an improvement to this page on GitHub . This page has a corresponding Talk Page.
A JSON version of this page is available at /api/antix.json. See the API Documentation for more.
This page was last updated on 02 November 2022. Latest releases are automatically updated.