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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.

You can check the version that you are currently using by running:
cat /etc/os-release

You can submit an improvement to this page on GitHub :octocat: . 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.