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Feb 28 2006, 01:04 PM
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#1
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Whitest Black Mage Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 1,323 Joined: 20-May 05 From: NB, Canada Member No.: 5,281 |
QUOTE he Gentoo Release Engineering team proudly announces the release of Gentoo Linux 2006.0. Gentoo Linux 2006.0, the first release in the 2006 series, represents improvements across many architectures since the 2005.1 release. Major highlights in the release include KDE 3.4.3, GNOME 2.12.2, XFCE 4.2.2, GCC 3.4.4 and a 2.6.15 kernel. This is also the first release with the Gentoo Linux Installer officially debuting on the x86 LiveCD, which will fully replace the Universal and PackageCD set. The LiveCD also features a fully-fledged Gnome environment. Later releases will include KDE support as well as a new LiveDVD. The PPC64 team has made significant improvements in its release media. IBM's hardware donation to the team greatly helped this and ensured a smooth release. The CDs feature 64-bit kernels and 32-bit userlands rather than the previous pure 64-bit environment. Optimized stages are available for the G5 and POWER5 processors, making Gentoo the first distribution compile time optimized for the POWER5 processor via a power5 profile. The new release includes an experimental CD with full framebuffer support for dual-core G5 machines along with thermal management features. This makes Gentoo the first to market with release media with this level of support. PPC and PPC64 profiles received further reorganization. They now match those of other 32/64-bit architectures such as SPARC and MIPS, unifying the look of the tree and allowing easier creation of specific profiles (for example, for server use) in the future. The PPC discs improve support for newer Apple laptops such as the last series of PowerBooks, which 2005.1 did not support, and feature improved OldWorld support with BootX on the universal CDs. The PPC team now produces the PackageCDs in a G4 and a ppc-generic configuration, especially useful for older and slower machines. The Hardened team is pleased to release both 2.4 and 2.6 kernel targeted stages for the x86 platform. The previously experimental non-multilib AMD64 stages are now part of the 2006.0 release, while Hardened Gentoo with multilib on AMD64 has become possible and the team is releasing experimental stages. The 2006.0 AMD64 release moves EM64T support out of the experimental realm. The InstallCDs feature support for NVIDIA SATA and for SysKonnect Yukon2 network cards as well as the inclusion of 32-bit Java Support. An experimental LiveCD is also available, featuring the Gentoo Linux Installer. The Alpha team now provides split NPTL profiles as part of the 2006.0 release -- NPTL must use a 2.6 kernel, and those who require a 2.4 kernel or do not wish to enable NPTL can use the no-nptl subprofile instead to not take advantage of the new threading model. Stage tarballs are now provided for both variants, and the InstallCD provides both 2.4 and 2.6 kernels. SPARC has moved to GCC 3.4.5 from the older 3.3 series and also to glibc 2.3.5 from 2.3.3 -- the profile features a 2.6 kernel and headers. However, this feature remains experimental and the SPARC team built the release media with the 2.4 subprofile. Testing from SGI Quality Assurance allowed the IA64 team to update its InstallCD to boot on SGI Prism machines. Gentoo Linux is a community-driven project committed to producing a high-quality open source distribution; more information regarding this release, such as detailed release notes will be available on the Gentoo Release Engineering team's project page. Gentoo.org I downloaded and tried out the live cd and it seems pretty nicely done. Since I had recently just installed gentoo 2005 (my first gentoo install) I figured why not try this out, just to see how it differed from the install using the minimal install cd. It really followed a very similar pattern just with a graphical frontend. I didn't get to go all the way through the setup since my network crashed from something hopefully unrelated after booting into the livecd Another pro of this setup as far as I can tell is the option to have it compile KDE/Gnome?OO.org etc all at the get go. Basically you set eeeeverything up and then hit "install" and a month later everything is compiled and running I'm going to try again tonight or tomorrow hopefully to get a more indepth look at the new install process and I'll update this thread once I get a more full impression of the live cd and all its toys. |
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Feb 28 2006, 02:10 PM
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#2
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Way Out Of Control - You need a life :) Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 1,980 Joined: 16-August 05 Member No.: 7,896 |
QUOTE The PPC64 team has made significant improvements in its release media. Let's see if this is right. Last time I tried it, the ppc64 install simply crashed on Power4 as well as on Power5 systems, whereas Redhat and Suze had no problems. Let's see if the LiveCD install things make the gentoo install easier for noobs. First step : the download link works fine! This post has been edited by yordan: Feb 28 2006, 02:13 PM |
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Feb 28 2006, 02:48 PM
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#3
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Whitest Black Mage Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 1,323 Joined: 20-May 05 From: NB, Canada Member No.: 5,281 |
I'd be willing to bet it will make it a bit easier for us n00bs
Each page in the install also has a help page outlining what is going on, another helpful addition. Even more, the partitioner is somewhat graphical (CLI partitioners seem to freak out alot of people, hell partitioning in general scares alot of people) and you can even just free up space and hit "reccommended partition scheme" or something and boom, it gives you a swap partition, and boot partition, and a root (they use the 512mb swap, 100mb ext2 boot, leftover space for root ext 3 layout that the install guide uses). Of course, manual partitioning is always available too. Honestly though I'm glad I ran through the install before this came out (barely made it haha) as I probably would have wimped out and done the live cd install otherwise and I think it was a good experience doing it the other way. The Live cd, however, will make things alot faster in the future from the looks of it. |
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Feb 28 2006, 02:49 PM
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#4
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Way Out Of Control - You need a life :) Group: Members Posts: 1,366 Joined: 14-September 04 From: Nottingham England Member No.: 570 |
@Jeigh....
Gentoo is not like other Distro's Their is no "version" like for example, fedora 1,2,3. with gentoo, its just a question of, how long ago you last "emerge --sync && emerge -uDv world" dont think of Gentoo 2006 as a new gentoo version, its a new Gentoo Profile. you DONT need to re-install ! QUOTE Major highlights in the release include KDE 3.4.3, GNOME 2.12.2, XFCE 4.2.2, GCC 3.4.4 and a 2.6.15 kernel. On my Gentoo 2005.1 system i am currently running... KDE-3.5.1, Gnome-2.12.2, GCC-3.4.4-r1, kernel-2.6.15-r5 ( with XFCE 4.2.2available ) my 2005.1 is running equaly up-to-date software, in in the case of KDE, more up to date software ( because i use the testing mask ~amd64 with KDE packages ) You can update your 2005.1 profile to 2006.0 in a few simple steps. see the link http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/gentoo-upgrading.xml (specific documentation has not yet been released for 2006.0, but i would expect it to arive soon) One of the reasons why gentoo is s fantastic, so diferant from other distro's is the way it updates and installs, an hw it avoids re-installs. you dont need downtime to upgrade |
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Feb 28 2006, 03:38 PM
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#5
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Whitest Black Mage Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 1,323 Joined: 20-May 05 From: NB, Canada Member No.: 5,281 |
Oh no I know that, I'm just doing the reinstall to see what its like comparatively to the other install method. I figure since I don't really have my other system set up too much yet, it won't be a big loss regardless. Best time for me to try it out if I'm ever going to want to.
But yea I know you just need to upadte everything to keep your distro at the bleeding edge, thats one of the things that has me interested in gentoo |
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Feb 28 2006, 03:47 PM
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#6
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Way Out Of Control - You need a life :) Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 1,980 Joined: 16-August 05 Member No.: 7,896 |
QUOTE and are scared by a terminal, I had exactly the opposite problem. I love terminals, and gentoo was afraid by mine. The CD first booted, I choosed "install" and the answer was "illegal terminal type term0" "system halted". I expected at least seing the installation starting. I hope this will not be the case with the new version I am currently downloading. QUOTE One of the reasons why gentoo is s fantastic, so diferant from other distro's is the way it updates and installs, an hw it avoids re-installs. So, from that point of view, gentoo starts being just like AIX... This post has been edited by yordan: Feb 28 2006, 03:53 PM |
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Feb 28 2006, 03:55 PM
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#7
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Whitest Black Mage Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 1,323 Joined: 20-May 05 From: NB, Canada Member No.: 5,281 |
Haha yea honestly I can't imagine being afraid of using a CLI. I mean that was one of the first things that I saw that made me want to try linux back in the day heh. It just seemed so powerful and precise compared to the GUI... but to each their own
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Feb 28 2006, 11:53 PM
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#8
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Whitest Black Mage Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 1,323 Joined: 20-May 05 From: NB, Canada Member No.: 5,281 |
:Update:
I am currently installing gentoo again It seems like they really did a good job on this. I can see alot more people trying to install gentoo once they realize the new installer is more friendly |
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Mar 1 2006, 11:32 AM
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#9
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Whitest Black Mage Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 1,323 Joined: 20-May 05 From: NB, Canada Member No.: 5,281 |
:Update 2:
Well, it's the morning after, but it's not the morning I get to boot into Gentoo In case anyone is curious for time comparisons, my comp is a 2.8ghz P4 w/HT with 1.5gig Ram. |
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Mar 1 2006, 01:01 PM
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#10
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Way Out Of Control - You need a life :) Group: Members Posts: 1,366 Joined: 14-September 04 From: Nottingham England Member No.: 570 |
QUOTE my comp is a 2.8ghz P4 w/HT with 1.5gig Ram. Did you remember to set the "kdeenablefinal" USE flag ??? This use flag will slaughter your free memory, but dramatically reduce kde compile time. Since you have plenty of free ram, and the computer is dedicatde to compiling right now, i would recomend you give it a try. EDIT: Ive seen screen-shots of the installer, but i will have to wait untill they release the amd64 version. Personally, i dont understand why they didnt release amd64 at the same time as x86. They can leave the installer itself as 32bit, with a 6bit kernel (for the chroot) The installer itself can use all the same 32bit binaries as the x86 installer, it just needs to unpack a dirrerant base system. After all, the installer only needs to pass parameters to, and execute emerge. |
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