Am 08.09.2013 20:51, schrieb Benjamin Block:
> Hej folks,
> 
> I wonder what is a good way to create an image of a gentoo-system, so
> that one can apply it later to the same or other computers.
> 
> In my case it is a rather simple setup: one partition, no encryption or
> lvm. Its a debug-setup, so its only used for certain programming-tasks
> and not for daily work, so no need for something fancy. The time I setup
> that system I also used only conservative compilation-flags and
> optimisation, so that it can be used on other CPUs (well, they have to
> be x86_64 and have to have mmx/sse[23] - but I think every setup that I
> intend to use this on will have these properties).
> 
> So I reckon that one could just use tar with permission-preservation and
> some excludes like dev/sys/proc/tmp. But is this a good idea or is there
> a better way to do this? I never cloned a gentoo-system, so thats why I
> would like to be at least somewhat sure about it, so that I don't have
> to reconfigure it later again, because I messed it up :D
> 

Tar with permission preservation is fine. Just exlude everything in
dev/sys/proc/tmp as you said. But make sure, that these directories are
in your tar file, it does not matter if they are empty, but they have to
exist in order to boot proplery.

One special case. To boot you most likely will need /dev/console and
/dev/null. Just inlcude those two device nodes in your tar file.

Optionally use compression (gz, bz2, xz, ...) on your tar to safe some
space.

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature

Reply via email to