Apart from this, Gentoo is a perfect Linux Distro.
Reminder: Can't think of other weaknesses, so all options are made up except Time Consuming.


including all nessessary packages like Xfree, kde, gnome, server apps?thebell wrote:I don't actually find it that time-consuming. A fresh install takes me about 3 1/2 hours to go from stage1 to xfree, and then I usually install fluxbox to use while Gnome is compiling, since it only takes a couple of minutes. And USE flags more than make up for the extra time it might take compared to something like Apt.



I wish portage had binary packages on the server.Can't you just do? It may be just me being confused....Code: Select all
emerge -k some-package


codergeek42 wrote:I wish portage had binary packages on the server.that's only if you have a binary existing in the portage tree (usually because you already have it compiled as a package - like GRP). you can't have portage download binaries from any rsync server, unfortunately.Can't you just do? It may be just me being confused....Code: Select all
emerge -k some-package

There working on itHydroSan wrote:I love Gentoo and the installation has become like second nature to me (after breaking around five Gentoo installations.).
One thing that really puts me off, though, IS the actual installation. It isn't very user-friendly at all, and scares away potential people. I recommend Gentoo to my friends at school wanting to try Linux, but they get put off by the fact that there isn't any graphical tools or interface to get to know. I know that it's kind of the 'easy way out', but I figure a lot more people would consider Gentoo if it had something like YaST based on Portage which allows you to search through Portage and select various 'default' setups or just ones from scratch. I mean, my standard installation looks like:
scripts/bootstrap.sh
emerge system
emerge (various tools)
reboot
How hard would it to be to make a very light-weight X with an installer which can guide the less Linux-Savvy people through the installation and configuration, yet still provide the good Gentoo Edge? It could easily be like 'Press F1 for Text-Based Installation; Press F2 for Graphical Installation'.
Just a thought.

As I said, up to the end of 'emerge xfree'. After that, it's a few minutes to get a lightweight window manager up, and I can start using it while the rest compiles. I don't use many server apps, and I only have about half the gnome packages installed, so those take about another hour. The real wait is for firefox.skyfolly wrote:including all nessessary packages like Xfree, kde, gnome, server apps?

kraylus wrote:codergeek42 wrote:Yeah, I hate that. I marked 'time consuming' because compiling KDE (and XFree86 and all them dependencies) took a day and a half. Total installation was about 2 days and that's from stage 3. And I'm not even going into how long it takes to compile other things.I wish portage had binary packages on the server.that's only if you have a binary existing in the portage tree (usually because you already have it compiled as a package - like GRP). you can't have portage download binaries from any rsync server, unfortunately.Can't you just do? It may be just me being confused....Code: Select all
emerge -k some-package
I don't make much use of the USE flags (well, I just started learning Gentoo... I'll get to using them sometime, but I'm going to get a new computer first - this 1 GHz Celeron makes me want to buy a sledgehammer), so compiling everything isn't very useful for me.
