On Tue, 27 Mar 2012 16:43:38 -0500, Dale wrote: > That's why I want something that I can install fast. Gentoo certainly > isn't the right choice for that. If Kubuntu fails, I can just reinstall > and not format /home.
That's why ${DEITY} gave us backups: no need to reinstall just roll back to the last working version. Even if your backup is a couple of weeks old, it with be more up to date than any distro CD. > Right now, if Gentoo fails to boot because of the init thingy, I have no > idea how to fix it. None at all. I know the basics of what it does but > no idea how to fix it when it breaks. That's where I am now with regard > to my other post. I can't su to root when using the init thingy but can > when I don't use the init thingy. I have no clue where to even start to > fix it. Why not post the details of it? All an initramfs is is an init script and a few binaries. Extract the init script, the initramfs file is a plain cpio archive, and post it here. > Me clueless since this is something I tried to avoid in the past and not > sure why it is needed now either. Because upstream decided to work this way to avoid the problems caused by the anachronistic separation of / and /usr. This is not so much a decision by the udev devs as an acceptance that the current filesystem organisation was becoming ever more unworkable in the general case. -- Neil Bothwick "Self-explanatory": technospeak for "Incomprehensible & undocumented"
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