On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 1:55 PM, Tom H <tomh0...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 9:13 AM, Nico Kadel-Garcia <nka...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> The difficulty is that anaconda has become a python nightmare of >> complexity, coupled with an unnecessary GUI of complexity. New >> features of sophisticated interaction and "pretty pictures" ti nabage
Lordie, did I actually type that???? I I meant "to manage". >> LVM, various clustering filesystems, and network installation have >> been added as desired, but it's easy to lose site of simple steps like >> "just present the names of disks. > > python isn't the problem; the hub and spoke "concept" is. Ubuntu's > Ubiquity is the best GUI installer. > > Ubiquity can't set up mdraid like Anaconda, but it handles btrfs > better than Anaconda. > > Anaconda's partitioning spoke's so horrendous that I only use > kickstart or "yum --installroot=... ..." - or unpack a tarball created > with one of those methods. Unfortunately, the "system-config-kickstart" tool is also horrible. It rewrites any base kickstart in its own format, quite orthogonal to the original and to the "anaconda-ks.cfg" file generated at install time, and it can only deal with one '%post" stanza though kickstart supports multiple stanzas. For future kickstarts, it's *amazing* what you can stuff into a bit of '%pre' scripting to apply "dd" and "parted" to any detected disks, or even to more gracefully clear LVM volumes, groups, and devices. With the improvements in the installation image's version of parted since SL 6, it became much easier to configure and pre-align disks pretty much as desired.