Le 15 Nov à 07:30, Brad Fuller ecrivait: > > It's a lot of work but it's been very stable for me. > Thanks Mark, I'll check it out. How long does it take to start from > scratch? I have an P4 1.8 that I'd try it on. > Then, how long does it take from start (from the small set you > mentioned) to a full DAW? Hi, I take permission to respond to share antother experience with gentoo :). If you absolutely don't know gentoo, with a barely solid knowledge of a linux system, I would say you'd need more or less one day to get a working system (with ardour and MuSE, and other smaller audio apps). You need to know how to compile a kernel (and patch it for real time of course). Gentoo docs are really well written, and you need to read them when installing, especially the handbook. http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/?catid=install (there are many translations). Install the pro-audio overlay, as it was said, before installing any audio software or you'll need to recompile mostly all of them. http://proaudio.tuxfamily.org/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page > Also, what is your experience with full distro upgrades? Absolutely no problem when upgrading from 2006.0 to 2006.1, there was just a trick to get rezound working again. Someone indicated me that trick here, in less than a hour if I remember well :). > You say you do minor upgrades while working during the day. Can you > really do real-time audio work while upgrading? Yes. I have real time without xrun while compiling GCC, which last for more than half an hour, like I did yesterday. But it's the same with other very large source codes like QT or X. I check for updates everyday, and I'm a very happy gentoo user after some years with Debian. > I have to admit, it sounds like a lot of crunching. What kind of > problems do you run into? My biggest complaint for running from source, > as anyone would attest, is the dependencies - secondary sources that I > have to find and compiles. When finally found, you have to compile, > and then there may be yet another problem with the dependency! This > could be a continuous problem, as you probably very well know. Is this > reasonably accommodated with Gentoo (like using a package manager)? Portage with the emerge tool manages very well dependencies, I never had to look for librairies or install libraries separately before installing something. Instead of apt-get install <something>, you just emerge <something> and it works quite the same way. You may want to consider system tools like eix, and then udept, when you're confortable with a Gentoo system, for a very precise dependencies, and reverse dependencies, management. Cheers, Y.