Neil Bothwick wrote: > 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.
I don't have the space for a backup, certainly not a full back up of even just the OS. I might could do one without all the KDE and other extras but that's not a whole lot better than just reinstalling. I keep copies of /etc and my world file on a stick thingy. > >> 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. I did post it a week or so ago in another thread. I thought it was a KDE issue at first since I first noticed it in KDE. After a few other tests, I found out it did the same outside of KDE. I went back to see what was updated and didn't find anything that I thought could cause such a thing so I thought I would try a older kernel, with no init thingy. It worked. Then I tried the exact same kernel as I was using before but removed the init options. It worked then. So far the only way I can get it to fail is to boot with the inti thingy. That is even tho I used the exact same kernel. Confuses me too. > >> 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. > > Yea, I know all that. They are breaking one thing to fix something else so that they don't have to deal with fixing what they broke. I got that a long time ago. ;-) When I reboot, I'll use the init thingy and post all this in a new thread. Dale :-) :-) -- I am only responsible for what I said ... Not for what you understood or how you interpreted my words! Miss the compile output? Hint: EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--quiet-build=n"