Gentoo Linux Important Details Explained

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 609

  • @bruhgamer317
    @bruhgamer317 Před 3 lety +2804

    what a nice looking distro, hopefully it doesn't take 70 hours to install it

    • @MentalOutlaw
      @MentalOutlaw  Před 3 lety +964

      Nah, even my 1k packages with LTO Graphite and 03 settings only takes about a day to compile on a 4790k

    • @s.m.g.9320
      @s.m.g.9320 Před 3 lety +535

      What if 69 hours tho
      👌🍻🍻👌👌👌

    • @greatcanadianmoose3965
      @greatcanadianmoose3965 Před 3 lety +95

      @@MentalOutlaw What about a 4 core laptop pentium @ 1.7GHz?

    • @undefinednull5749
      @undefinednull5749 Před 3 lety +83

      @@MentalOutlaw all that takes about 50 minutes to compile on newest Ryzen desktop processors. 14 minutes fo chromium source, Gentoo becomes the Power User's best choice especially with Power User's hardware :)

    • @slay3rgamingyt
      @slay3rgamingyt Před 3 lety +37

      @@greatcanadianmoose3965 What about a 2 core celeron @ 1.6GHz and 4GB RAM?

  • @noideac
    @noideac Před 3 lety +861

    Just works distro: Automatic transmission
    Arch: Manual transmission
    Gentoo: building the car from scratch using some Dr. Seuss machine looking transmission system

    • @evildragon1774
      @evildragon1774 Před 3 lety +138

      Linux from scratch: building a home by using your own buit tools.

    • @Darkshadowguy
      @Darkshadowguy Před 3 lety +99

      @@evildragon1774 watching Linux FS videos are like watching those videos of the random dudes build huts and pools out in the middle of the jungle by hand

    • @asandax6
      @asandax6 Před 3 lety +9

      Just works is Automatic transmission with manual mode when needed

    • @BasedPureblood
      @BasedPureblood Před 2 lety +35

      TempleOS:
      Blessing every Brick of the Holy Temple with "Holy Holy Holy" 33 times before laying it down.

    • @lupuscanis4370
      @lupuscanis4370 Před 2 lety +22

      Not really, "from scratch" is actually LFS a book titled "Linux From Scratch" Gentoo was made to avoid LFS.
      Gentoo isn't installed from scratch you just decompress a tarball and run some commands, and then you compile only the packages that you want, if you want Xorg well you compile Xorg. And then whatever WM or Desktop that you want.

  • @greatcanadianmoose3965
    @greatcanadianmoose3965 Před 3 lety +864

    You probably see the lowest youtube adsense revenues because your audience actually knows how to install an adblocker!

    • @retrace
      @retrace Před 3 lety +79

      dont worry I watch with youtube premium so he gets money ez

    • @Winnetou17
      @Winnetou17 Před 3 lety +36

      Some of us have YT Premium, so hopefully he gets enough money to be worth it :)

    • @blyaticon8190
      @blyaticon8190 Před 3 lety +41

      Well I'm watching this on mobile in bed, so that's revenue for our boi

    • @purpl3x774
      @purpl3x774 Před 3 lety +46

      @@blyaticon8190 If you have an android you can block sponsors and ads on your phone using vanced

    • @juzujuzu4555
      @juzujuzu4555 Před 3 lety +34

      Mental Outlaw really deserves our crypto donations. So much great shit on this channel. Gentoo and 3D printed weapons on the same channel, both the ultimate symbols of freedom.

  • @turkucpodjadek2347
    @turkucpodjadek2347 Před 3 lety +1394

    gentoochads workout while compiling so they are always buffed

  • @liquidlar
    @liquidlar Před 3 lety +239

    I don't think I would ever personally use Gentoo but I do appreciate its existence.

    • @no_name4796
      @no_name4796 Před rokem +9

      Yup. This is the beaty of the foss world: the fact that every thing you can think about, already exists

    • @julianstephen1303
      @julianstephen1303 Před 11 měsíci

      @@no_name4796 lets endorse foss ....

    • @jocm99
      @jocm99 Před 2 měsíci

      @@no_name4796 Except a standardised package manager, or having a key figure of FOSS not supporting pedophilia.
      These two things sadly cannot exist.

    • @no_name4796
      @no_name4796 Před 2 měsíci

      @@jocm99 bruh

  • @rdxdt
    @rdxdt Před 3 lety +857

    My mom(previous Windows user) is using Linux Mint, and she didn't even noticed that(I applied a Windows 10 theme on Cinnamon)

    • @wp6007
      @wp6007 Před 3 lety +51

      Not relevant to the video

    • @Roman-tj4bl
      @Roman-tj4bl Před 3 lety +33

      Just installed Linux Manjaro, which is supposed to be Newbe-friendly but I'm struggeling as a 15 year Windows user. My biggest problem rn is that I have to be located right next to the router to get a WIFI connection, whenever I am in another room the symbol in the task bar tells me I am connected, but the websites wont load. So I thought, alright maybe I will try Ubuntu as thats supposed to be the go to Linux disto for newcomers, but I cant find out how the hell I get it to boot from my USB stick. I actually really love the features and design of Manjaro, but if I cant access the web from another room thats a hard no. Never been a problem with Win 10. If anybody has any tips on any of the points in this little rant, Id appreciate it.

    • @rdxdt
      @rdxdt Před 3 lety +150

      @@wp6007 Mental Outlaw literally mentioned Linux Mint on the video, so yes it is relevant to the video.

    • @antonyjr.devlogs5957
      @antonyjr.devlogs5957 Před 3 lety +54

      @@Roman-tj4bl You really need to check your Wifi drivers. In linux usually manjaro installs all non-free drivers too but in some cases you might be using all open source drivers which gives you very poor performance in some hardware which have obscure hardware. So your best bet might be to find your actual wifi card and search if you have option to install non-free driver for your card if not then buy a usb wifi dongle which has good linux support.

    • @KickingAnimal
      @KickingAnimal Před 3 lety +2

      @@antonyjr.devlogs5957 not open source not non-free as the software that is proprietary is still "free" (might be stealing data who knows)

  • @erdragh
    @erdragh Před 3 lety +289

    "Pretty much the Linux endgame":
    LFS would like to have a word with you

    • @naoltitude9516
      @naoltitude9516 Před 3 lety +15

      @flim Shut up

    • @diago2805
      @diago2805 Před 3 lety +41

      LFS is thousand times painful becaz it doesn't have a package manager. Nice for servers but not for desktop users needing various regularly updated applications...
      Gentoo on the other hand is simply the Painless LFS.

    • @itsgalaxy2407
      @itsgalaxy2407 Před 3 lety +5

      @flim shut it gentoo noob

    • @itsgalaxy2407
      @itsgalaxy2407 Před 3 lety +7

      @flim Gentoo is a distribution for noobs. Everything Gentoo can do you can do on other distributions easier.

    • @itsgalaxy2407
      @itsgalaxy2407 Před 3 lety +5

      @flim I'm talking about things like compiling your own kernel, compiling programs from source with specific features enabled, changing the coreutils, etc.

  • @JulianUccetta
    @JulianUccetta Před 3 lety +342

    Gentoo was my first Linux experience back in the mid 2000s as a teen. I had an extra thick install instruction manual and spent hours getting it set up. Good times

    • @realdomdom
      @realdomdom Před 2 lety +17

      Ever installed Gentoo on the Wii? It's the reason I hate SquashFS.

    • @JulianUccetta
      @JulianUccetta Před 2 lety +22

      @@realdomdom No but I can imagine how painful that must be, haha. I might give Gentoo another try some day in the distant future when I feel like I need some extra pain in my life.

    • @sresshowdown
      @sresshowdown Před rokem +3

      @peter.johnson idk man. Like sure knowing excel at that age like I did was something intensive and stuff but I doubt you actually did that

    • @adolphin9288
      @adolphin9288 Před rokem +3

      @@sresshowdown installing gentoo is just reading, copying and pasting commands, its not really difficult

    • @sresshowdown
      @sresshowdown Před rokem

      @@adolphin9288 how ironic that i've gotten this reply during my gentoo instalation. at this moment im struggling with mental outlaws video about gentoo instalation. first of all, how the f am i supposed to use the wifi drivers like this

  • @jackwest540
    @jackwest540 Před 3 lety +88

    As a TA I had to help several students install gentoo for a class. Gentoo is a great distro. Although, compiling massive packages for hours does take a toll. Gentoo discourages trying new software with a lot of dependencies if you are constrained on time. But I do respect it and will switch to it when life settles down.

    • @Stszelec01
      @Stszelec01 Před 3 lety +18

      World woud be prettier with fewer dependencies

  • @laughingvampire7555
    @laughingvampire7555 Před rokem +78

    Forgot to mention a few things.
    Gentoo was created by Daniel Robbins to be an alternative to LFS not to Debian, with the goal to have options in every step of the process, and this includes to offer default binaries or compile from source code. Compiling from source code is the preferred because is the one that allows for more options.
    Gentoo is not the first distro that Robbins made, Robbins made another distro I think it was Enoch and he followed LFS to make it, then while working on Enoch he tried FreeBSD to see what was about it, then he fell in love with the port system of FreeBSD and that it was a lot more UNIX than Linux. So then Daniel retook Enoch rename it to Gentoo and made Portage.
    Gentoo also became famous because included a lot of patches to the kernel that made it faster than any other distro. Eventually all distros incorporated this patches and the "advantage" was lost.
    Gentoo kept growing until 2 events happen.
    1. Ubuntu came out
    2. the loss of the original Gentoo wiki
    the original Gentoo wiki was so good that it was the default reference for all things Linux.
    then without the wiki and with Ubuntu lots of users got tired to deal with the continuous issues with Portage and the USE flags and its multiple files to configure everything and the lack of proper documentation.

    • @leothehuman_9476
      @leothehuman_9476 Před rokem +15

      So is the old gentoo wiki a lost media?? What has been saved from it?
      I'm a newcomer to linux but I'm willing to learn how everything works in depth so I can get to more complex distros like Arch and understand what I'm doing and precisely what is my system.
      Are there any other wikis similar to the old gentoo? Or just, what should I search to get that knowledge?

    • @redcoat4348
      @redcoat4348 Před rokem +13

      @@leothehuman_9476 The Arch wiki seems to have taken that spot.

    • @leothehuman_9476
      @leothehuman_9476 Před rokem

      @@redcoat4348 I have already read it and it didn't help so much, but well anyways in the end I've managed to install Arch (btw).

    • @redcoat4348
      @redcoat4348 Před rokem

      @@leothehuman_9476 I sent another comment which linked to a reddit post saying that the gentoo wiki (which was actually an unofficial fan project) was almost completely recovered and that it's only a commonly held urban legend in the Linux community that it had been lost. I guess it didn't send because sending links gets caught in spam filters now.

    • @laughingvampire7555
      @laughingvampire7555 Před rokem +5

      ​@@leothehuman_9476 yes, I don't remember exactly what happen I think the og Gentoo wiki was hacked and the wiki was deleted, some other Gentoo users had partial back ups and they were able to restore the wiki partially, but is no where near what it used to be, like the trust of the community in keep editing the Gentoo wiki was lost.
      And yes, the Arch wiki took that place, because when Arch came out, they liked the idea of Gentoo but they wanted a binary first distro, and in a way they are correct because right now Gentoo can't offer a lot of compilation options because -o3 is broken if you compile your Gentoo with that thing you are going to get an unstable system that is going to crash a few more times, not terrible really is still usable but is annoying have to reboot the machine, and defeats the purpose of super-optimizing the system. So Arch eventually gained the trust of the community but is still not up to par to what the og Gentoo wiki was, because the Gentoo team kept some guidelines to make it easier for newbies that really made Gentoo accessible to a lot of people.
      you can still optimize in terms of the size of the binaries by carefully using the use flags per package and add or remove integrations to other packages.
      Now if you wanna learn Linux deeply, I think following the book of LFS in tandem with Gentoo/Arch is going to be a great starting point. The best tool you are going to need is persistence and frustration management. To me that is the real barrier, every distro is good for newbies the only problem is that most people lack persistence and frustration management.

  • @dubbynelson
    @dubbynelson Před 3 lety +136

    The real reason why you should install your software at night is because (they don't want you to know this) the alphabet boys are asleep by then.

    • @MpSniperM1911
      @MpSniperM1911 Před 2 lety +5

      what if you live 12 hours ahead from the alphabet boys and you are sleeping while installing your software

    • @Misha-dr9rh
      @Misha-dr9rh Před 2 lety +1

      a little known fact about alphabet boys is that their wife's boyfriend makes them go to bet at 7 PM making it much easier to plot your terroristic acts past then

  •  Před 3 lety +211

    Could you make a video about init systems like OpenRC and runit compared with SystemD?

  • @juzujuzu4555
    @juzujuzu4555 Před 3 lety +131

    I would just start to install Gentoo on Virtual machine and start to play with it. Figuring out what things are actually important to learn is really hard at first. Majority of USE flags for example are useless and there are just too much to learn. After getting Gentoo to work and after managing it awhile, then I would just go and install it to on real hardware, assuming you have secondary computer at hand. You can always configure it more later.
    Gentoo is interesting in the sense that it seems hard for awhile, but then suddenly you realize you know the system. One day you feel there's endless amounts of hard things to learn, and the next day you feel that you handle the majority of the system. Don't give up, because in the end you will feel more comfortable with your system than with any other system, and that feeling is something that's quite impossible to describe.

    • @axlslak
      @axlslak Před 3 lety +2

      You dont need a vm for that. If you already in linux, just download the stage3 and follow the guide as if you booted from their boot media. you dont need to boot into their boot thingie to do chroot. you can even google how to gentoo windows wsl and do it in windows.

    • @pulkitsukhija
      @pulkitsukhija Před 2 lety +2

      Oh yes, I felt the same thing 4 months ago

    • @1marcelfilms
      @1marcelfilms Před 2 lety +5

      Thats like playing hitman for the first time not knowing anything vs playing the level for the 100th time killing everyone in one run

    • @FABESTAH
      @FABESTAH Před rokem +1

      You're absolutely right. I myself switched over from Windows directly to Arch and it was the best thing I ever did, even though it was really really hard and exhausting at the beginning but I learned so much interesting and beautiful things and also found my new love named Linux ;D
      The key to succeed in such a journey is to simply never give up as you already said but I also do think such a distro is not for everybody, so if you don't feel the joy and thirst for knowledge after a certain amount of time, it doesn't make much sense to further force yourself into learning this distro because you heard or read on CZcams that it's so fulfilling and great.

    • @juzujuzu4555
      @juzujuzu4555 Před rokem +3

      @@FABESTAH With Gentoo I would say that you are most likely not going to feel joy in the same way that you'll feel with Arch. In the beginning I mean. There's certain period that needs to be pushed through and then it's going to get joyfull.
      I would say it's kind of like starting to go to gym (except that we all know that gym will work, here you don't know it) where in the beginning you don't see any results for a while and it's really only painful physically and mentally.
      Gentoo most likely isn't for people who aren't interested in the premise itself. Just the performance improvements (which are plenty) or security benefits etc. are probably not enough to overcome the disadvantages unless the idea of having the system build by yourself is not something that you like.
      Though Gentoo might be great for systems like Threadrippers etc. as if you config the kernel and have really great compiler config, then you truly can get software running faster on systems with lots of cores. And the compiling itself on those systems is fast.
      Also if you run distcc server you can use fast computer for compiling Gentoo for old hardware, and you can have Gentoo running fast on absolutely ancient machines, create old laptops for browsing etc. create old desktops as media center machines etc.

  • @avetis2377
    @avetis2377 Před 3 lety +248

    if gentoo is so great where's genthree

    • @v1rx
      @v1rx Před 3 lety +13

      how 'bout genone

    • @cosmic5934
      @cosmic5934 Před 3 lety +27

      how about gendeez

    • @hikt1731
      @hikt1731 Před 3 lety +5

      Hey, I don't know who you are but I hate you from deep in my heart.

    • @v1rx
      @v1rx Před 3 lety +1

      @@cosmic5934 deez nuts

    • @Jupiter__001_
      @Jupiter__001_ Před 3 lety +2

      @@cosmic5934 and what of genutz?

  • @patologicznypiotrus5638
    @patologicznypiotrus5638 Před 3 lety +323

    gentoo is void/arch for people with a lot of CPU cores and a lot of patience

    • @juzujuzu4555
      @juzujuzu4555 Před 3 lety +43

      I run it with dual core laptop. No problems. You only need to change the attitude towards updating and allow it to happen on the background or when you are not using your computer. Any other patience really isn't needed as the system is exactly as I want, thus I don't need to be patient with BS that other distros would force upon me.

    • @mrherpes2971
      @mrherpes2971 Před 3 lety +14

      @@juzujuzu4555 or you can have a life and switch to a superior os like FreeBSD or even arch.

    • @vetrixfx9264
      @vetrixfx9264 Před 3 lety +62

      @@player-8740 "wow this program/os has 2 features i dont use, must be bloat!"

    • @drumF_4200
      @drumF_4200 Před 3 lety +3

      @@mrherpes2971 BSD is a cuck OS

    • @abc.2924
      @abc.2924 Před 2 lety +4

      @Asshaker "i use arch btw"

  • @ezequiel5260
    @ezequiel5260 Před 3 lety +39

    LS memes aside, this is why I stuck with Artix. It does take time and effort to use Gentoo, which currently I'm focusing into other things. Maybe in a couple of years I'll revisit it.

  • @mattlebutter9162
    @mattlebutter9162 Před 3 lety +18

    Many tests have been run and show that those compile tweaks only result in very minor improvements, which are not visible from a human's experience. Especially if you have a top-notch CPU to compile your system in a reasonable time, like many commentators on this thread are saying. And compiling at night may be good, but waking-up to an error message with emerge and a broken computer for the day is definitely not that great...
    However i think installing and maintaining it for a while is a great learning experience for getting to know Linux.

  • @NightGlyde
    @NightGlyde Před 3 lety +42

    When I was in high school I attempted to install Gentoo. It didn't work out very well (I couldn't install any packages because portage was broken), but I learnt a lot in the process.

    • @nd_otd
      @nd_otd Před 3 lety +8

      For me, I'm able to install a bare-minimum setup. But just got stuck and gave up on installing xorg + DE. I might also revisit it when I have a lot of time.

    • @mikopiko
      @mikopiko Před 2 lety +6

      But that's the point with Gentoo. It's not about being able to install a fully functional os, the point is how much you learned during the process even if you don't exactly end up with a functional os.

    • @daemonace5910
      @daemonace5910 Před 2 lety +17

      @@mikopiko
      The OS where having a working OS is not the point

    • @imzesok
      @imzesok Před 2 lety +2

      @@nd_otd I ran into the same issue. when I did a few years ago the documentation for getting there in the handbook was both incomplete and outdated(a lot of the commands simply didn't exist anymore), I had to jury-rig a patch work of BS from like 8 different videos/sites, to even get to a DE. It sadly broke after an update the next day. i'll never do it again. too painful. I gained a greater appreciation for Arch 🤣

    • @nd_otd
      @nd_otd Před 2 lety +2

      @@imzesok yeah, that was the time I stopped hopping into other distros and just stuck with Arch

  • @johnterpack3940
    @johnterpack3940 Před rokem +34

    I assume it would be possible to have a dedicated compiling rig on your network. Maybe set up some monitored folders so that when you drop a package in a given folder it gets compiled with a certain set of flags for a specific machine. The resulting binary gets sent to a local repository where the target machine can see it. You could also then archive those binaries to simplify reinstalling if needed. That gives you the flexibility and control of Gentoo with some of the convenience of a lesser distro.

  • @NofewFudtefcity
    @NofewFudtefcity Před 2 lety +5

    It's such a little thing, but I really like that you said "Enjoy the rest of your day". Thank you!

  • @AlaKernel
    @AlaKernel Před 3 lety +26

    i love this kind of big picture videos about linux stuff /

  • @jamesschmames6416
    @jamesschmames6416 Před rokem +5

    Arch is not for bragging rights. In many ways it is easy mode Linux. Installing most software is a breeze and you have access to all the latest and greatest. No PPA or SNAP BS. You just have to be a more experience Linux user for the occasion it breaks. You don't even have to be that experienced if you are willing to reinstall once or twice a year. (keep a separate HOME partition, boys and girls)
    BTW, I used Gentoo for a year or two back in the aughts, before switching to Ubuntu until that was ruined by Gnome 3 and Unity. Gentoo is great in theory, but in practice the tradeoffs are just not worth it. Good for learning though.

    • @ren5689
      @ren5689 Před 11 měsíci

      True! Used to think that arch is very hard to use, so I stuck with Linux mint, and a few distro hopping for a while. But I'm quite annoyed with some files being there that I don't use at all, so I tried arch, oh damn I actually appreciate how arch lets me compile stuff, not too easy and then sacrificing some freedom to compiling, but not too hard for me to cry for days trying to compile. It even has a heavily detailed wiki and yt videos instructions (even archinstall) The experience helped me understand how linux works as a whole. Definitely not going for Gentoo though as main, but for experiencing within VB, sure.

    • @ren5689
      @ren5689 Před 11 měsíci

      I would love to know about your overall experience in Gentoo though.

  • @xero110
    @xero110 Před 3 lety +7

    The Gentoo install I did ~15 years ago was a nightmare, but I learned a lot. Back then Linux was just for learning for me, I just wanted to learn as much as I could about Linux and computers.

  • @pfcrow
    @pfcrow Před 2 lety +42

    I love Gentoo for automatically including local patches from /etc/portage/patches when building packages. I have maybe half a dozen packages where I've tweaked them with local packages, and thanks to Portage, it keeps my patches when the package is updated, and I only have to worry about it when the upstream changes enough that my patches fail to apply or compile.

  • @PPAChao
    @PPAChao Před 3 lety +49

    I'd like to try Gentoo for maximum minimalism to get the most out of old hardware like ancient Thinkpads or cheapo ARM SBCs, but those platforms would also take the longest to compile anything, so it's kind of self-defeating (unless you cross-compile on your desktop/VM for deployment on weaker platforms).

  • @user-vi3pi9rf7w
    @user-vi3pi9rf7w Před 3 lety +20

    Loving these frequent uploads

  • @MaffeyZilog
    @MaffeyZilog Před 2 lety +20

    Mint is based off Ubuntu but does have a Debian edition.
    In fact, the Debian edition is considered THE most stable distro there is because of how stable and tested Debian is and Mint uses the previous Debian edition for extra stability.
    LMDE is actually a nice distro (and yes I'm a Windows user as well as Linux).

  • @ongkenneth308
    @ongkenneth308 Před 3 lety +12

    We miss your gentoo video. Excited to see it

  • @avnzx5177
    @avnzx5177 Před 3 lety +10

    For me at least, fixing a system you messed up is just part of the package with a do-it-yourself distro (even Arch which doesn't have the compile times but can still be a PITA to re-setup).
    Especially since Windows breaking was the first catalyst i had into installing my first distro (Ubuntu) , and then my progression onto learning more about Linux after I managed to break something low level.

  • @amnottabs
    @amnottabs Před 3 lety +27

    and here I am feeling all nerdy with my Ubuntu server base + some DE on top

    • @hedgeearthridge6807
      @hedgeearthridge6807 Před 3 lety +7

      Honestly that's the best way to go. Im a proud distrohopper. I thought Arch was cool until it fucked itself because of a bug, Arch hates XFCE and doesnt play nicely with it. An entire evening of work, wasted. Ubuntu doesn't shit-the-bed and waste your time like Arch does.

    • @evildragon1774
      @evildragon1774 Před 3 lety +5

      Ah yes, my early days. I use to flex my linux to my friends eventhough they don't give a damn about it

    • @warhawk_yt
      @warhawk_yt Před 3 lety

      @@hedgeearthridge6807 That might just be a person experience. I have never had arch break once unless I explicitly did something and arch didn’t like it. I have also used xfce on arch and never had a problem. Of course it’s been a couple years since I switching to a tiling window manager so it could be a newer bug but my point still stands that everyone will have a different personal experience.

    • @amnottabs
      @amnottabs Před 3 lety

      @@evildragon1774 I'm certainly not on my early days anymore but still consider myself a novice/casual user, I did distrohop until I reached the Arch Linux on laptop meme, when they moved to systemd I moved to Archbang but never felt comfortable enough so after staying for years on Linux Mint Debian I moved to Ubuntu mostly because Mint stopped offering MATE oob

    • @amnottabs
      @amnottabs Před 3 lety

      @@hedgeearthridge6807 I think when moving between Linux branches the best way to get your feet wet is by trying a novice friendly fork of it; I did try Manjaro and it isn't harder to install than Ubuntu but we need to understand that things are done in a different way

  • @W00DGR0USE
    @W00DGR0USE Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thank you thank you thank you. Every surface level explanation I have found on Gentoo either starts and ends with "Gentoo good" or is "Gentoo full install guide and setup (play time 2 hours and 50 minuets)"

  • @fustiian
    @fustiian Před 3 lety +39

    I WAS JUST WONDERING WHEN YOU’RE GONNA UPLOAD.
    GOD HAS BLESSED ME

  • @Kaiwizz
    @Kaiwizz Před 3 lety +8

    thanks for this really informative video. I am new to Linux and I heard about Gentoo before. but I understood that Gentoo is probably not suited for users like me whose workload is much much lighter than the machine they have access to.
    but installing Gentoo does look like a fun project to know more about computers in general.

  • @ulcuber
    @ulcuber Před 2 lety +3

    With gentoo you had to know how your system works. But there is ability to understand as much as you need. There are already profiles with configured packages sets for popular desktop environments. Also it has precompiled binary kernel. Some packages are both binary and sorce code so you able to avoid recompiling some huge things as java and firefox. Gentoo is useful if you want to choose drivers in your kernel, if you want to configure network components from scratch, if you want to have full control over the system. Also it is unique with portage package management which allows you to compile as much as you need excluding some modules as said in video. And you can also extend your system with some flatpack applications if you need. Gentoo is suitable for building minimalistic systems. There are a number of windows managers such as i3 and etc. And you don't need to remove old desktop environment to install it.

  • @codegenprime3362
    @codegenprime3362 Před 3 lety +27

    >seven hours of emerging firefox on my old thinkpad

    • @codegenprime3362
      @codegenprime3362 Před 3 lety

      @@nonetrix3066 because i use 32bit kernel

    • @bifrost8832
      @bifrost8832 Před 3 lety +5

      ​@Rei Damn we really live in a time where people define you by the devices you own lmao

  • @Pipeartist937
    @Pipeartist937 Před 2 lety +1

    I have Gentoo on my machine and i probably wont ever migrate away from it. The software is literally compiled for your hardware and nothing else. This removes alot of bloat and allows u to only build for your PC. It is the most stable system i have ever installed. It never freezes, never crashes. I use musl hardened selinux profile and use Sway. Using lto-overlay, my whole system is also compiled with gcc graphite and lto. I have the newest GNU Icecat for my browser compiled with pgo and lto optimizations. Youll learn alot from the installation and it will take time but you will have a superior end product with total control of how the software is built. Its worth it

  • @MysteryMan159
    @MysteryMan159 Před 2 lety +2

    Your have a great, smooth, soothing recording voice. Some Linux content creators have such a grating voice and I know I shouldn’t judge who I listen to based on that but it’s hard wired ...

  • @AnzanHoshinRoshi
    @AnzanHoshinRoshi Před 3 lety +6

    Thank you. I last used Gentoo about 11 years ago and liked it but went back to Debian based. By the way, as a Canadian I always thought it was "Pore-tahj". Jes suis desole.

  •  Před 3 lety +8

    As linux user and web developer, thank you for explaining why gentoo is not for me.

    • @flowers-for-the-end
      @flowers-for-the-end Před rokem

      what were your turn offs in relation to web dev?

    •  Před rokem +1

      @@flowers-for-the-end There wasn't turnoffs really, it's more lack of turn ons. Linux based OS I am using is straightforward for web dev.

    • @darmoed_phantorm
      @darmoed_phantorm Před rokem +1

      @ but gentoo has a beautiful neofetch

  • @brianchandler3346
    @brianchandler3346 Před 3 lety +14

    Long time Gentoo user on and off (depending on want/need/time). Still my absolute favorite distro. I always struggle getting these key points across or even worded clearly. Now I'll just link them here. Nailed it. :)

    • @phoneticalballsack
      @phoneticalballsack Před 2 lety +2

      Can you explain why people are obsessed with making their computer experience as difficult and strenuous as possible?

    • @phoneticalballsack
      @phoneticalballsack Před 2 lety

      @Christopher Wiggins yeah but you cant even play valorant or fornite

    • @phoneticalballsack
      @phoneticalballsack Před rokem +4

      @Marie ♥ I joined the Linux fascists. Typing this on Gentoo right now.

    • @yoyoma2026
      @yoyoma2026 Před rokem

      Oh dear

  • @valiantviktor
    @valiantviktor Před 7 měsíci +4

    Maybe the real Gentoo was the packages we built along the way...

  • @vicyoslinuxofficial2607
    @vicyoslinuxofficial2607 Před 3 lety +4

    Gentoo makes me remind of Android custom roms, where it takes several hours to compile the OS, the Kernel, and the apps depending on the computer specs.

  • @lilythebluespheresfan2897
    @lilythebluespheresfan2897 Před 3 lety +33

    But Genthree when 😳

  • @harleyspeedthrust4013
    @harleyspeedthrust4013 Před 9 měsíci +1

    i like gentoo, and some day I'll start using it. right now i use debian and i compile most packages/tools i use from source. usually i add -march=native and -O3 to the compiler flags. so far it's been great

  • @uwuwaifu101
    @uwuwaifu101 Před rokem +2

    Starting with gentoo today :) Thank you for the introduction =)

  • @DannyMexen9
    @DannyMexen9 Před 3 lety +13

    Kenny, have you done a video on how you discovered Gentoo? And when you realized it was the distro you would use?

  • @gustavomariz7769
    @gustavomariz7769 Před 3 lety +16

    Where is the hannah montana linux tutorial?

  • @MysticMylesZ
    @MysticMylesZ Před rokem +2

    Hopefully I can install it on a older laptop, the goal is to have something that's as stripping down as possible, to use for something specific.

  • @jamesh3639
    @jamesh3639 Před 3 lety +2

    I'm sorta new to GNU/Linux and I'm trying it out right now and I'm enjoying it. The main reason why I trying Linux is that I want to learn how it works and how to use it. My first distro is Arch Linux because I like the concept of customizing your OS so you're aware of what's running and what's on your system. I'll try out Gentoo if learn enough about Linux in general but for now I'll continue to use Arch.
    PS: Thank you for teaching me how to install Arch.

  • @elcr9mlg
    @elcr9mlg Před 3 lety +17

    every copy of Gentoo is personalized

  • @itsgalaxy2407
    @itsgalaxy2407 Před 3 lety +5

    All those things you listed are all possible to do in other distros like void, artix or even debian. It just takes extra time and it's not baked into the install process.

    • @theTweak0284
      @theTweak0284 Před 3 lety +3

      Except that if you compile things from scratch on other distros that are distributed as binaries through the package managers, you will typically have to manually check for updates or at least write your own script instead of something like "sudo pacman -Syu" or "emerge --sync" and other emerge commands

  • @kirtanvora3789
    @kirtanvora3789 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I installed Gentoo on my granny's PC and she's loving it

  • @Epsilonsama
    @Epsilonsama Před 3 lety +6

    I installed gentoo and let me tell ya it's definetely a time sink. The process itself is not that hard but if you get down the rabbit hole of USE flags you will be down there a while. Gentoo is the closest thing to being a distro maintainer in the sense that you are building the packages and determining which USE flags to use and how to customize everything. IMO for a Desktop user it's way too much but for someone who wants to REALLY learn GNU/Linux and learn about computer hardware it's a great distro to have. Even Arch Linux is much easier to maintain day to day than Gentoo. With Arch is pretty easy to have up to date packages while with Gentoo you know that any big update means a long emerge session.

    • @ChrisPinCornwall
      @ChrisPinCornwall Před 2 lety

      Agreed. To me, it seems a huge investment in time and effort for a slight gain. I shall stay with Debian server and Arch/Mint desktops.

  • @JTKroll12
    @JTKroll12 Před 3 lety +1

    "Gentoo is the Linux endgame"
    that's all I needed to hear

  • @fatbeard8072
    @fatbeard8072 Před 3 lety +3

    Nice informative vid as always. I like my LMint for now, over a year using it. I wish I was a bit better on using the Terminal. I use Zorin OS for my extra PC as entertainment on my TV. Linux is free and fun really.

  • @aesculetum
    @aesculetum Před 3 lety +7

    I don't think there's a better distribution than Gentoo. But I have been playing with NixOS for the Nix language (unfortunately, it uses Lennartware). Maybe a video on NixOS in your series on distributions of the the GNU+Linux system?

    • @Gabifuertes
      @Gabifuertes Před 3 lety

      "Lennartware" I don't understand the hate for Pottering to this day.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Před 2 lety

      Having done one or two sysinit scripts and systemd service files, I find systemd easier.

  • @jumsdogpetter7610
    @jumsdogpetter7610 Před 3 lety +8

    “Gentoo is the linux endgame” - i run gentoo, but i disagree. If there is such a thing, it is probably one of the declaratively configured operating systems like nix or guix. I’d like to try nix out but i’ve been too happy with gentoo. I’ve read a lot of nix documentation and the package/config ideas behind it are fascinating.

  • @Littlefighter1911
    @Littlefighter1911 Před rokem +1

    Damn, seeing Linux Mint, brings back nostalgia.
    When the whole Linux ecosystem was new to me and there was a shit ton of stuff to explore.
    Now it's like a game you've played for too long.
    It's not exciting in the slightest anymore.
    I also have very nice memories of XFCE on Gentoo and FreeBSD.

  • @XaetaCore
    @XaetaCore Před 6 měsíci +1

    Took me 6 hours to install and fully configure it to the point i can run Steam games and VFIO vm's

  • @wtry69
    @wtry69 Před rokem

    I'm looking forward to compiling everything so that I can learn programming looking and editing at source code that I really have to use

  • @maynnemillares
    @maynnemillares Před 3 lety +16

    What I truly hate about Gentoo is it behaves like Windows. It will only work on the machine it is installed on, you wish to migrate the hdd/ssd to another computer? It won't work, you have to reformat.
    What I love about Linux is its general sense a "portable OS", where the OS drive can be migrated to other machines without the need to reinstall it again from scratch.

    • @EloNaj
      @EloNaj Před 2 lety +2

      Depends on the useflags and compiler options you use. You could also compile bloat binaries (and there are even precompiled binaries if you want to skip compiling the big packages) but Gentoo shines in optimizing your Distro and Kernel to your system.
      And you can port your Gentoo to a new System. I updated my system for years and I did not reinstall you only need to change your flags / Kerneloptions cpu flags etc.

    • @skflmgjok462
      @skflmgjok462 Před 2 lety +1

      My windows worked fine when i moved the ssd from my laptop which screen got cracked to my desktop.

  • @ulcuber
    @ulcuber Před 2 lety +1

    With build servers it is good variant for old hardware

  • @infectedmushroom3488
    @infectedmushroom3488 Před 3 lety +1

    Hands down best Linux CZcamsr ever

  • @cryptixdaemon7236
    @cryptixdaemon7236 Před 3 lety +1

    Use OpenZFS or BRRFS or LVM to create snapshots before doing system package updates for easy point in time system resore points that can easily be rolled back to should something go wrong that will take a while to fix especially if time is a problem.

  • @anikbiswasarnob
    @anikbiswasarnob Před 3 lety +2

    Thinking of installing it on my ancient desktop that contains only 2GB RAM and a Dual Core Pentium Processor. Currently a Debian user.

    • @DocJade
      @DocJade Před 2 lety

      13 years to compile firefox

  • @oliverbrotchie3799
    @oliverbrotchie3799 Před 3 lety +2

    @Mental_Outlaw Official Linux support for the apple M1 MacBooks is coming in the next kernel patch (v5.13); I would love to see a simplified tutorial on how to switch over to Gentoo on Apple Silicon!

  • @RealYethal
    @RealYethal Před 3 lety +5

    What do you think about running your own private ports server that would automatically build all your packages with appropriate use flags and cflags so that when you need to rebuild your desktop you could just download precompiled packages optimized for your specific system? It's not like either of those things changes very often.

  • @xthebumpx
    @xthebumpx Před 3 lety +5

    Last time I used Gentoo to save time I ended up using a pre-built kernel and installing most of what I used via Flatpak or Toolbox (Fedora's podman/buildah container utility). After a few weeks of that I started questioning what was even the point of using Gentoo for me and went back to another distro. Though if you want a really minimal core with container based user space it seems like Gentoo might be a pretty good choice.

    • @wisatong2221
      @wisatong2221 Před 2 lety

      Why would you want container based userspace if you are using Gentoo?

    • @catchnkill
      @catchnkill Před 2 lety

      Even so you do not need Gentoo. Apline Linux is just fine and a lot easier.

  • @YvanJanssens
    @YvanJanssens Před 3 lety +1

    I mainly use Gentoo because it's the only thing that supports my Sun T5240; current Solaris on it is unsupported. It's still rough on the edges, even for Gentoo.

  • @TopHatProductions115
    @TopHatProductions115 Před 2 lety +1

    Artix OpenRC (Xfce) is near perfection for me. But wishing ZFS was native :(
    Timeshift for daily (especially before updates/config changes) backups is awesome :)

  • @anonymunsichtbar3715
    @anonymunsichtbar3715 Před rokem +1

    Seems reasonable to compile your OS for a day and every program for probably even more, just for having better optimization. For a Server Environment it makes sense, but for a desktop no way. I like arch because it's customizable too and you can compile stuff yourself too if you want, but why should you.

  • @shaunnan146
    @shaunnan146 Před 2 lety

    Excellent. That is the best explanation i have had out of all the others. Thank you.

  • @alephanull1953
    @alephanull1953 Před 3 lety +1

    Last time I was this early, Kenny was reviewing Windows

  • @seanld444
    @seanld444 Před 3 lety +5

    If only I had time to set it up

  • @eurimontero1883
    @eurimontero1883 Před 3 lety +1

    In fact Gentoo is not a Linux Distro, it is a GNU distro, and you can choose use Linux as Kernel, Hurd, BSD, or Linux forks like Linux-libre.

  • @denizo9263
    @denizo9263 Před 2 lety +1

    Seems like a good distro for gaming!

  • @nevermind824
    @nevermind824 Před 2 lety

    My first ever Linux install was gentoo.. It took me about 2 weeks to get my ISDN modem years ago to connect to the internet to finish the install

  • @pongopea
    @pongopea Před rokem

    first linux install I've ever tried was gentoo, I can fondly remember ending up with a broken install without a DE and a bricked system
    after that I tried ubuntu and that worked out a bit better

  • @kjakobsen
    @kjakobsen Před rokem +1

    I once tried upgrading GCC, by uninstalling the old first.... And that's where my problems started. LOL

  • @onceagain77
    @onceagain77 Před 3 lety

    Just upgraded my kernel from 5.11-zen1 to 5.11.15-gentoo and a Steam game would crash. So I went to 5.11.15-zen1 and everything works just fine. Your jaw would drop at my incompetence running Gentoo as a daily driver but some how I manage.

  • @bsodcat
    @bsodcat Před 3 lety +6

    Every copy of gentoo is personalized.

    • @aneeshprasobhan
      @aneeshprasobhan Před 3 lety

      is it true if everyone are using the same tutorials tho

  • @glowiak3430
    @glowiak3430 Před 3 lety +4

    Gentoo doesn't see my network card, so I'm using FreeBSD 13.0-BETA4 (never upgraded) :D

  • @sudoakado
    @sudoakado Před 6 měsíci

    Very kool. I like your efforts and articulation mate!

  • @programmingsocks9246
    @programmingsocks9246 Před 3 lety +1

    okay, nicc. i might start running gentoo now, ty

  • @BattyBest
    @BattyBest Před rokem +1

    Linux Mint is for newbs who just want something that works
    Ubuntu is for people who want a nice middle ground
    Arch is for people who like customization but dont wanna spend 8 hours getting a single package to work
    Gentoo is for people that want to know everything that goes on in their system
    Linux from scratch is for- uh... hmmm... just write your own kernel at that point- it's easier.

  • @sebaszwarc6028
    @sebaszwarc6028 Před 3 lety +1

    I wonder how many dependencies can be stripped from Pianobar on Gentoo, because on Homebrew/MacPorts it is a hell of the graphic libraries and codecs for something that is just console Pandora client.

  • @psihozefir
    @psihozefir Před rokem

    I was a 15 y Gentoo power user until EAPI 6, iirc. But I switched to Manjaro to save time and power.

  • @Interpause
    @Interpause Před 2 lety

    my mid term plan is to install artix on my laptop and use that. once i graduate from uni, then ill try out gentoo

  • @dentureadventure1490
    @dentureadventure1490 Před 3 lety +1

    i don't even have Linux but i watch this cause i'm interested in Linux.
    i don't wanna make the complete switch mainly cause my Ryzen 3600 didn't play
    nice with Manjaro within more then a hour of us, i'd have Thermal shutdowns.
    could have been a bug with the distro or something wrong with my CPU i never could get to the bottom of it and caved in and switch back over. I tried Lubuntu and Linux Mint also same problem.
    Edit: i used linux in the past btw pinguyOS was my daily driver back then.
    I know the basic stuff a noob would know after a little while of use but thats it.

  • @callisoncaffrey
    @callisoncaffrey Před 3 lety +2

    Since you are shooting out videos like they are confetti, I'm sure you have enough ideas until the internet gives up, but if you don't mind some requests, I wouldn't mind hearing more about this S6. More importantly though, how do I compile Gentoo for other machines? So far I've always been told to compile it on the machine I'm actually using it on. Well, I don't intend to do compiling on a bananapi or an Atom or a Sempron even.

    • @maxsilvester1327
      @maxsilvester1327 Před 3 lety

      You can use distcc. Using -march=native won't work directly (the compiler will run on another machine so it would optimize for the other machine), but you can install app-misc/resolve-march-native and run resolve-march-native. This will output what -march=native would do on your machine.

    • @callisoncaffrey
      @callisoncaffrey Před 3 lety +1

      @@maxsilvester1327 A Gentoorian! Thanks, I'll write that down. Still wouldn't mind a video about it though - just in case the steak chef is listening.

  • @renaryugu9120
    @renaryugu9120 Před 3 lety

    i use gentoo have done that sence september last year loveing it so nice:)

  • @MOOBBreezy
    @MOOBBreezy Před 3 lety +2

    Ahaha, im still trying to figure out wtf I'm doing with arch. Thanks for the suggestion, I'll need to be a bit more tech savvy tho

    • @juzujuzu4555
      @juzujuzu4555 Před 3 lety

      Install Gentoo on Virtual machine, don't stop until you have it configured the way you want. That's the easiest way of doing it, you can do it on the pace you want, have browser open in the next window and read the manual, and duckduckgo for the answers for possible problems.
      It seems hard as phuck to everyone in the beginning, but that steep learning curve stops suddenly. There really isn't that much you need to learn, even though it seems that way all the way up until it doesn't. To me it took couple of weeks to feel secure with my system, and perhaps two months when I felt completely at ease with it.
      I would say it's like giving up smoking, pretty much anyone can do it if they have the willpower. And once you have suffered for couple of weeks to couple of months, you will be forever grateful that you did it.

    • @Cookiekeks
      @Cookiekeks Před 3 lety

      @@juzujuzu4555 Once I learned Arch enough (installed it a few days ago) I might consider to switch to gentoo, so I really know whats going on on my pc

    • @juzujuzu4555
      @juzujuzu4555 Před 3 lety

      @Nadeko After you learn Gentoo it really doesn't take time to maintain, at least it haven't for me. Updating takes time, but you can update on the background, or update when you are not using your computer.
      If you only have one computer, then just install it in virtual machine. And I would encourage that route anyway, as you get to pause the install process, have snapshots during your progress, and have browser open on the side.
      Then if you choose you can install it without worries.
      Updating takes time, or compiling takes time, updating works as well as within other distros. You can update on the background, or when you are not using the computer. That really isn't a problem, you get used to that different paradigm quite fast.
      Arch is great, though Gentoo gives you so much, and it gives you things you just couldn't know in advance. The feeling it gives is just superior.

  • @cryptixdaemon7236
    @cryptixdaemon7236 Před 3 lety +1

    If you have to reinstall Gentoo again from source your're doing it wrong, that's why you tell Portage to keep a local binary repository of all packages that you compiled for disaster recovery so that you can then reinstall it again using your own binaries from your local repository just as fast as any other system.

  • @gamezoid1234
    @gamezoid1234 Před 2 lety

    Gentoo is what has sold me on Linux. The degree of customizability baffles me. Its such a great distro, and it is a shame that it isn't more popular.

    • @yoyoma2026
      @yoyoma2026 Před rokem

      You would have been a Mac user otherwise?

    • @gamezoid1234
      @gamezoid1234 Před rokem

      @@yoyoma2026 if I'm being honest, if I had grown up with Mac instead of windows there's a halfway decent chance I would have stayed on it. IMHO from what I can tell about OS X is a pretty good Unix. Apple is pretty trash when it comes to hardware and affordably so it's hard to say.

  • @bschlueter
    @bschlueter Před 3 lety +3

    I use arch with a custom kernel :)

  • @sigweirtsarlazahm8887
    @sigweirtsarlazahm8887 Před 3 lety

    When his wild guess about linux mint users is 100% a match to your own.
    *He's a **-wizard genius-** interlectual*

  • @isheamongus811
    @isheamongus811 Před 2 lety

    USe separate /home pratition like with lfs cos u can easy reinstall if u need an its fgood practise

  • @paulwalker5225
    @paulwalker5225 Před 3 lety +1

    Can you talk about linux phones or "smart"phones in general and which are the least spooked ones to choose from?

  • @only1gameguru
    @only1gameguru Před 3 lety

    I use mint because the menu is easy to find... I also use it for business so I need it to run without a random graphics driver issue. Though I haven't had the issues on my machine with Arch when it comes to graphics I like having all the systems in my business running the same version so if I show something to someone I'm working with they can duplicate the actions 1:1. On two of the work machines Arch kept breaking the graphics and I'd have to go in and reinstall the drivers and get it up and running. 30 minutes to fix a machine once and a while is too often for a work machine.

  • @danielpovolny3247
    @danielpovolny3247 Před 3 lety +3

    Mental Outlaws videos are good as podcast