In order to be able to Further configure my system, I am looking for a fork of my current OS (artix with openRC as init system) in which i am able to compile every package from source in order to Further configure it with make flags. I am currently not using gentoo, and because the packages in its default repos are only updated when necessary, and the break-my-gentoo repo is more of a joke than an actual replacement for arch. However, if someone can recommand me a repo with similar package updates as arch, I would be looking at installing gentoo.

EDIT: Thank you for Pointing out to me that Gentoo can have newer Packages too. I did indeed not know this, and therefore just stamped off Gentoo as a stable rolling release distro. I will be looking at learning more about gentoo and eventually installing it, once I know how to use portage.

38 points
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Not sure, but you can get a very similar experience with fork as follows:

Step 1. Download and install arch.

Step 2. Go to kitchen and grab fork.

Step 3. Jab fork into you eye ball socket

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2 points

“Awwww”

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41 points

Just use Gentoo. Do it from scratch on the command line without the GUI installer like a pro 👍

At the very least you’ll learn how everything works at a deeper level.

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2 points
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@riskable @Luffy879

I half agree with this I think maybe somebody should try arch first before using Gentoo because gentoo takes more time to compile

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1 point

Definitely agree, there’s going to be mess-up’s and your learning process will be significantly slower when you’ve gotta compile everything

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2 points

@Pallaxis

Agreed :)
I personally believe most people at some point should at least try arch OE Gentoo at some point but maybe not the first distro because they need to learn how to use the terminal.

Also I have a question for you, what do you personally think is the best beginner distro and what do you think is the word beginner distro?

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5 points

That is indeed my plan, to learn more about Linux by using complex Distros and learning how to use it.

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25 points
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It sounds like Gentoo is literally exactly what you want.

I am currently not using gentoo, and because the packages in its default repos are only updated when necessary, and the break-my-gentoo repo is more of a joke than an actual replacement for arch.

I’m sorry, but I am genuinely confused here.

Gentoo can be both stable and bleeding edge and allows you to mix and match on a per-package basis.

Does setting ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~amd64" globally not make things bleeding edge enough for you? Grab *-9999 packages instead.

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4 points

I did indeed not know that you can do such thing, thank you for pointing this out to me.

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4 points

Does sound like what youre looking for is gentoo. Packages may be a little older than arch, but its a rolling release too. You get new stuff fast

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11 points

If you are looking for a distro similar to Arch where you can compile everything from source you can just use Arch. https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Arch_build_system

Disclaimer: I have never used this feature so don’t know how easy it is to use, but I do use Arch which is how I know it exists. (I use Arch btw)

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6 points

Fellow Arch user here (btw). It’s exactly the same as building AUR packages. Clone a git repo containing a PKGBUILD, use makepkg to build it, and pacman to install it. The nice thing is you can host a repo of your built packages and install them on other systems really easily. The big downside is that dependency management is not automated, so it will take some time and annoyance to map out what packages you need to build and in what order, if you want a fully source-bootstrapped system.

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