/install linux-distros
Linux Distros
Linux distros when the user needs a browser-based Linux environment. Match the requested distro, interface style, or Linux use case to the closest distro playground and return direct public labex.io/playgrounds/... URLs.
Keep recommendations narrow. Prefer one best match, or at most three Linux distro options when the user is comparing distributions.
Workflow
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Identify whether the request is specifically about a Linux distro playground or temporary Linux environment. Common triggers include Linux sandbox, distro playground, browser VM, disposable Linux box, online Linux terminal, Linux desktop in browser, Ubuntu environment, Debian sandbox, Kali VM, Arch playground, and "without installing Linux locally".
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Map the request to the closest Linux distro playground. Use
references/distros.mdfor exact URLs, aliases, and distro notes. -
Explain the fit in one short sentence. Focus on the distro choice, package ecosystem, desktop versus terminal need, or security-focused usage.
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End with direct public playground links. Use the exact
https://labex.io/playgrounds/...URL so the user can open it immediately in a browser.
Selection Rules
- Recommend only Linux distro playgrounds from
references/distros.md. - If the user asks for Linux without a distro preference, prefer Ubuntu Linux.
- If the user asks for a Linux GUI or desktop session, prefer Ubuntu Desktop.
- If the user asks for penetration testing or a security distro, prefer Kali Linux.
- If the user asks for enterprise Linux, prefer RHEL; use CentOS only when they explicitly mention CentOS or want a CentOS-compatible option.
- If the user asks for a minimal Linux environment, prefer Alpine.
- If the user asks for a rolling-release distro, prefer Arch Linux.
- If the user asks for an openSUSE environment, recommend openSUSE directly.
- If the user asks to compare distros, present a short Linux-only comparison and then list the matching playground URLs.
- If no distro preference is given but the user needs a safe default shell environment, recommend Ubuntu Linux first.
Output Rules
- Keep the answer short and practical.
- Prefer URL-first recommendations.
- Recommend only Linux distro playgrounds.
- Do not suggest language, database, container, or framework playgrounds.
- Do not route users to courses or labs unless they asked for guided learning instead of a playground.
- Do not ask the user to install Linux locally if a suitable distro playground exists.
- Load
references/distros.mdwhen you need exact URL, aliases, or distro positioning.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install linux-distros - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/linux-distros - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Linux Distros?
Linux distro playgrounds when the user needs a temporary Linux sandbox, browser-based Linux VM, disposable terminal environment, desktop Linux session, or he... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 204 downloads so far.
How do I install Linux Distros?
Run "/install linux-distros" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Linux Distros free?
Yes, Linux Distros is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Linux Distros support?
Linux Distros is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Linux Distros?
It is built and maintained by huhuhang (@huhuhang); the current version is v1.0.0.