I have an Acer Chromebook R11 which has reached End of Life and won’t receive updates (which is insane, I bought it new four years ago). I have checked, and my model is now fully supported by most Linux distros.
I need suggestions for a lightweight distro to use. I will use the machine for surfing, playing Pixel Dungeon, streaming some indie games over Moonlight/Steam Headless and manage my home server over ssh. So nothing major. I want something lightweight and really low maintenance.
Specs:
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Processor: 1.6GHz quad-core Intel Celeron N3150 (quad-core, 3MB cache, up to 2.08GHz with Turbo Boost)
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Graphics: Integrated Intel HD Graphics
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Memory: 4GB DDR3L
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Storage: 32GB (with SD card reader for more storage)
I have a lot of experience with Arch-based (EndeavourOS, Manjaro), Ubuntu-based (Mint, PopOS) and Debian-based (Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, Raspbian) distros, but I am open for other suggestions
Thanks for all the great replies! I installed OpenSUSE Tumbleweed with XFCE for now, because I had it lying around on a USB stick. Mostly to see if I even could get it running. So far so good, but I will definitely use some time to check out my options and see what will work the best. All replies are greatly appreciated!
I used to work for Chromebook Retail and I have a bunch of EOL devices around. Tumbleweed has been the most stable in my experience followed by Endeavor OS.
BIOS & mobo
First you need to look if your Chromebook is even supported for running coreboot.
mrchromebox.tech/#devices
Storage
Your Storage is pretty low. Adding an SD card with up to 256GB is very possible. There are even 1TB SD cards!
But best to check if you can replace the emmc module inside.
Open it up and send us a pic of the internals. Also search online.
Increasing the emmc storage will give you the best speed. Using a USB stick/ flashdrive is not recommended as those are not meant for running an OS off of them.
RAM
pretty low but not extremely. 4GB is pretty fine.
You can work around it by using a Distro using ZRAM, like Fedora.
Ask here or on discussion.fedoraproject.org how to make ZRAM fill all your RAM.
ZRAM compresses your RAM contents with zstd (imagine it like .zip but worlds better), so you have 12GB or more space. But it consumes more CPU power, which should be a fine tradeoff.
Desktop
While preeetty outdated in default design on Fedora, it is the most lightweight Desktop that will soon (version 6.1) have Wayland support.
Lubuntu has a better theming and maybe better support, see if ZRAM works on Ubuntu base.
Distro
I would recommend Fedora Atomic Desktops a lot.
But as LXQt is likely the best desktop, and it doesnt have the best support on Fedora, I would recomment Lubuntu.
Even though I would give KDE a try, you can strip it down really well. Here, Fedora Kinoite is absolute king.
Wow, thanks for this write-up! I will definitely look into ZRAM! I have been wanting to give Fedora Atomic a go
First look if your Chromebook is supported.
You can do this in ChromeOS. The model number needs to match exactly.
Chromebooks run some version of Coreboot but that includes many proprietary drivers.
Mrchromebox is an awesome developer, patching coreboot to include all the needed drivers.
Thanks! I have figured all that out. I went with Tumbleweed for now, because I had it lying around on a USB stick and wanted to see if it worked. Looks like it works pretty much out of box. I found a ZRAM guide too. Might distro jump over to Fedora though
Debian with XFCE/Mate/Mint/LXQt?
Your bottleneck will be browsing with 4GB, can’t upgrade that?
Also did a search to see if RAM or storage is possible to upgrade, it is not. Everything is soldered right to the board.
I can however add some storage with SD card (planning on doing just that)
Try Puppy Linux on it. It runs with meager resources - ~100MB RAM, 250MB storage (only if you want to install it to disk). Everything runs in RAM and is blazing fast. It is a God send for older computers
Do read up about the philosophy of puppy Linux. They are based on different distributions like Ubuntu, Debian, Slackware, etc. Puppy Linux aims to make these small and efficient with some minor utilities thrown in. So, for actual support, you can rely on those distributions as such. Any updates, software installation, etc can be had from the base distro itself.