Before we start, we first list what hardware requirements you need to successfully install Gentoo on your box.
| Apple NewWorld Machines |
|---|
| Apple OldWorld machines |
| Genesi |
| IBM |
| Memory |
| Diskspace |
| Swap space |
Be sure to read the
Gentoo Linux can be installed using a
Installations using a stage1 or stage2 tarball file are not documented in the
Gentoo Handbook - please read the
An Installation CD is a bootable medium which contains a self-sustained Gentoo environment. It allows you to boot Linux from the CD. During the boot process your hardware is detected and the appropriate drivers are loaded. The Gentoo Installation CDs are maintained by Gentoo developers.
There currently are two Installation CDs available:
Gentoo also provides a Package CD. This is not an Installation CD but an additional resource that you can exploit during the installation of your Gentoo system. It contains prebuilt packages (also known as the GRP set) that allow you to easily and quickly install additional applications (such as OpenOffice.org, KDE, GNOME, ...) immediately after the Gentoo installation and right before you update your Portage tree.
The use of the Package CD is covered later in this document.
You can download the Universal Installation CD (and, if you want to, the
Packages CD as well) from one of our
Inside those directories you'll find ISO files. Those are full CD images which you can write on a CD-R.
After downloading the file, you can verify its integrity to see if it is corrupted or not:
To fetch our public key using the GnuPG application, run the following command:
$ gpg --keyserver subkeys.pgp.net --recv-keys 0x17072058
Now verify the signature:
$ gpg --verify <signature file> <downloaded iso>
To burn the downloaded ISO(s), you have to select raw-burning. How you
do this is highly program-dependent. We will discuss
On NewWorld machines place the Installation CD in the CD-ROM and reboot the system. When the system-start-bell sounds, simply hold down the 'C' until the CD loads.
After the Installation CD loaded, you will be greeted by a friendly welcome
message and a
We provide one generic kernel,
You can tweak some kernel options at this prompt. The following table lists some of the available boot options you can add:
| Boot Option | Description |
|---|---|
To use the above options, at the
boot: apple video=ofonly
If you don't need to add any options, just hit enter at this prompt, and a
complete Gentoo Linux environment will be loaded from the CD. Continue with
On the Pegasos simply insert the CD and at the SmartFirmware boot-prompt type
If you have an OldWorld Mac the bootable portion of the livecd can't be used. The most simple solution is to use MacOS 9 or earlier to bootstrap into a Linux environment with a tool called BootX.
First, download
To prepare BootX, start the BootX App Control Panel. First select the Options
dialog and check
cdroot root=/dev/ram0 init=linuxrc loop=image.squashfs looptype=squashfs console=tty0
Check once more to make sure the settings are correct and then save the
configuration. This saves typing just in case it doesn't boot or something is
missing. Press the Linux button at the top of the window. If everything goes
correctly, it should boot into the Installation CD. Continue with
You will be greeted by a root ("#") prompt on the current console. You can also switch to other consoles by pressing Alt-F2, Alt-F3 and Alt-F4. Get back to the one you started on by pressing Alt-F1. Due to the keyboard layout, you may need to press Alt-fn-Fx on Apple machines.
If you are installing Gentoo on a system with a non-US keyboard, use
(PPC uses x86 keymaps on most systems. The mac/ppc keymaps provided on the Installation CD are ADB keymaps and unusable with the Installation CD kernel) # ls /usr/share/keymaps/i386
Now load the keymap of your choice:
# loadkeys be-latin1
Now continue with
When the Installation CD boots, it tries to detect all your hardware devices and loads the appropriate kernel modules to support your hardware. In the vast majority of cases, it does a very good job. However, in some cases, it may not auto-load the kernel modules you need. If the PCI auto-detection missed some of your system's hardware, you will have to load the appropriate kernel modules manually.
In the next example we try to load the
# modprobe airport
On older iMacs, sometimes the network card is not detected properly. These use the BMAC driver:
# modprobe bmac
If you are an advanced user, you might want to tweak the IDE hard disk
performance using
# hdparm -tT /dev/hda
To tweak, you can use any of the following examples (or experiment
yourself) which use
Activate DMA: # hdparm -d 1 /dev/hdaActivate DMA + Safe Performance-enhancing Options: # hdparm -d 1 -A 1 -m 16 -u 1 -a 64 /dev/hda
If you plan on giving other people access to your installation
environment or you want to chat using
To change the root password, use the
# passwd New password:(Enter your new password) Re-enter password:(Re-enter your password)
To create a user account, we first enter their credentials, followed by
its password. We use
# useradd -m -G users john # passwd john New password:(Enter john's password) Re-enter password:(Re-enter john's password)
You can change your user id from root to the newly created user by using
# su - john
If you want to view the Gentoo Handbook (either from-CD or online) during the
installation, make sure you have created a user account (see
If you want to view the documentation on the CD you can immediately run
# links /mnt/cdrom/docs/html/index.html
However, it is preferred that you use the online Gentoo Handbook as it will be
more recent than the one provided on the CD. You can view it using
# links http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/handbook/
You can go back to your original terminal by pressing
If you want to allow other users to access your computer during the
Gentoo installation (perhaps because those users are going to help you
install Gentoo, or even do it for you), you need to create a user
account for them and perhaps even provide them with your root password
(
To fire up the SSH daemon, execute the following command:
# /etc/init.d/sshd start
To be able to use sshd, you first need to set up your networking. Continue with
the chapter on