10 2011-08-03
Timezone

You first need to select your timezone so that your system knows where it is located. Look for your timezone in /usr/share/zoneinfo, then copy it to /etc/localtime. Please avoid the /usr/share/zoneinfo/Etc/GMT* timezones as their names do not indicate the expected zones. For instance, GMT-8 is in fact GMT+8.

# ls /usr/share/zoneinfo
(Suppose you want to use GMT)
# cp /usr/share/zoneinfo/GMT /etc/localtime
Installing the Sources Choosing a Kernel

The core around which all distributions are built is the Linux kernel. It is the layer between the user programs and your system hardware. Gentoo provides its users several possible kernel sources. A full listing with description is available at the Gentoo Kernel Guide.

For alpha-based systems we have gentoo-sources (the default 2.6 kernel source).

# emerge gentoo-sources

When you take a look in /usr/src you should see a symlink called linux pointing to your kernel source. In this case, the installed kernel source points to gentoo-sources-. Your version may be different, so keep this in mind.

# ls -l /usr/src/linux
lrwxrwxrwx    1 root     root           12 Oct 13 11:04 /usr/src/linux -> linux-

Now it is time to configure and compile your kernel source. You can use genkernel for this, which will build a generic kernel as used by the Installation CD. We explain the "manual" configuration first though, as it is the best way to optimize your environment.

If you want to manually configure your kernel, continue now with Default: Manual Configuration. If you want to use genkernel you should read Alternative: Using genkernel instead.

Default: Manual Configuration Introduction

Manually configuring a kernel is often seen as the most difficult procedure a Linux user ever has to perform. Nothing is less true -- after configuring a couple of kernels you don't even remember that it was difficult ;)

However, one thing is true: you must know your system when you start configuring a kernel manually. Most information can be gathered by emerging pciutils (emerge pciutils) which contains lspci. You will now be able to use lspci within the chrooted environment. You may safely ignore any pcilib warnings (like pcilib: cannot open /sys/bus/pci/devices) that lspci throws out. Alternatively, you can run lspci from a non-chrooted environment. The results are the same. You can also run lsmod to see what kernel modules the Installation CD uses (it might provide you with a nice hint on what to enable).

Now go to your kernel source directory and execute make menuconfig. This will fire up an ncurses-based configuration menu.

# cd /usr/src/linux
# make menuconfig

You will be greeted with several configuration sections. We'll first list some options you must activate (otherwise Gentoo will not function, or not function properly without additional tweaks).

Activating Required Options

First go to File Systems and select support for the filesystems you use. Don't compile them as modules, otherwise your Gentoo system will not be able to mount your partitions. Also select Virtual memory and /proc file system.

File systems --->
  Pseudo Filesystems --->
    [*] /proc file system support
    [*] Virtual memory file system support (former shm fs)

(Select one or more of the following options as needed by your system)
  <*> Reiserfs support
  <*> Ext3 journalling file system support
  <*> JFS filesystem support
  <*> Second extended fs support
  <*> XFS filesystem support

If you are using PPPoE to connect to the Internet or you are using a dial-up modem, you will need the following options in the kernel:

Device Drivers --->
  Networking support --->
    <*> PPP (point-to-point protocol) support
    <*>   PPP support for async serial ports
    <*>   PPP support for sync tty ports

The two compression options won't harm but are not definitely needed, neither does the PPP over Ethernet option, that might only be used by ppp when configured to do kernel mode PPPoE.

If you require it, don't forget to include support in the kernel for your ethernet card.

The following options are recommended as well:

General setup --->
  <*> SRM environment through procfs
  <*> Configure uac policy via sysctl

Plug and Play configuration --->
  <*> Plug and Play support
  <M>   ISA Plug and Play support

SCSI support --->
  SCSI low-level drivers --->
    <*> SYM53C8XX Version 2 SCSI support (NEW)
    <*> Qlogic ISP SCSI support

Network device support --->
  Ethernet (10 or 100 Mbit) --->
    <M> DECchip Tulip (dc21x4x) PCI support
    <M> Generic DECchip & DIGITAL EtherWORKS PCI/EISA
    <M> EtherExpressPro/100 support (eepro100)
    <M> EtherExpressPro/100 support (e100)
  Ethernet (1000 Mbit) --->
    <M> Alteon AceNIC
      [*] Omit support for old Tigon I
    <M> Broadcom Tigon3
  [*] FDDI driver support
  <M> Digital DEFEA and DEFPA
  <*> PPP support
    <*> PPP Deflate compression

Character devices --->
  [*] Support for console on serial port
  [*] Direct Rendering Manager

File systems --->
  <*> Kernel automounter version 4 support
  Network File Systems --->
    <*> NFS
      [*] NFSv3 client
      <*> NFS server
      [*] NFSv3 server
  Partition Types --->
    [*] Advanced partition selection
    [*] Alpha OSF partition support
  Native Language Support
    <*> NLS ISO 8859-1

Sound --->
  <M> Sound card support
    <M> OSS sound modules
      [*] Verbose initialisation
      [*] Persistent DMA buffers
      <M> 100% Sound Blaster compatibles

When you've finished configuring the kernel, continue with Compiling and Installing.

Compiling and Installing

Now that your kernel is configured, it is time to compile and install it. Exit the configuration and start the compilation process:

# make && make modules_install
# make boot

When the kernel has finished compiling, copy the kernel image to /boot. Recent kernels might create vmlinux instead of vmlinux.gz. Keep this in mind when you copy your kernel image.

# cp arch/alpha/boot/vmlinux.gz /boot/

Now continue with Kernel Modules.

Alternative: Using genkernel

If you are reading this section, you have chosen to use our genkernel script to configure your kernel for you.

Now that your kernel source tree is installed, it's now time to compile your kernel by using our genkernel script to automatically build a kernel for you. genkernel works by configuring a kernel nearly identically to the way our Installation CD kernel is configured. This means that when you use genkernel to build your kernel, your system will generally detect all your hardware at boot-time, just like our Installation CD does. Because genkernel doesn't require any manual kernel configuration, it is an ideal solution for those users who may not be comfortable compiling their own kernels.

Now, let's see how to use genkernel. First, emerge the genkernel ebuild:

# emerge genkernel

Now, compile your kernel sources by running genkernel all. Be aware though, as genkernel compiles a kernel that supports almost all hardware, this compilation will take quite a while to finish!

Note that, if your boot partition doesn't use ext2 or ext3 as filesystem you need to manually configure your kernel using genkernel --menuconfig all and add support for your filesystem in the kernel (i.e. not as a module).

# genkernel all

Once genkernel completes, a kernel, full set of modules and initial ram disk (initrd) will be created. We will use the kernel and initrd when configuring a boot loader later in this document. Write down the names of the kernel and initrd as you will need it when writing the bootloader configuration file. The initrd will be started immediately after booting to perform hardware autodetection (just like on the Installation CD) before your "real" system starts up.

# ls /boot/kernel* /boot/initramfs-*
Kernel Modules