Linux

Linux sī 1-chióng chū-iû ê chok-gia̍p hē-thóng. Linux chit-ê bêng-sû si̍t-chāi sī chí Linux kernel ê pō͘-hūn, chóng--sī chhiâng-chāi hō͘ lâng iōng lâi piáu-sī pau-koah kernel chāi-lāi ê kui-thò Unix-khoán (Unix-like) ê chok-gia̍p hē-thóng, hō͘-chò GNU/Linux. GNU ê pō͘-hūn chí GNU sū-kang thê-kiong ê chi̍p (library) kap ke-si-thâu-á.

Linux
Tux the penguin
Linux ê ang-á-phiau sī 1 chiah khiā-gô, hō-chò Tux.[1]
DeveloperCommunity contributors
Linus Torvalds
Written inC, assembly languages, and others
OS familyUnix-like
Working stateCurrent
Source modelOpen source
Initial release1991 nî 9 goe̍h 17 ji̍t;​ 32 nî í-chêng​ (1991-09-17)
Repositorygit.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/
Marketing targetCloud computing, embedded devices, mainframe computers, mobile devices, personal computers, servers, supercomputers
Available inMultilingual
PlatformsAlpha, ARC, ARM, C6x, C-Sky, H8/300, Hexagon, IA-64, m68k, Microblaze, MIPS, Nios II, OpenRISC, PA-RISC, PowerPC, RISC-V, s390, SuperH, SPARC, x86, Xtensa
Kernel typeMonolithic
UserlandGNU[lower-alpha 1], BusyBox[lower-alpha 2]
Default
user interface
  • Unix shell (CLI)
  • Most distributions include a desktop environment (GUI)
LicenseGPLv2[9] and others (the name "Linux" is a trademark[lower-alpha 3])
Official websitekernel.org
Articles in the series
Linux kernel
Linux distribution

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  • Bangkok kui-chek (Bangkok kui-tsik; eng-gí: Bangkok Rules)
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