This is a discussion on Another reason I love gentoo within the Gentoo Linux Support forums, part of the Unix Operating Systems category; --> I went with gentoo back when I was messing with bios level raid and had the idea of dual ...
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| I went with gentoo back when I was messing with bios level raid and had the idea of dual booting between windows XP and linux on the same raid volume set. Gentoo and a recipe for setting up grub make it easy. I use vmware for running the few windows apps I use and aren't interested enough in windows games to dual boot it. The XP partition is long gone. I have a second system for mythtv and I went with gentoo because I wanted complete control over how it was set up and didn't want any kind of heavyweight desktop manager. The two systems run distccd and builds have 4 cpu cores (2 on each system) available. I created a third system as a bedroom mythtv system and was able to simply copy the main mythtv system, change a few conf files and be up and running in a couple of hours. I modified it's /usr/local directory to point to the /usr/local directory on the main mythtv box so I wouldn't have to do updates to two mythtv systems. I update the main one, and the second one uses the new version automagicly. I later changed it to a diskless system by copying all of it's files over to a subdirectory on the main mythtv system and set the second system for pxelinux and nfsroot. I played around with suspend to disk , but the system is so quiet without the disk drive and can boot fast enough that it doesn't have much advantage. This is what I love about gentoo. The way it gives the user complete control over the system, makes setups like the one I enjoy easy and almost trivial to setup. |
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| AZ Nomad wrote: > I use vmware for running the few windows apps I use and aren't interested > enough in windows games to dual boot it. The XP partition is long gone. I took that one step further and set it up so that I can boot into Gentoo and run the native XP install in a VM or boot into XP and run the native Gentoo install in a VM (Though I must always remember to shut down the VM and not just "pause" it if I want to boot it for real later :P) > [...] > This is what I love about gentoo. The way it gives the user complete > control over the system, makes setups like the one I enjoy easy and almost > trivial to setup. I only discovered Gentoo relatively recently (two months ago or such; I would have to look when I posted here for the first time). I'm using Linux since ages (I was running Slackware 2 in 1994 far the best distro I ever came across. Why the hell I didn't try it out sooner, no idea. That will teach me to listen to the opinions of the so-called "experts" (Gentoo is too difficult/chaotic/breaks/insert-other-false-assumption-here). My search for the perfect distro ended when I came to Gentoo. Period. |