And the way to make test is to completely erase the layout of the user's hard driver without warning... No, I don't think so. Don't forget that this comes from 2006.0. It is a pain that is is failing so miserably in such basic things. It should never be documented as the official way to install Gentoo. The old method just works, and this new livecd doesn't. For me, it is a clear choice.didymos wrote:On the other hand, it's normal for open-source projects to make incomplete versions available from very early on, so people can test things out and give feedback.
In my humble opinion, it SHOULD NEVER appear in the handbook, and it should be put into separate download locations, clearly stating that is alpha software (I think it is). If a newbie comes, try this, and something breaks, it will flee forever.Since you can't very well test the GLI if you've already installed Gentoo (well, unless you're in the mood to reinstall for the hell of it or you go to the trouble of a chroot or something similar), distributing the installer does make some sense. That said, it really should be made extremely clear up front that the GLI is far from finished and may do bad things to your system. There should also be GLI-free versions of the LiveCD and LiveDVD.

Neither do I. I said "open-source projects". I'm not enumerating the flaws and faults of the GLI. I'm simply saying it isn't a bad thing in and of itself to release it in an unfinished state.6thpink wrote:And the way to make test is to completely erase the layout of the user's hard driver without warning... No, I don't think so.didymos wrote:On the other hand, it's normal for open-source projects to make incomplete versions available from very early on, so people can test things out and give feedback.
A defensible opinion. I myself have no objection to it's appearance in the handbook as long as it's clearly stated that this is still an early stage in the GLI's development, and that the command-line install should be used if it doesn't work, since the "CLI" is the officially sanctioned install method.In my humble opinion, it SHOULD NEVER appear in the handbook
Going by the roadmap for the project, I'd say it's still well within the alpha phase....clearly stating that is alpha software (I think it is).
Debatable. Some will keep at it until they figure out how to install Gentoo. Some probably will be driven off for good. The question is: how many are in each category?If a newbie comes, try this, and something breaks, it will flee forever.

I'm getting very tired of reading this nonsense. I spent several hours trying to get the 2007.0 live CD to wipe partitions without warning me and I failed. What I did succeed with was to install Gentoo with it.20div0 wrote:After reading the above link, people
lose all the partitions because of the installer and I was almost another victim if I haven't
used Gparted to resized and created new partitions already.


terracotta_shore wrote:
I'm getting very tired of reading this nonsense.
Don't botherterracotta_shore wrote: I would welcome the opportunity to make some constructive criticisms but I fear that if I did so my voice would be drowned out with all this pebkac-inspired moaning.)
They just did a huge rewrite of the thing. Why would they drop it? It's in active development and has not had a 1.0 release. That means bugs should be expected. As code get's refactored, that means regressions. I get the impression that people think an installer is something trivial to implement, so why can't they just get it right already. It's been awhile since I've used another distro, so I can't say how things stand now, but I unfondly remember dealing with various iterations of "user-friendly" Redhat and Debian installers. They spent years refining and fiddling around with the install process, only to ditch it for new, re-written systems every now and then. And when packages or commands on those things broke, you were basically just screwed until they pressed new CDs (or felt like downloading a bunch of crap over a slow-ass dialup account). And those were/are effectively binary-only distributions. So the GLI has to contend with all that stuff if you go the GRP route, plus it needs to deal with all the stuff that makes Gentoo Gentoo, and then it has to integrate all that functionality into a single, graphical interface (for now, that is. Eventually there's to be a text UI, a web UI, and fully-unattended installs). Oh, and it has to work for every supported Gentoo arch, and these volunteer devs have to do all the testing themselves before they're allowed to release the code in executable form. But obviously, those fuckers are incompetent because they haven't finished yet and it's not perfect (and yes, I'm being hyperbolic, rhetorically speaking). And it's not like I'm in love with the thing, either. I don't use it, and currently have no plans to start. I just find all the hostility and mob-behavior irritating, along with all the straw-men and other fallacies being tossed around. I have a suspicion that I've read more of the release notes and other docs for the GLI than a lot of the people who actually used the thing and then decided to launch their own little jihad against it.bLUEbYTE84 wrote:One would guess, even after this time the installer would either be dropped or enhanced (i.e. made usable rather than harmful)l
#gentoo-dev wrote:<agaffney> spbecker: don't blame me for stupid people using the installer...I'd like to get rid of the installer
<agaffney> it wasn't ever meant to be what it has become
<spbecker> agaffney: I know you want to kill it...doesn't mean that I can't blame you for it
<genone> agaffney: so tell Chris to remove it from the next release
<agaffney> genone: well, chris and I agree that we can't remove it without replacing it with *something*
<agaffney> since x86/amd64 no longer have a universal cd
<steev64> agaffney: "text instructions"
<agaffney> so you can't do a networkless install
<agaffney> I'm thinking of just trimming down the installer code to provide a commandline program that can pull packages from the CD
<agaffney> for networkless purposes
<genone> agaffney: and we can't go back to the universal cds?
<agaffney> genone: it's not the universal...it's the GRP CD
<agaffney> that thing is typically a royal pita
<agaffney> genone: universal+GRP were replaced with the LiveCD
<agaffney> which takes up far less space on the mirrors
<agaffney> and is more useful
<genone> agaffney: so what exact functionality of the installer would have to be replaced? Just the binpkg creation?
<agaffney> genone: creating a stage3 equivelant from the LiveCD and copying packages (a la binpkg) to the install chroot
<agaffney> genone: and the code is already there in the installer
<agaffney> genone: I wrote a script to use the installer code to do this stuff from the commandline 2 releases back
<genone> agaffney: so you already have a replacement for the next release?
<agaffney> genone: heh, pretty much
<agaffney> I would just have to clean it up
<agaffney> to be more usable
<agaffney> genone: and then brace myself to deal with the ensuing shitstorm from whining users
<agaffney> anyone who used GLI for automated installs can use its sister project quickstart
<agaffney> which is already far more capable than the installer
<genone> agaffney: would those users be worse than the current situation?
<agaffney> genone: true
