In the vast ecosystem of Linux distributions, Ubuntu stands as a giant—renowned for its user-friendliness, extensive software repositories, and robust community support. However, the standard Ubuntu ISO has grown significantly over the years. A typical installation of Ubuntu Desktop now hovers around 4.5 GB . So, when users begin searching for an "Ubuntu highly compressed 10MB" version, eyebrows raise. Is this a magical, undetectable distro? A compression miracle? Or a fundamental misunderstanding of what an operating system requires?
Potential final compressed size with musl + busybox + custom kernel: – still not 10MB, but very close. Step 4: Use Ultra-High Compression (xz -9e or zstd) Normal Ubuntu ISOs use gzip or lzma. You can re-compress the squashfs root filesystem using: ubuntu highly compressed 10mb
# Remove snap packages (saves 100s of MB) sudo snap remove --purge firefox gnome-3-38-2004 core20 sudo apt autoremove --purge linux-image-5.*-generic Clean journal logs (compresses to near nothing) sudo journalctl --vacuum-size=10M Use deborphan to delete orphaned libraries sudo apt install deborphan sudo apt purge $(deborphan) In the vast ecosystem of Linux distributions, Ubuntu
| Distribution | Compressed Size | Ubuntu Compatibility | Use Case | |--------------|----------------|----------------------|-----------| | | 12 MB (Core) | No, but has its own repo | Ultra-light desktop/server | | Alpine Linux | 8 MB | No (uses musl + busybox) | Containers, embedded | | Boot to Busybox | 4 MB | No | Rescue disk | | KolibriOS | 1.4 MB | No (FASM assembly) | Graphical demo | So, when users begin searching for an "Ubuntu