A Linux system optimizer and monitoring tool with a graphical interface for performance tuning and cleanup.
Stacer is a Linux system optimizer and monitoring application that provides a graphical interface for managing and improving system performance. It helps users monitor system resources, clean up unnecessary files, and manage services and applications, simplifying tasks that typically require command-line expertise.
Linux users, particularly those on Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, or Arch-based distributions, who prefer a graphical tool for system maintenance and optimization without relying heavily on terminal commands.
Developers choose Stacer for its all-in-one graphical approach to Linux system optimization, consolidating features like system monitoring, cleanup, and service management into a single user-friendly interface, making it accessible to users less comfortable with command-line operations.
Linux System Optimizer and Monitoring - https://oguzhaninan.github.io/Stacer-Web
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Provides a single graphical application for real-time monitoring of CPU, memory, disk, and network usage, as shown in the screenshots, eliminating the need for multiple terminal commands.
Bundles features like system cleaning, package management, service control, and APT repository management, making it easy to perform various maintenance tasks from one place.
Simplifies complex Linux system tasks such as managing startup applications and cleaning caches, which typically require command-line expertise, as stated in the project philosophy.
Offers installation methods for Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, and Arch Linux via PPAs, .deb/.rpm files, or AUR, covering major Linux families as detailed in the README.
The README explicitly states the project is abandoned with no further releases, meaning no bug fixes, security updates, or compatibility improvements for modern systems.
Requires systemd and is optimized for Debian-based systems; it may not function properly on other init systems or distributions without manual tweaks or may lack features.
Since development has stopped, features like package management or system monitoring might not support newer Linux kernels, software versions, or security best practices.