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I’d trust also the official Arch repo.
Yeah they’ve only rolled out a version of curl that broke the package manager a few times.
I’d trust also the official Arch repo.
Yeah they’ve only rolled out a version of curl that broke the package manager a few times.
It depends. I’m glad that we have tools like proton, but when this was an explicit stretch goal that was met during funding it’s a bit different.
I’m disappointed in Nightdive. Not just because they cancelled the port, but because they made a promise and they broke it, and they just remained silent about it instead of being transparent about any challenges that they were facing over the preceding years.
The same day as they announce they’re not doing the system shock native client eh?
there is no good answer
There is clearly a worst option.
I use Traefik for all of my containerised services. It’s fantastic.
I’m sorry, but no. PluralKit only really impacts a tiny minority of the userbase to begin with. It isn’t enough to cause people outside that group to choose the platform, nor is it enough for people outside of that minority to avoid moving to whatever the next big thing is.
There absolutely was. Intel got smacked on the wrist for doing their benchmarks using ICC… you know, the compiler that builds code that detects that it’s not running on an Intel CPU and disables all optimisations and extended instruction sets (like say MMX/SSE).
No idea, I don’t arch.
Theoretically you can install a desktop amd64 system using the binhost without compiling anything (or if compilation is required there won’t be much), I haven’t tried though I have seen other users do it successfully.
You want to run a stable debian kernel, not “bleeding edge” stuff from the backports repo. It’s likely that your NVIDIA drivers are not compatible with the more modern kernel, either for real reasons (they’re old) or because that’s how they were packaged.
Aha, would you mind elaborating? That sounds like quite the issue for Pacman to break its own dependencies.
There was a bug with http/2 in a particular version of curl, which was very quickly updated in the arch repos and rolled out to users; It broke pacman’s ability to sync.
It’s one of those frustrating things that happens, and someone has to hit the bug first. It’s nice to have a “stable” and “testing” branch so that users explicitly opt-in to bleeding edge packages.
Ah okay, I was under the impression that the installation didn’t require installing from source with the new binary system – I thought it was more akin to Arch’s installation where you just select your kernel binary in Pacman, then download, and install.
This is just the base system - it’s like any other distribution’s base install except that we don’t have an official ‘installer’; Gentoo distributes tarballs that users unpack following the guidance in the handbook.
From there most packages can be installed as a binary if the USE flags line up (and it has been asked to do so), otherwise portage will compile it for you.
After unpacking the system image you can install a binary kernel, have portage compile one for you, or manage it manually (but still let portage fetch sources)
Gentoo has a great system for managing configuration changes when a package updates a file that you’ve customised.
Would you have any resources/documentation for me to look into this more?
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Dispatch-conf
I misworded my original post – I was referring to things like updating the kernel. I thought that maybe the kernel would be a binary, so it would not have to be recompiled like how I would assume it usually does.
It comes down to user choice. That can now be entirely binary or from source (or from source but managed by portage)
This sounds very appealing to me, but I must admit that these sorts of configurations do seem like they would be mildly daunting to juggle on a production machine.
It’s actually pretty straightforward - you nominate packages that you want to run on ~arch (testing) and add them to some config files. Portage handles the rest.
Any thoughts or comments are welcome
If this is a corporate decide your cyber security team have really dropped the ball by enabling you to change the boot order.
Oh look an essay full of fearmongering that adds nothing to the discussion. Thanks for contributing!
Using binary packages — those that are offered — is missing out on a key strength of Gentoo and the primary reason one may choose it over another.
Gentoo is about enabling choice. The choice to use non-customised binary packages to fill a need is still a choice.
It’s incredibly unsupported and untested. You have no idea what bugs you’ll be uncovering.
This has been answered a bit already but:
So, in summary, is a binary Gentoo functionally equivelant to Arch Linux, but with more control over the system?
Perhaps, if that’s how you view the world. I’d argue that it’s better as I’ve never seen Gentoo ship a version of curl that broke Portage…
I would like to know more about the following:
- Does the OS installation change, and, if so, how?
You basically unpack a tarball, select a kernel, install a bootloader, and go. It’s no different to before except that you can optionally choose to enable the use of binary packages.
- Does package installation, updates, and maintenance change, and, if so, how?
If comparing to arch, you use portage to handle that but the concept is the same.
Gentoo has a great system for managing configuration changes when a package updates a file that you’ve customised.
- Do system updates change, and, if so, how?
This question doesn’t make much sense to me. What is a “system update”? Isn’t that just updating all of your packages at once?
- Do you lose any potential control over the system when using the binaries, rather than compiling from source, and, if so, what?
Yes and no. If you customise your USE flags the binary won’t be suitable and instead portage will build the package as you requested it
- Are there any differences in system stability? Can I expect things to break more readily on a binary Gentoo compared to Arch Linux?
Hahahahaha. Hahahahahaha. Hahaha. Ha.
Arch is notorious for shipping barely tested software to have the higher version number in their repo.
Gentoo enables users to select the stable or testing path, on a per package basis, so you have to opt into packages that haven’t been well tested and even those are typically better tested than arch.
As the Gentoo chromium maintainer, not really - we strip most CFLAGS as part of the ebuild unless you enable a special USE flag to keep them and it’s not particularly supported - if you encounter breakage with that enabled the first thing I’m going to ask you to do is turn them off.
Edit: we do have some USE flags that control how the package is built, but that’s mostly choosing between the Google-bundled and system versions of libraries.
Edit the second: there isn’t a package on the binhost for chromium yet, I need to work out how to build it so that it isn’t an issue to distribute.
You have conflated two statements.
i was thinking about re-writing the bluetooth daemon, in order to…
The NIH is strong with this one.
IMO you’d be better off putting that enthusiasm into fixing BlueZ - you might actually be able to fix some real issues and improve things for a great number of users relatively quickly.
Writing a new, competing, piece of software is going to take a while to achieve both feature parity and see any adoption by major distros.
retro-compatible (exposes the same D-Bus APIs as BlueZ)
Is there any reason for this? I can’t think of anything off the top of my head that would require it. It’s an admirable goal but make sure it’s worthwhile doing this and that there aren’t actual benefits that could be achieved by breaking compatibility.
Lmao, it does not.