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energyman76b
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 17, 2008 5:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

yes and yes. Luckily we have a local mirror. Sadly not everything is on that mirror...
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 17, 2008 7:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

energyman76b wrote:
audiodef wrote:
Windows and MacOS will pop up a dialog when something crashes, even if it's "DaBigBadProgram has unexpectedly quit because an error of type -1 occurred".

Shouldn't Gentoo have this, to at least give us a clue to use to figure out why Flumdebox has crashed?


that is the job of your desktop. Lo and behold - kde does exactly that!


No, it doesn't. I've had Firefox crash - simply disappear off my screen and nothing - let alone KDE - tells me anything.

Perhaps there's a package to install that will provide pop-ups when something crashes?
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energyman76b
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 17, 2008 7:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

of course - kde only notifies you when a kde app crashes.
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 17, 2008 9:42 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

What I don't like about Gentoo is that the install doesn't sync to The Dark Side of the Moon.

For one, it is too long. I can get all the way from Piper through Animals, at least, before it finishes, and it syncs with none of it.

All those clock alarms going off at once at the beginning of Time? Compiler output.
On the run? Compiler output.
Great Gig in the Sky? Compiler output.

Very uninspiring. I have tried this drunk, high, suspended on meat hooks over the sea, freebasing Ajax cleanser, sniffing glue, shooting mucilage, and still -- nothing of significance. I even tried fdisking to Echoes once, just to see. A whole lot of nothing. mke2fs -j barely doesn't even get me to the "Overhead the albatross" bit. Very limp.

At the same time, I can sync a Windows defrag to Side 3 of The Wall and it's COMPLETELY FREAKING AWESOME. Also I once Fatal Exception Errored during that "Bleating and babbling I fell on his neck with a scream" bit in Sheep. That was *FREAKING AMAZING*. I was tripping balls at the time. On 250 mics of Mark Shuttleworth's ego. I saw God. He looked a like Peter Stormare, the head nihilist from The Big Lebowski.

Anyway if I have one Gentoo complaint, this is most definitely it.

Otherwise, you know, I sync. I upgrade. Sometimes things break. Then I fix them. Usually it tells me I need a USE flag or something, or a revdep-rebuild fixes it. More of the same. Year six!

(EDIT: One time I did sync a Barry Manilow album to a "GENTOO IS DYING" thread on the forums here. But I won't go into that because I believe that pornography is off-topic.)
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audiodef
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 2:40 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

quag7 wins the "Most Interesting Post" award. :P
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Hypnos
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 8:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

audiodef wrote:
quag7 wins the "Most Interesting Post" award. :P

I agree -- a creative way to say, "I've been using Gentoo for 6 goddamn years and it works as good as it ever done did, quit yer bellyachin'."

I concur, but things can always be improved.
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Sprotte
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 12:09 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Windows and MacOS will pop up a dialog when something crashes, even if it's "DaBigBadProgram has unexpectedly quit because an error of type -1 occurred".

Shouldn't Gentoo have this, to at least give us a clue to use to figure out why Flumdebox has crashed?


I agree that this isn't the job of Gentoo. Gentoo is just a collection of stuff, and a package manager.

Flumdebox should print a meaningful error message to stdout, though.

Like so much other stuff, it's the problem of "upstream".

What do I not like about Gentoo? Again, I said that elsewhere, I'd like a slightly more intelligent and faster portage. Pr0ntage is the heart of Gentoo, so it should work as efficiently as possible. This doesn't mean I hate portage, I'm just trying to find fault because it's the theme of the thread :-)

The other thing is the config file updating / handling of it. This I really don't like.

I'd like to see some real progress, some real visions again. It seems like most of the manpower goes into maintenance. A lot of GNU/Linux seems like that atm (apart from the KDE project I guess, which seems amazing). E17 is a candidate for "vision", but it seems to be a walking dead.

There's almost no reason to update anymore, except to "keep with the times". Sure, yeah, the new baselayout and init scripts. I use stable, though. Yawn.

I know I should contribute myself, but I'm coding and mapping for a game project full-time (full-spare-time at least). And I don't know Python, and others don't seem to think that there are problems. And it does work, in principle.

Is there a current vision for Portage, and if so, what is it, and what are the plans to make it happen?
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Hypnos
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 1:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

sprotte,

I use cfg-update (supports both Portage and Paludis). Doesn't make it a pleasure to keep up with config files, but better than the alternatives I've tried.

As for the other stuff, GNOME 3 is in the works (I use GNOME primarily, not KDE), and also using GNUstep I follow Etoile closely.
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Sprotte
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 4:00 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Etoile looks interesting. At least they have a vision.

I was bored enough today to install pkgcore. I was pleasantly surprised that it's a small download, is a drop-in replacement, is faster (well, pmerge is) than portage, and seems to Just Work. Some things are still missing, so I'll keep using Portage, but pkgcore is impressive. The search tool (at least on full description searches) and cache regen are just as unspeakably slow as Portage's though. That hints at a systemic error (database problem). No match for FreeBSD's. I didn't see reverse dependencies either.

Well, at leat something is happening.
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 6:06 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Certain packages version, especially from VOIP (net-misc) are getting obsolete and users are forced to select newer onces from overlays like Asterisk 1.4
OpenSIPS doesn't even exist in overlays.

I wish Gentoo was more up-to date with these packages
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 6:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sprotte wrote:
I was pleasantly surprised that it's a small download, is a drop-in replacement, is faster (well, pmerge is) than portage,

what version of portage are you comparing it with?
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Sprotte
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 6:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm comparing pkgcore 0.4.7.12 with the latest stable portage, 2.1.4.5.

Even if the latest ~x86 portage is faster, I seriously doubt it would be 200% faster at calculating dependencies. The sync and regen aren't noticeably faster with pkgcore, but supposedly it scales really well with multiple CPUs (which I don't have).

pquery is also a lot faster than emerge -s/-S, it's not absolutely fair to compare since pquery's output isn't as verbose (it doesn't show license, latest installed version etc, only short description, repo and such). It's clear that it's faster though.

Some stuff's still missing, too.
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PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 10:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

F_ wrote:
I usually just run through the commands:
emerge --sync
emerge -avuDN world
emerge -av --depclean
dispatch-conf
revdep-rebuild


At some point (dispatch-conf?) I need to edit config files and I don't want to.
1. I am lazy (i know... but I am a student right now and during the semester i can't focus 100% on my machine :cry:)
2. I don't know wtf I am editing because I haven't studied to great length on the script/program the config deals with (why? see above)

That is all.


Merging new config files shouldn't be a big hassle unless you're doing something wrong. If you find it troublesome, just remember these simple rules:

1. If you don't even know what the config file is, you don't even have to look at it. Just replace it with the new one since you probably haven't made changes to a file you don't know about.
2. If you do know what the config file is, but you know you haven't made any changes from the default, just replace it with the new one.
3. If you do know what the config file is, and you have (or may have) made changes, just do a simple merge, keeping your changes while adding in the new stuff.

So (IMO) you should only ever need to "replace with new" or "merge." I don't think "keep original" is very useful.

Following these rules, I never spend more than a minute or two on config files; even if there are merges to do (which is rare). It usually only takes a few seconds. And I use etc-update which (I believe) is less capable than dispatch-conf.

Phew, what a relief! You do have time to maintain your Gentoo installation after all! I would get frustrated, too, if I thought that I had to study the origins and use of every config file before deciding what to do with new ones. Don't do it like that...
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 1:17 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

From the most annoying:

1. Portage speed.
Every subsequent version works slower than previous one when searching for package and its dependencies. If I first want to only display the dependency tree and see what USE flags are there, and then making changes to USE flags to see what will be sucked as dependencies additionally, it takes too much time - every particular display mills the HDD again from the start, even if it had found the same package a while ago.
During the compilation - yes, you can minimize console and do other things, but the compilation process uses so much CPU power that other things are quite hard to do. All the system slows down. There should be some way to prioritize the emerge.

2. Portage disk space.
Why every user is forced to maintain the WHOLE portage tree on his HDD if he uses maybe 1% of it at once? Wouldn't it be better if there were only one global portage tree [and maybe some mirrors of it] on the distro servers, where they could be queried remotely? E.g. if I want to emerge package X, emerge command could query the server about the package and its dependencies and then download what's needed.
It could additionaly save time and bandwidth of Gentoo servers, because updating the local tree won't be needed then. The tree would be up-to-date all the time since it's on the global server.
Of course, for the needs of networkless installation, the local tree could be used if it's there, which would take precedence then.

3. Portage evolution.
Too slow. Other distros already have packages, which are not accessible on Gentoo in a standard way. One have to use overlays and stuff to circumvent this. It's probably the most often mentioned drawback.

4. Portage dependencies and unmerging.
Already mentioned. Portage doesn't prevent from unmerging packages which are vital for other packages. It could break a big hole in one's system by accident. Before removing the package, it should display what other packages depend on it and would break, and then let the user decide [force remove of this package only, remove the dependant packages too, etc.].

5. USE flags descriptions.
Some flags are describet poorly. What a description it is for e.g. a "xyz" flag wchich goes: "XYZ support"? :P Oh please, I can know THAT one by myself from the flag's name! :P But it doesn't enlighten me any further. I still have to type that "XYX" on Google to see what's that enigmatic "XYZ" and what it means for that one particular package.

6. Binary packages.
Even if Gentoo's idea was to compile everything from sources, there isn't probably anything in Portage which might prevent it from using it to emerge binary packages. Some of them are in Portage already. Still it has to fetch it, unpack, launch some tools on it [no difference it's the compiler or something else] and install it. It still has to deal with dependencies. So what is the problem to have it both?

7. Manuals.
Even if Gentoo Handbook is great and contain many information, it would be good to clean it a little for a user who comes to Gentoo first time and doesn't know what he should do, which ISO he should download and why, what's the choice for desktop environments etc. FreeBSD Handbook is better in it, because the knowledge there is more structured. Gentoo Handbook seems like one of those old RPG games where you're reading about current event, choosing one of several options and go to the specified paragraph number to see what happens next.
OTOH I really appreciate HOWTOs from Gentoo Wiki, because they're more task-oriented and generally well explained.
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 1:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

sasq wrote:
During the compilation - yes, you can minimize console and do other things, but the compilation process uses so much CPU power that other things are quite hard to do. All the system slows down. There should be some way to prioritize the emerge.

This one you do have some control over. From the make.conf manpage:
Code:
PORTAGE_NICENESS = [number]
       The value of this variable will be added to the current nice level that emerge is running at.  In other words, this will not set
       the nice level, it will increment it.  For more information about nice levels and what are acceptable ranges, see nice(1).
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 2:03 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

sasq,

2. Play with rsync excludes using RSYNC_EXTRA_OPTS in your make.conf. But you may get weird unsatisfied dependencies if you exclude the wrong thing. Anyway, I find that with a fast hard disk it's not worth it -- searches are reasonably quick, and I have a cron script do my syncs at night while I'm asleep.

Remote queries would be a bad idea -- much more bandwidth would be used querying than syncing once/{day, week}. Think of your local Portage tree as a local cache.

3. It's much more hassle to make sure things compile cleanly on a variety of systems with various tools and USE flags, than simply creating binaries for certain targets and with options you control. Part of the problem is that many major software packages (e.g., GNOME) are designed for binary distribution, not easy source distribution, so they have a mess of switches that don't all play nicely together and circular dependencies.

4. Paludis has this feature; hopefully Portage will have it soon.

5. Agreed.

6. Large packages like OpenOffice are already offered in binary format; not a big time-saver with smaller packages on a reasonably new machine. Also, if you deviate from the USE flags used for binary distribution, you'll have to build from source anyway.

7. Unlike BSD, there are more novice-friendly Linux distros out there. Certainly, for power users the Gentoo handbook is quite friendly.

That said, FreeBSD's documentation is the best I've ever seen for an open source project. Maybe because they have coherent design philosophy and top-down governance ... Gentoo is merely a distribution, so a variety of tools can get any specific job done, and what these tools are change over time.
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 11:52 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

sasq wrote:

4. Portage dependencies and unmerging.
Already mentioned. Portage doesn't prevent from unmerging packages which are vital for other packages. It could break a big hole in one's system by accident. Before removing the package, it should display what other packages depend on it and would break, and then let the user decide [force remove of this package only, remove the dependant packages too, etc.].


Something called "Reverse dependencies" is needed to handle this. Portage never had it; it's why we're all (well, except the Paludis users) looking with envy to things like FreeBSD. Portage has revdep-rebuild however, which fixes broken dependencies by re-emerging the needed packages. It's a good idea to use revdep-rebuild sometimes to see if anything is broken. It's not the optimal solution though.

Quote:
6. Binary packages.
Even if Gentoo's idea was to compile everything from sources, there isn't probably anything in Portage which might prevent it from using it to emerge binary packages. Some of them are in Portage already. Still it has to fetch it, unpack, launch some tools on it [no difference it's the compiler or something else] and install it. It still has to deal with dependencies. So what is the problem to have it both?


Simple, manpower is the problem. Someone would have to compile and maintain a huge, ever-changing pile of packages. Not a nice job. If you have two releases per year, it's doable, but Gentoo has no such releases; it's ever changing.
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Hypnos
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 1:06 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sprotte wrote:
[...] It's a good idea to use revdep-rebuild sometimes to see if anything is broken. It's not the optimal solution though.

I run it (well, the Paludis equivalent, reconcilio) after any upgrade of a package that contains dynamic libraries.

The question of whether there's a better way to do this has been something bugging devs a long time. The problem is that there are many different kinds of "linking" (e.g. Java classes), and for some interfaces inconsistencies can only be understood at runtime (e.g., Xorg modules).

This is why I have never understood the benefit of deep upgrades. If you upgrade only world packages, these things are more likely to work as the ebuild devs have already figured out versioning in the dependency specifications.
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 9:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

What don't I like?

Not the first or last time I'll say this, but: It should be an absolute requirement for every package to list, in detail, what each USE flag actually does for that package. The global list is no help - for example, the "mp3" flag says something like "Enables MP3 support." Well, no kidding, Sherlock. But what does that mean? If I don't flip it will I not be able to listen to MP3s? What does it do, for which packages, and what are the consequences? These are things you don't find out about until you try to do something, and it doesn't work, and you find out from forum posts that you should have set the "tralfaz" flag before compiling 30 packages.

Most of my gripes have already been listed by others. Slowness to incorporate packages into the stable tree, poor portage performance... I hear portage 2.2 is better, but it's not stable yet (see 1).

...and in the interest of equal time, what do I like?

I like that I can keep the system up-to-date on a rolling basis without ever having to "upgrade" as you would with e.g. Fedora or OpenSUSE or Ubuntu.

I like having some control over what is installed. Every open-source OS has its version of "dependency hell," but with Gentoo, by controlling USE flags carefully, you can remove stuff you don't use, which means removing potential dependency problems.

Also, I've learned a lot about Linux in general by using Gentoo.
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 2:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

blandoon wrote:
What don't I like?

Not the first or last time I'll say this, but: It should be an absolute requirement for every package to list, in detail, what each USE flag actually does for that package. The global list is no help - for example, the "mp3" flag says something like "Enables MP3 support." Well, no kidding, Sherlock. But what does that mean? If I don't flip it will I not be able to listen to MP3s? What does it do, for which packages, and what are the consequences? These are things you don't find out about until you try to do something, and it doesn't work, and you find out from forum posts that you should have set the "tralfaz" flag before compiling 30 packages.
The following commands might help you
Code:
euse -i <USE FLAG>
equery uses <package name>

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 3:46 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

ppurka wrote:
The following commands might help you
Code:
euse -i <USE FLAG>
equery uses <package name>

This does help for the USE flags that are explicated in packages' metadata.xml, but not all USE flags are described in this way. use.local.desc is currently autogenerated, but not use.desc -- this leaves nearly 400 USE flags without any package-specific info.

More at GLEP 56.
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 5:04 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The one thing I would like to see in Gentoo is a better version of genkernel I guess. A precompiled kernel that doesn't require a long time genkernel compile or a manual build. That's just me being lazy though.
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 3:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

tylerwylie wrote:
The one thing I would like to see in Gentoo is a better version of genkernel I guess. A precompiled kernel that doesn't require a long time genkernel compile or a manual build. That's just me being lazy though.


I never did a genkernel, but I think that a genkernel is againts the idea about Gentoo...it's all about choice and the kernel config is an important part.

So I want to configure my kernel by me self :P
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 7:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hypnos wrote:
ppurka wrote:
The following commands might help you
Code:
euse -i <USE FLAG>
equery uses <package name>

This does help for the USE flags that are explicated in packages' metadata.xml, but not all USE flags are described in this way. use.local.desc is currently autogenerated, but not use.desc -- this leaves nearly 400 USE flags without any package-specific info.


Indeed. For example:

Code:
forklift ~ # euse -i mp3
global use flags (searching: mp3)
************************************************************
[+ C  ] mp3 - Add support for reading mp3 files

local use flags (searching: mp3)
************************************************************
no matching entries found


And even if it returned anything, we still need a better description than "Add support for reading mp3 files," which is pretty self-explanatory. Maybe mp3 isn't the best example, but it would be nice to know exactly what a flag does for each package that implements it.
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PostPosted: Tue Oct 21, 2008 12:15 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

d2_racing wrote:
tylerwylie wrote:
The one thing I would like to see in Gentoo is a better version of genkernel I guess. A precompiled kernel that doesn't require a long time genkernel compile or a manual build. That's just me being lazy though.


I never did a genkernel, but I think that a genkernel is againts the idea about Gentoo...it's all about choice and the kernel config is an important part.

So I want to configure my kernel by me self :P
So shouldn't I be able to grab a prepackaged kernel, as long as the choice is there? Seems what you're talking about is lack of choice...
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