Gentoo: Installing / Administering on Multiple Machines
Joshua Pollak
pardsbane at offthehill.org
Thu Feb 12 00:25:39 EST 2004
On Feb 11, 2004, at 8:10 PM, Gregory Boyce wrote:
> I've been a Gentoo user off and on since early 2002, and I'm currently
> running it on most of my machines, including my desktop at work. Even
> with this, I definitely agree it's not a good idea to use a widescale
> deployment of machines with Gentoo. I'm actually in the process right
> now of fixing some problems that a "emerge -u world" caused on my
> machine, and I'm not running their "unstable" branch.
>
Yeah, I know these problems occur. I've been using gentoo for a very
long time. I imagine that if we did roll this out, we'd have a testing
box where we test all our upgrades before rolling them out. We
certainly wouldn't have any sort of automated emerge -u world script.
Basically, as a software developer, I work with tons of libraries. It
would be extremely advantageous to install and uninstall packages the
Gentoo way when I'm exploring options, as compared to RedHat way.
> 1) Go with binary packages. Gentoo does support binary packages
> (although I haven't used them). You should be able to build them
> exactly how you want on one machine, and distribute to the rest. No
> need to expend binary compile time * the number of machines.
That was the plan. The real question was, once I have my compiled
binary packages, how do I go about doing an install on other machines?
> 2) Compile for lowest common denominator. It'll be hellish trying to
Definitely.
> 3) Look into the Gentoo Enterprise initiative that was just announced
> in
> last week's gentoo news letter
> (http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gwn/20040202-newsletter.xml). It's just
Thanks, I will.
> 4) If you're not going with binary packages and the enterprise edition
> doesn't work out, consider running your own rsync repository that you
> update by hand. That way you can only upload the updated packages that
> you've confirmed work. Note that this would only be worthwhile if
> you're supporting a LOT of machines. If it's just a handful, fixing
> the
> machines that end up with the occasional issue might be less of a time
> sink.
Yeah, and interesting idea, but I think I'll be sticking with binary
packages. I know there is the new binary package installation process,
maybe I'll check that out.
--
Bush/Cheney '04:
Thanks for not paying attention.
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