Mark Knecht wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, Oct 17, 2023 at 9:41 AM Dale <rdalek1...@gmail.com
> <mailto:rdalek1...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> <SNIP>
> >
> > Well, the 770T now has Gentoo on it.  As usual, my fresh built kernel
> > booted the very first time without error and every thing worked.
> > Sometimes, things go right.  ROFL  I have to say tho, I wish they would
> > split the install docs into two parts.  One for old BIOS and one for the
> > efi thingy.  It was confusing in a couple places but I got there.  Maybe
> > some color coding would help???
> >
> <SNIP>
>
> Congrats. I hope it goes well.
>
> There are still times I wish I was running Gentoo - the documentation,
> camaraderie and deep technical knowledge of the group, but I just
> don't have time or patience to iron out issues with applications when
> Gentoo isn't a supported distro. Still, for something like a NAS box it
> makes sense if everything you run is sour\ce code coming from the
> Gentoo code stores.
>
> Cheers,
> Mark


It is basically a base system with nfs, encryption and LVM added.  I'm
not adding a whole lot of stuff.  At this point, it is console only.  I
had the same with Ubuntu.  Since I'll remove the monitor and keyboard
later, all I need is to be able to ssh in when it gets booted up.  It
boots fast too.  Ubuntu had a few points where it waited for a while.  A
couple times, it had a two minute wait which makes the boot time pretty
long.  I think the Gentoo install boots in less than a minute.  It might
be more than a minute but if it is, it isn't by much.  I figure if I hit
the power button and wait 3 minutes, it should be booted and giving me
the evil eye for making it wait.  It's a lot faster than Ubuntu.

I did have a small battle with dracut and getting Grub to see both the
kernel and init thingy.  Once I got that sorted, it went fairly easy. 
Oh, I got to remember to add -1 to make.conf too.  I knew I forgot
something. 

I to find Gentoo to be much better documented.  There were places where
the old BIOS and efi info got a little confusing but eventually I
figured it out.  I been trying to think of a way to color code the docs
but I can't figure out a sensible way.  You got BIOS and efi, openrc and
systemd and several other smaller things that one has to decide on and
take different steps.  One would run out of colors or the colors
themselves would get confusing. I can't think of a better way. 

Anyway, back to working on my fuel drums.  I don't have a lot of energy
today so may not finish.  I didn't finish yesterday either. 

Dale

:-)  :-) 

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