Post details: wiping out, moving on

7 December, 2006

Permalink 23:53 UTC, by Josh Saddler Email , 366 words, 1532 views   English (US)
Categories: Gentoo, Hardware

wiping out, moving on

There were some good comments on my last journal entry, thanks to everyone who responded. I'm happy to say that some of the problems have been dealt with. I've been talking to several developers who are rather likeminded; just check Planet's entries for the last week or so.

Anyway, I've decided to give my trusty ol' lappy das boot, by which I mean "the boot" rather than "the boat." :p

It's had Gentoo (Jackass! 2005.1, yay for my old project) installed on it since August 31, 2005. And what with one thing or another, it's just been slowing down. It's got a strange partition layout on it, too. A whole unused 10GB ntfs partition (never got around to installing Windows), a smaller Linux test partition, and the main desktop stuff. Rather inefficient usage of the 60GB disk, considering its recent use. The slowness, combined with space issues, and the fact that I haven't updated it since before gcc-4.1.1 went stable on x86 means that I've decided to just reinstall. Why spend a week compiling when everything will likely break if I try to simultaneously migrate to modular Xorg and switch from gcc-3.4, as well as all the crazy kernel/udev/nvidia/madwifi updates?

Time to wipe the disk and move on to something more recent. I've spent today moving /home to my new USB key and dumping it to my AMD64 box. It really highlights the slow-as-molasses USB1.1 on the laptop, as well as the crappy I/0 and slow system bus. I'll be doing some smarter performance tuning this time around, as well as installing only Xfce. I've been running mostly in Gnome because of some weird Xfce/Fluxbox issues, but with only 128MB memory, any and all workloads are just about unbearable.

Of course, the simpler solution would have been to just plug the laptop drive straight into the IDE cables on the AMD64 box for the updates, but unfortunately, the drive uses some weird laptop-only ATA/power combo connector, not the standard IDE connector. Oh well. I don't mind trying out the Installer LiveCD, especially since I'll have nothing to lose.

Guess I have to go re-read all the changes I've been making to the installation handbooks. ;)

Comments:

Comment from: Branno Badrljica [Visitor] Email
That "laptop only ATA/power combo" is AFAIK standard for 2.5" drives. It is mentioned and described in ATA standard.

You just need suitable adapter for it, which is not much more than piece of circuitboard aith a couple of connectors and power cable. Around here it costs something like $4...

PermalinkPermalink 8 December, 2006 @ 00:20

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Josh Saddler

The journal of Josh Saddler (nightmorph), a documentation developer.

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