Installing and Initializing openSUSE Leap 15.1 WSL - 1. Download openSUSE-Leap-15-1 from the Windows App Store. Double-click on the downloaded, 'openSUSE-Leap-15-1.appx' file. Click the 'Install' button.
(c) Niki Kovacs 2019
This repository provides an 'automagic' post-installation setup script forOpenSUSE Leap KDE.
![Install Microsoft Fonts Opensuse Leap Install Microsoft Fonts Opensuse Leap](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126229492/552309022.png)
Perform the following steps.
- Install OpenSUSE Leap KDE.
- Open a terminal (Konsole) as root (
su -
). - Install Git:
zypper install --no-recommends git
- Grab the script:
git clone https://github.com/kikinovak/opensuse-setup
- Change into the new directory:
cd opensuse-setup
- Run the script:
./opensuse-setup --setup
- Grab a cup of coffee while the script does all the work.
- Log out and log back in.
Turning a vanilla Linux installation into a full-blown desktop with bells andwhistles always boils down to a series of more or less time-consumingoperations:
- Customize the Bash shell: prompt, aliases, etc.
- Customize the Vim editor.
- Setup official and third-party repositories.
- Remove some unneeded applications.
- Install all missing applications.
- Enhance multimedia capabilities with various codecs and plugins.
- Install Microsoft and Apple fonts for better interoperability.
- Edit application menu entries.
- Configure the KDE desktop for better usability.
The
opensuse-setup.sh
script performs all of these operations.Configure Bash and Vim:
Setup official and third-party repositories:
Remove unneeded applications:
Install additional applications:
Install Microsoft and Apple fonts:
Configure custom menu entries:
![Install Microsoft Fonts Opensuse Leap Install Microsoft Fonts Opensuse Leap](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126229492/732725422.png)
Install custom KDE profile:
Apply custom KDE profile for existing users:
Perform all of the above in one go:
Strip the system before upgrading to the next version:
Resync repos, fetch updates, strip new stuff and clean menus:
Display help message:
If you want to know what exactly goes on under the hood, open a second terminaland view the logs:
Joss wrote:Fonts, DPI scaling, drivers, games,
fonts are one of those issues
fonts are one of those issues
Fonts? Look pretty good by default in Linux Mint and LMDE2. On top of that you can even install the Microsoft fonts.
Drivers? Unless you have some really odd hardware, everything usually tends to work quite well on Linux Mint. And if something doesn't work, that's due to the manufacturers of hardware refusing to provide the devs with necessary information for writing a driver , thus it's not Linux that is to blame
Games? Look how many Steam games there are for Linux already. And the number is getting bigger every day.
About DPI scaling I don't really know. There might be some issues, but I personally haven't experienced any problem related to it so far.