Pardus is a Linux distribution developed with support from the government of Turkey. Pardus' main focus is office-related work including use in Turkish government agencies. Despite that, Pardus ships in several languages. Its ease of use and availability free of charge has spawned numerous communities throughout the world.
is a package management system that was developed for Pardus. It was used in the initial versions of the distribution, but abandoned in favor of APT since the project moved to Debian base. Pardus 2011.2, released on September 19, 2011, was the last Pardus release that used PiSi. PiSi stores and handles dependencies for various packages, libraries, and COMAR tasks. Some features of PiSi include:
Integrates low-level and high-level package operations
Framework approach to build applications and tools upon
A community fork of the old Pardus with PiSi package management exists, called PiSi Linux. PiSi Linux's latest stable version is 1.2, and latest development version is 2.0 Beta 2. eopkg - the package manager of the Solus project, a rolling-release Linux distribution, is based on / derived from PiSi.
YALI
YALI is the first Pardus software a user encounters. Basically, it recognizes the hardware and installs Pardus software from installation media to a user-selected hard disk partition. YALI can handle resizing of NTFS partitions found on the disk. A yalı is a waterside mansion common in the Bosphorus region. This project is stopped and not being used since the migration to Debian-base.
KAPTAN
KAPTAN is a desktop greeter, which starts at the first start. It allows a user to change the desktop theme, mouse, keyboard and language settings, date and time, KDE menus, wallpaper, Package Manager settings, smolt, number of desktops. The word :wikt:kaptan|Kaptan means 'captain' in Turkish. This project is stopped and not being used since the migration to Debian-base.
Reception
Ladislav Bodnar, the creator of DistroWatch, wrote in his round-up of Linux/*nix in 2006 that Pardus is one of the distros he was most impressed by that year "... thanks to unique package management ideas, innovative start-up sequence and general desktop polish..." Dmitri Popov, an author of Linux User & Developer, titled his review of Pardus 2011 Beta as the most exciting distro of the year.
Pardus attended CeBIT Eurasia in 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011.
Derivatives
based on Debian released on April 12, 2013. Pisi Linux and Pardus-Anka projects forked from PİSİ based Pardus. A group of volunteers aim to continue PİSİ and other features of Pardus independently. Pisi Linux released two new versions. These versions are direct continuation of Pardus 2011.2 64bit edition, includes updated versions of Pisi, Kaptan etc.