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crohnnie n00b
Joined: 23 Jan 2005 Posts: 9
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 5:44 pm Post subject: Gentoo not as reliable as before... |
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I'm new to posting to the forums (my first post), but have been using Gentoo for over a year now. I find it very stable, and very easy to use and keep up to date. Any problems I've encountered have been easy to solve by looking through the docs or browsing the forums. I always stick to packages considered stable, and never play with the masked ones.
In the past 4 months or so, it doesn't seem quite so easy to keep updated. I've noticed that every time I upgrade my system, it breaks something. Usually if I sync again after a couple of days it gets fixed, but this does tend to get annoying. The stability and reliability of Gentoo made me decide to get rid of windows, but now it doesn't seem quite so reliable. I guess I'm wondering if there has been some major change with the way things are declared stable, or if someone different is making these decisions now. Things just seem a little more buggy lately.
This is just a little food for thought from an average user who likes the distro, but is starting to wonder. Any feedback from the more experienced users, or just average users like myself, would be appreciated. |
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ciaranm Retired Dev
Joined: 19 Jul 2003 Posts: 1719 Location: In Hiding
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 5:54 pm Post subject: |
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Are you running ~arch? Are you using dodgy CFLAGS? Are you running a broken kernel? Are you running a broken filesystem? Are you doing insane things in make.conf? |
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MdaG l33t
Joined: 09 Nov 2004 Posts: 945 Location: Stockholm, Sverige
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 6:15 pm Post subject: |
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I've been wondering why the attr and acl packages are switching from being a dependancy to not being needed at all (checked with emerge -p depclean)? |
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ciaranm Retired Dev
Joined: 19 Jul 2003 Posts: 1719 Location: In Hiding
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 6:26 pm Post subject: |
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Oh, that? If you change core-system USE flags, expect to have to rebuild your system. If you're installing from a stage 3, use the same USE flags as the stage. This has always been the case. |
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MdaG l33t
Joined: 09 Nov 2004 Posts: 945 Location: Stockholm, Sverige
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 6:32 pm Post subject: |
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The only flags I've added are
USE="alsa cdr dvd dvdr imap nptl -kde -gnome " |
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Liquid n00b
Joined: 18 Nov 2003 Posts: 59
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 6:37 pm Post subject: |
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ciaranm wrote: | Are you running ~arch? Are you using dodgy CFLAGS? Are you running a broken kernel? Are you running a broken filesystem? Are you doing insane things in make.conf? |
This is the problem guys, if you like to play with the superlast things, consider that break your box can happen. Who use dodgy CFLAGS deserve to have a broken box
Actually in my office I have plenty gentoo box installed from stage 3 with defalut flags and without running ~arch, everything works like a charm.
On the other side at home I play with everything possible and of course I broke things, but never I will post here a complain on that. |
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MdaG l33t
Joined: 09 Nov 2004 Posts: 945 Location: Stockholm, Sverige
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 6:39 pm Post subject: |
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I'm running the stable branch and I'm apart from my USE I'm using the defaults. I'm not having any problems at all, I just wondered about attr and acl. |
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crohnnie n00b
Joined: 23 Jan 2005 Posts: 9
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 6:56 pm Post subject: |
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ciaranm wrote: | Are you running ~arch? Are you using dodgy CFLAGS? Are you running a broken kernel? Are you running a broken filesystem? Are you doing insane things in make.conf? |
I'm not doing anything different than I was doing for the first 10 months I was using Gentoo. No crazy use flags, just the stuff recommended in the install docs. My filesystem doesn't seem to be broken. My kernel (2.4.25) hasn't given me any problems since I installed it. As I said in my first post, I can usually sort things out with the help of the forums and docs, but it just seems that I end up doing that more and more lately. At first it was simple, 'emerge -u world' and everything would work when it was finished. Now it seems that when I do this, I have to spend time tracking down where a compile failed, and fixing it. Updates just don't seem to be as transparent and easy as they used to be. I'm not looking for specific support, just wordering if it's just me, or is anyone else finding similar problems as well. |
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Chaosite Guru
Joined: 13 Dec 2003 Posts: 540 Location: Right over here.
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 7:07 pm Post subject: |
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Knowing ciaranm, what he is actually asking is:
Are you using CFLAGS that break executables?
Are you using a -love or -nitro kernel, or any other kernel with loads of mostly untested exprimental patches ?
Are you using Reiser4?
Is your make.conf similar to this one?
Seems like the answer to all of these is "no".
( What he is trying to do is rule out user brain damage. You seem to be talking about actual Gentoo problems that are not your fault, though ) |
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crohnnie n00b
Joined: 23 Jan 2005 Posts: 9
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 7:15 pm Post subject: |
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Chaosite wrote: |
Seems like the answer to all of these is "no".
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You're right. My setup is pretty vanilla. Nothing out of the ordinary, just what the install docs recommended.
By the way, I got a really good laugh from the linked bug report. |
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wirwzd n00b
Joined: 03 Jul 2004 Posts: 68 Location: Leominster, Massachusetts USA
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 7:47 pm Post subject: |
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When I was using ~arch things were getting a little wacky, but I believe that can be attributed to a pickup in the pace of development and growth over the past 6 months. Which is a Good Thing®.
Not surprising as after all testing is by its definition is "A procedure for critical evaluation; a means of determining the presence, quality, or truth of something". So more testing == better Gentoo.
Switching to stable arch and over to the new /etc/portage system has evened things out greatlyas well. Toned down the CFLAGS to "-O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -pipe" and switched to the hardened toolchain. I was using "-O3 -ffast-math -mfpmath=sse,387 -march=pentium4 -pipe -fstack-protector-all"
On my laptop, most of the time I run the hardened kerenel with PaX/Grsecurity with fbspash/vesafb-tng patched in but switch between this, nitro, gentoo-dev-sources, and vanilla 2.6.11-rc1 with the ck patches, fbspash, vesafb-tng tossed in. My desktop and ultra-5 web/mail server run Gentoo as well.
There seems to have been much change lately, but it seems to be converging on a much easier to manage system (use flags, controlling updates, etc).
Also documentation has goten much better as well (except for maybe documentation of local use flags, but then again if you dont't know what it does, you probably shouldn't touch it .Maybe someting like emerge -l for use flags?)
Note this is not directed at the original poster (as above they seem to be running a pretty vanilla setup) just my $0.02 on the current state of Gentoo. _________________ Keith Alan Landry
My Band: Twelfth of Never
Last edited by wirwzd on Sun Jan 23, 2005 7:52 pm; edited 2 times in total |
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titan100 n00b
Joined: 06 Sep 2004 Posts: 61
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 7:48 pm Post subject: |
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I've not noticed this, I upgrade world every week, nothing has broken the last untold number of times. Most of the time when soemthing breaks, it's becuse I do something really stupid like rm some lib _________________ http://www.thoron.org |
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wirwzd n00b
Joined: 03 Jul 2004 Posts: 68 Location: Leominster, Massachusetts USA
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Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2005 8:16 pm Post subject: |
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Also, is most testing done with the 2.6 kernel/headers now?
Ive only been using gentoo for a few months and have never used the 2.4 kernel outside of my sparc server. I only do what's neccesary for security updates to this one. _________________ Keith Alan Landry
My Band: Twelfth of Never |
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Pajarico Guru
Joined: 01 May 2004 Posts: 493 Location: Madrid, España.
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Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2005 4:05 pm Post subject: |
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crohnnie to me it seems like you screwed your /etc files. Did you do etc-update every now and then?
_________________ Gentoo: the only software worth paying that is free. |
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Doc7 Tux's lil' helper
Joined: 18 Jul 2004 Posts: 133 Location: AC-Germany
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Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2005 4:31 pm Post subject: |
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i think i get crohnnie's point.
Lately there were more upgrades that needed manual intervention.
e.g.:
- problem regarding lidstdcc (or something), after last upgrade of gcc
- some broken snapshots, using emerge-webrsync
- about any kde-app "broken", when "-arts" did get a different behavior on kde-3.something
- some portage update, that wiped all use-flags
- kernel-2.6.9 had trouble with cdr
just to name some problems i realized.
These probs weren't really hard to fix most of the time, but at least they are annoying and prevent me from running updates unattended anymore
ohh... btw... i don't use any experimental use-/cflags either |
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krolden Apprentice
Joined: 28 May 2004 Posts: 293 Location: Belgium
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Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2005 4:39 pm Post subject: |
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I've been getting the feeling that it's getting more unstable lately.
I use a pretty vanilla setup though.
I might put Debian (prolly Woody... yeah Woody) on this box. I simply need a stable box. |
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crohnnie n00b
Joined: 23 Jan 2005 Posts: 9
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Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2005 9:04 pm Post subject: |
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Pajarico wrote: | crohnnie to me it seems like you screwed your /etc files. Did you do etc-update every now and then?
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I do update my config files after every emerge. I try to keep an up to date and stable system.
Originally. one of the major things that drew me to Gentoo was the portage system, but like Doc7 says, it just doesn't seem to be as hands-off as it used to be. |
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wirwzd n00b
Joined: 03 Jul 2004 Posts: 68 Location: Leominster, Massachusetts USA
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Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2005 2:22 pm Post subject: |
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Whats ironic about this discussion is right after I posted, my GCC was borked by the GCC upgrade/downgrade BS...lol.
But then again if I didn't have GCC marked for testing, I wouldn't have had the issue. So now I have it locked at gcc-3.4.3-r1 ~X86.
Was a pain to recover from _________________ Keith Alan Landry
My Band: Twelfth of Never |
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crohnnie n00b
Joined: 23 Jan 2005 Posts: 9
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Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2005 11:08 pm Post subject: |
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As an example of my original point, I upgraded one of my systems to an AMD64 on an MSI Neo MB this week. I spent 3 full evenings and all day Saturday trying to get a reasonably stable system running on this box. I ran into no less than a dozen compile errors that I had to overcome before I could get the system to load gnome. The system was crashing regularly.
The solution that I finally came up with was to download and install Fedora. I spent 1.5 hours to configure and install the OS and boot into a functional desktop (gnome or kde, I installed both). This compares to several days to get an unstable desktop with Gentoo. I mean no disrespect to those who are dedicated Gentoo users, but sometimes a person just wants something that works.
I guess I'm just a little tired of fighting against my OS in order to be productive. |
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ciaranm Retired Dev
Joined: 19 Jul 2003 Posts: 1719 Location: In Hiding
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Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2005 11:12 pm Post subject: |
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crohnnie wrote: | As an example of my original point, I upgraded one of my systems to an AMD64 on an MSI Neo MB this week. I spent 3 full evenings and all day Saturday trying to get a reasonably stable system running on this box. I ran into no less than a dozen compile errors that I had to overcome before I could get the system to load gnome. The system was crashing regularly. |
Fix your hardware, and next time don't overclock. |
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crohnnie n00b
Joined: 23 Jan 2005 Posts: 9
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Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2005 11:21 pm Post subject: |
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ciaranm wrote: | Fix your hardware, and next time don't overclock. |
Pretty standard hardware, and I don't overclock my system! |
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Lokheed Veteran
Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Posts: 1295 Location: /usr/src/linux
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Posted: Mon Jan 31, 2005 2:23 am Post subject: |
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People buy inferior mainboards and wonder why their systems are such a mess. Its the heart of your system guys...get quality, dont get cheap (yes I know there is worse than MSI, but its certainly not the most solid of boards). See the difference when you buy superior hardware.
I also dont understand how you spend an hour and a half installing a binary distro? It should take no longer than 10 mins. to copy the files from disk. Thats about it, you copy all the files and you are up and running. There is no extended install or extended partition formatting like Windows. Linux is basically setup with "cp". Aslong as the files are in the proper place, you are good to go. I setup up FC2 in 7 mins...
You shouldnt get mad at the hammer because you hit yourself in the thumb with it, but that is often the mentality of the person isnt it? You know how many posts I have seen where people swear up and down they hate Linux and Gentoo, and post back saying it was there mistake and now everything is peachy... |
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Gherald Veteran
Joined: 23 Aug 2004 Posts: 1399 Location: CLUAConsole
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Posted: Mon Jan 31, 2005 2:38 am Post subject: |
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Lokheed wrote: | People buy inferior mainboards and wonder why their systems are such a mess. Its the heart of your system guys...get quality, dont get cheap (yes I know there is worse than MSI, but its certainly not the most solid of boards). See the difference when you buy superior hardware. |
Inferior hardware?! The MSI Neos are some of the best motherboards on the AMD64 desktop market, right up there with Asus and Abit.
But the fact that it takes him that long to configure and install things makes me suspect he is was negligent with his hardware, which could have been damaged by something like ESD (note: just an example, it could have been any number of other little things that affect stability).
cronnhie, have you run memtest, cpuburn, etc and checked to see if your hardware is stable? non-reproducible emerge errors can also be indicative of hardware problems. For the majority of compile errors you encontered, have you confirmed that other people have experienced the same issues, and that none of them were user error on your part? |
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Lews_Therin l33t
Joined: 03 Oct 2003 Posts: 657 Location: Banned
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Posted: Mon Jan 31, 2005 5:42 am Post subject: |
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ciaranm wrote: | crohnnie wrote: | As an example of my original point, I upgraded one of my systems to an AMD64 on an MSI Neo MB this week. I spent 3 full evenings and all day Saturday trying to get a reasonably stable system running on this box. I ran into no less than a dozen compile errors that I had to overcome before I could get the system to load gnome. The system was crashing regularly. |
Fix your hardware, and next time don't overclock. |
Woot for assinine assumptions!
crohnnie wrote: | ciaranm wrote: | Fix your hardware, and next time don't overclock. |
Pretty standard hardware, and I don't overclock my system! |
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truekaiser l33t
Joined: 05 Mar 2004 Posts: 804
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Posted: Mon Jan 31, 2005 5:58 am Post subject: |
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Lews_Therin wrote: | ciaranm wrote: | crohnnie wrote: | As an example of my original point, I upgraded one of my systems to an AMD64 on an MSI Neo MB this week. I spent 3 full evenings and all day Saturday trying to get a reasonably stable system running on this box. I ran into no less than a dozen compile errors that I had to overcome before I could get the system to load gnome. The system was crashing regularly. |
Fix your hardware, and next time don't overclock. |
Woot for assinine assumptions!
crohnnie wrote: | ciaranm wrote: | Fix your hardware, and next time don't overclock. |
Pretty standard hardware, and I don't overclock my system! |
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yea he seems to do that alot. |
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