gentoo-install/README.md

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## About gentoo-install
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This script performs a reasonably minimal installation of gentoo. An EFI system is highly
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recommended, but legacy BIOS boot is also supported. The script supports both systemd (default)
and OpenRC as the init system. The main performed steps are:
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1. Partitioning
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1. Download & cryptographically verify stage3 tarball
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1. Extract stage3
1. Initialize portage
1. Install kernel
1. Install additional software
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The system will use `sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin`, which should be suitable
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to boot most systems out of the box. It is strongly recommend to replace this kernel
with a custom built one, when the system is functional. If you are looking for a way
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to detect and manage your kernel configuration, have a look at [autokernel](https://github.com/oddlama/autokernel).
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## Quick start
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Edit `gentoo.conf` and execute `./install -i` in any live system.
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You can review the partitioning that will be applied before anything critical is done.
Afterwards, this will apply the partitioning scheme and properly
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install the selected stage3 gentoo system. By default, the new system will use
`sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin` as the kernel, and an initramfs generated by gentoo's genkernel to provide
a bootable environment. The script can optionally install `sshd` to
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allow for a convenient setup of the new system afterwards.
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## Overview
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Here is a more complete overview of what this script does:
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1. Partition disks (supports gpt, raid, luks)
1. Download and cryptographically verify the newest stage3 tarball
1. Extract the stage3 tarball
1. Sync portage tree
1. Configure portage (create zz-autounmask files, configure MAKEOPTS, EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS)
1. Select the fastest gentoo mirrors
1. Configure the base system
1. Install git (so you can add your portage overlays later)
1. Install `sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin` (until you replace it)
1. Create efibootmgr entry or install syslinux depending on whether your system uses EFI
1. Generate a basic fstab
1. Ask for a root password
Also, optionally the following will be done:
* Install sshd with secure config
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* Install dhcpcd (only for OpenRC)
* Install additional packages provided in config
Anything else is probably out of scope for this script,
but you can obviously do anything later on when the system is booted.
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I highly recommend building a custom kernel. Have a look at the [Recommendations](#Recommendations) section.
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## Install
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Installing gentoo with this script is simple.
1. Boot into the live system of your choice. As the script requires some utilities,
I recommend using a live system where you can quickly install new software.
Any [Arch Linux](https://www.archlinux.org/download/) live iso works fine.
2. Clone this repository
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3. Edit `gentoo.conf`, and particularily pay attention to
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the device which will be partitioned. The script will ask for confirmation
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before doing any partitioning - but better be safe there.
4. Execute `./install -i`. The script will tell you if your live
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system is missing any required software.
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The script should be able to run without any user supervision after partitioning, but depending
on the current state of the gentoo repository you might need to intervene in case a package fails
to emerge. The critical commands will ask you what to do in case of a failure.
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### Config
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The config file `gentoo.conf` allows you to adjust some parameters of the installation.
The most important ones will probably be the device to partition, and the stage3 tarball name
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to install. By default you will get the hardened nomultilib profile without systemd.
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### (Optional) sshd
The script can provide a fully configured ssh daemon with reasonably good security settings.
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It will by default only allow ed25519 keys, restrict key exchange
algorithms to a reasonable subset, disable any password based authentication,
and only allow root to login.
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You can provide keys that will be written to root's `.ssh/authorized_keys` file. This will allow
you to directly continue your setup with infrastructure management software such as ansible or [simple_automation](https://github.com/oddlama/simple_automation).
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### (Optional) Additional packages
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You can add any amount of additional packages to be installed on the target system.
These will simply be passed to a final `emerge` call before the script is done, and autounmasking will also be done automatically.
It is recommended to keep this to a minimum, because of the heavily "interactive" nature of gentoo package management ;)
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### Troubleshooting
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In theory, after the initial sanity check, the script should be able to finish unattendedly.
But given the unpredictability of future gentoo versions, you might still run into an issue.
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The script checks every command for success, so if anything fails during installation,
you will be given a proper message of what went wrong. Inside the chroot,
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most commands will be executed in a checked loop, and allow you to interactively
fix problems with a shell, to retry, or to skip the command.
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## Recommendations
There are some things that you probably want to do after installing the base system,
or should consider:
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* Read the news with `eselect news read`.
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* Use a custom kernel (config and hardening, see [autokernel](https://github.com/oddlama/autokernel)), and remove `gentoo-kernel-bin`
* Adjust `/etc/portage/make.conf`
- Set `CFLAGS` to `-O2 -pipe -march=native` for native builds
- Set `CPU_FLAGS_X86` using the `cpuid2cpuflags` tool
- Set `FEATURES="buildpkg"` if you want to build binary packages
* Use a safe umask like `umask 0077`
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## Acknowledgements
This installer bundles a statically linked copy of newt
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## References
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* [Sakaki's EFI Install Guide](https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Sakaki%27s_EFI_Install_Guide)
* [Gentoo AMD64 Handbook](https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Handbook:AMD64)