Steven Susbauer wrote:
stage 3 is the suggested way of doing it nowadays anyway. If you're a
sp33d d3m0n you can always run the bootstrap and emerge -e system,
emerge -e world after you've installed everything. It will take a long
while, but since it's still up and running while it does this, t
stage 3 is the suggested way of doing it nowadays anyway. If you're a sp33d d3m0n you can always run the bootstrap and emerge -e system, emerge -e world after you've installed everything. It will take a long while, but since it's still up and running while it does this, that's generally okay.
On 12
Dale wrote:
You should have plenty of space then. You are not half way there yet.
If you put a full KDE on there, it will be close.
You may want to do a env-update then exit the chroot. Just type in
env-update the exit to exit. Then go back and chroot in again following
this:
mount -t pr
>
>
> FilesystemSize Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> tmpfs 252M 5.2M 247M 3% /
> /newroot/dev/cdroms/cdrom0
>59M 59M 0 100% /mnt/cdrom
> /dev/loop/052M 52M 0 100% /mnt/livecd
> tmpfs 252M 1.2M 251M 1%
Dale wrote:
Mike Kenny wrote:
I am trying to install gentoo from the web by following the steps in
the Gentoo Linux x86 Handbook for a stage 1 install. This works well
up to a point.
When I execute
# emerge --emptytree system
after some time the process terminates with a message similar to
Mike Kenny wrote:
> I am trying to install gentoo from the web by following the steps in
> the Gentoo Linux x86 Handbook for a stage 1 install. This works well
> up to a point.
>
> When I execute
> # emerge --emptytree system
> after some time the process terminates with a message similar to
>
>
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