Requirements: Difference between revisions

From Alpine Linux
(storage space is hardware)
m (Removed reference to Nintendo 3DS: According to the requirement table it is incapable of running recent versions of Alpine. If this is incorrect please revert this edit and adjust the minimum ram columns!)
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== Hardware requirements ==
== Hardware requirements ==


For installation and usage consider that Alpine can run on several kinds of devices, from the popular PC machine to video game consoles like the 3DS, and as such you must verify the details below:
For installation and usage consider that Alpine can run on several kinds of devices, from personal computers to video game consoles, and as such you must verify the details below:


* CPU architecture
* CPU architecture

Revision as of 11:47, 20 December 2023

This page will tell you what requirements you will need to use the Alpine Linux operating system:

Hardware requirements

For installation and usage consider that Alpine can run on several kinds of devices, from personal computers to video game consoles, and as such you must verify the details below:

  • CPU architecture
  • Memory
  • Storage
  • Peripherals

Architectures

CPU architecture is an instruction set design that defines how a processor is used by software. Widely used across desktops and servers are x86 (mostly i386) and x86_64 (also known as amd64). There are other supported computer architectures that are not "x86", like mainframes, servers, and embedded devices (such as routers like Sonicwall and Cisco ones). The table below represents architectures supported by Alpine:

Supported architecture Available since Description
x86_64 all Widely spread AMD64 compatible 64-bit x86 instruction set.
x86 all i686 (or later) CPUs with at least CMOV and SSE
ppc64le v3.6 For PowerPC devices with pure little-endian mode, mostly for POWER8 and POWER9
armhf v3.0 A 32-bit ARM instruction set with hard-float point extension.
armv7 v3.9 The 32-bit ARM only execution state of the ARMv7 devices machines.
aarch64 v3.5 The 64-bit ARM only execution state of the ARMv8+ device machines..
s390x v3.6 For IBM mainframes, especially IBM Z and IBM LinuxONE servers.

Memory

This material is work-in-progress ...

Most of these numbers seem to be guessed, if not outright fabricated for non x86* architectures.
(Last edited by Zcrayfish on 20 Dec 2023.)

Below are shown minimum RAM amounts for various installation types and phases:

Target Arch Minimum RAM to start Minimum RAM to install Minimum RAM for GUI desktop Enough for GUI work
x86_64 128 Megs 320 Megs 512 Megs 8 Gigs
x86 96 Megs 128 Megs 320 Megs 3 Gigs
ppc64le 128 Megs 256 Megs 2 Gigs 8 Gigs
armhf 256 Megs 512 Megs 1 Gigs 6 Gigs
armv7 256 Megs 512 Megs 1 Gigs 6 Gigs
aarch64 256 Megs 512 Megs 2 Gigs 8 Gigs
s390x 128 Megs 256 Megs 2 Gigs N/A

Storage

This means any external or internal storage device that can be added after or before installation to use by the Alpine Linux system.

PATA and SATA hard disk drives are supported, as well as any USB or SD card that can be detected by the Linux during installation.

Peripherals

This means any external or internal device that can be added before or after installation and detected by Alpine Linux. The peripherals that are supported depends on the current version of the Linux kernel.

Almost any GPU is supported, but certain features and 3D acceleration might depend on MESA drivers:

  • Intel: mostly any Intel by one exception, Intel i810/i815 will lack features since it has only 4Mb memory, support for it has been dropped by Mesa and Linux.
  • ATI/AMD, only Radeon series with exception of recent last two years, Rage r128/match64 series has limited support.
  • Nvidia: support for Nvidia GPUs is limited since their drivers are proprietary and built for GNU libc. Nouveau drivers are available as free alternative.
  • Matrox: not all features are supported.
  • Sis: limited features are supported, due to limited support from upstream.
  • Via: limited features are supported, due to limited support from upstream.

Software requirements

Media

Alpine boot images are provided on downloads page or on a mirror

The images should be verified as in Installation, to ensure the file wasn't corrupted during transfer.

Booting

The following table describes supported firmware types, for more information please check Alpine and UEFI wiki page.

Supported Arch Supported firmware Supported Types
x86_64 Coreboot, Vendor/OEM BIOS, UEFI
x86 Coreboot, Vendor/OEM BIOS, UEFI
ppc64le Coreboot, Vendor/OEM UEFI
armhf Uboot, Vendor/OEM UEFI
armv7 Uboot, Vendor/OEM UEFI
aarch64 Vendor/OEM UEFI
s390x Vendor/OEM unknown

Space

This material is work-in-progress ...

Required storage space should be moved to the hardware section and the partitioning seems a bit out of place here.
(Last edited by Zcrayfish on 20 Dec 2023.)

A default installation of Alpine requires at least 1GB of free space. You can see various partition configurations and their sizes on Alpine disk layout for UEFI/BIOS at Alpine and UEFI wiki page.

See Also