Gentoo Linux

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by DaleNixon (talk | contribs) at 03:00, 1 October 2003 (Gentoo is not a LiveCD only distribution like Knoppix! Added mention of USE FLAGS and current ports.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.


Gentoo Linux is a high performance, sources-based Linux distribution. It has an advanced *BSD-style package management system called Portage which is written in Python. Gentoo is hailed as a meta-distribution because of its near infinite configurability. This includes the optional use of USE FLAGS, which describe the hardware and software features the user would like to include while building packages. The originator and current head of the Gentoo project is Daniel Robbins.

One of the goals for Gentoo Linux 1.4 is the addition of the GRP--the Gentoo Reference Platform--which will allow users to install precompiled packages built to certain baselines specifications. This may be an attempt to appease naysayers; some believe that Gentoo users spend too much time compiling and recompiling common packages.

It is also possible to create tarballs of packages for distribution to other machines; this is particularly useful in the case of a homogenous computer setting, where one machine can build new or updated packages and the resulting precompiled tarballs can be installed on the rest of the machines without needing any further modification or rebuilding.

In June 2003, Zachary Welch, a long-standing developer and sponsor of Gentoo, announced that he was unhappy with the direction of Gentoo and was creating a new distribution. This is to be maintained by a new non-profit organisation, the Zynot Foundation.

Ports of Gentoo exist for the x86, PowerPC, Sparc, and HPPA platforms at the time of this edit.