Note

The Funtoo Linux project has transitioned to "Hobby Mode" and this wiki is now read-only.

Difference between revisions of "F2FS Install Guide"

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swapon /dev/sda2
swapon /dev/sda2
mkfs.f2fs  -l root -O extra_attr,inode_checksum,sb_checksum  /dev/sda3
mkfs.f2fs  -l root -O extra_attr,inode_checksum,sb_checksum  /dev/sda3
mkfs.ext4 /dev/sda4
</console>
</console>


Line 78: Line 77:
mkdir /mnt/funtoo/boot
mkdir /mnt/funtoo/boot
mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/funtoo/boot
mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/funtoo/boot
mkdir /mnt/funtoo/home
mount -o noatime /dev/sda4 /mnt/funtoo/home
</console>
</console>



Latest revision as of 16:14, December 20, 2021

   Important

Carlos, I recommend removing most of these old docs and just document the differences to the official install docs. --Daniel

Introduction

These docs assume you have a "PC compatible" computer system with a standard PC BIOS. Many new computers support UEFI for booting, which is a new firmware interface that frequently replaces the older MBR-based BIOS. If you have a system with UEFI, you will want to use this documentation along with the UEFI Install Guide, which will augment these instructions and explain how to get your system to boot. You may need to change your PC BIOS settings to enable or disable UEFI booting. The UEFI Install Guide has more information on this, and steps on how to determine if your system supports UEFI.

Installing on F2FS isn't terribly different from installing on XFS or EXT4, but there are enough factors that warrant a guide of its own.


Live CD

Funtoo doesn't provide an "official" Funtoo Live CD, but there are plenty of good ones out there to choose from.

A great choice is the System Rescue as it contains lots of tools and utilities and supports F2FS and BTRFS.

To learn how to install SystemRescueCd on a USB-stick, click here.

It is also possible to install Funtoo Linux using many other Linux-based live CDs. Generally, any modern bootable Linux live CD or live USB media will work. See requirements for an overview of what the Live Media must provide to allow a problem-free install of Funtoo Linux.

To begin a Funtoo Linux installation, boot your preferred live media & start a commandline session.

Starting an SSH session

This is only required if you wish to perform the installation process on a remote computer, not at the console of the machine you're installing funtoo on:

systemctl stop iptables
passwd 
ip a

SSH is a default daemon in SystemRescue, but if you don't want to make iptables rule, it's better to stop the service, asks for a root password, and it then displays the IP address.

Partitioning

cfdisk /dev/sda

Your partition layout should be similar to this:

Partition Size MBR Block Device (fdisk) MBR Code
/boot 512 MB /dev/sda1 83
swap 1.5 to 2x RAM for low-memory systems and production servers; otherwise 2GB. /dev/sda2 82
/ (root) minimum of 10GB. Note: to compile the debian-sources kernel, requires a minimum of 14GB free space in /tmp; consider a minimum of 20GB in this case. /dev/sda3 83

For a step by step how to format the disk see:

Formatting

mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/sda1
mkswap /dev/sda2
swapon /dev/sda2
mkfs.f2fs  -l root -O extra_attr,inode_checksum,sb_checksum  /dev/sda3


Mounting the new system

mkdir /mnt/funtoo
mount -t f2fs /dev/sda3 /mnt/funtoo
mkdir /mnt/funtoo/boot
mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/funtoo/boot

Downloading the system

cd /mnt/funtoo/
elinks build.funtoo.org

Navigate to your build, arch, and subarch and save stage3.

Installing stage3

cd /mnt/funtoo
tar --numeric-owner --xattrs --xattrs-include='*' -xpf stage3-latest.tar.xz
rm -f stage3-latest.tar.xz

See more Install/Download_and_Extract_Stage3

chrooting into the new system

mount -t proc none /mnt/funtoo/proc
mount --rbind /dev /mnt/funtoo/dev
mount --rbind /sys /mnt/funtoo/sys
env -i HOME=/root TERM=$TERM $(which chroot) /mnt/funtoo bash -l

Setting the root password

(chroot) #  passwd

Configuring DNS

(chroot) #  echo "nameserver 1.1.1.1" > /etc/resolv.conf

Downloading the Portage tree

(chroot) #  ego sync

See more Install/Download_Portage_Tree

Configuring your system

For a better understanding of configuration files see Install/Configuration_Files


/etc/fstab

/etc/fstab is used by the mount command which is ran when your system boots. Statements of this file inform mount about partitions to be mounted and how they are mounted. In order for the system to boot properly, you must edit /etc/fstab and ensure that it reflects the partition configuration you used earlier:

(chroot) #   nano -w /etc/fstab
# <device>               <dir>           <type>           <options>             <dump> <fsck>
/dev/sda1                /boot            vfat            defaults                 0    2
/dev/sda2                none             swap            sw                       0    0
/dev/sda3                /                f2fs            defaults,rw              0    0
#/dev/cdrom              /mnt/cdrom       auto            noauto,ro                0    0
   Note

When using f2fs as rootfs fsck fails on boot. Solutions are either disabling fsck in /etc/fstab (setting the last number to 0). See bug #671786. [1].

Setting the Date and localtime file

(chroot) #  # date --set=mm/dd/yy
(chroot) #  date --set=12/12/2021
(chroot) #  # date --set=hh:mm:ss
(chroot) #  date -s 00:05:00

/etc/localtime is used to specify the timezone that your machine is in, and defaults to UTC.

(chroot) #  ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/$(tzselect) /etc/localtime

See more Install/Setting_the_Date

/etc/portage/make.conf

Setting:

(chroot) #   nproc
4

So your make.conf file will look like:

cat > /etc/portage/make.conf <<'EOF'
MAKEOPTS="-j2"
EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs 4 --load-average 5"

LINGUAS="en en_US en_GB pt pt_BR"
L10N="pt-BR en en-US"
ACCEPT_LICENSE="*"
EOF

/etc/conf.d/hwclock

If you dual-boot with Windows, you'll need to edit this file and change the value of clock from UTC to local, because Windows will set your hardware clock to local time every time you boot Windows. Otherwise you normally wouldn't need to edit this file.

(chroot) #  nano -w /etc/conf.d/hwclock

Localization

By default, Funtoo Linux is configured with Unicode (UTF-8) enabled, and for the US English locale and keyboard. If you would like to configure your system to use a non-English locale or keyboard, see Funtoo Linux Localization.

Portage Sync

(chroot) #  ego sync
(chroot) #  emerge -auDN @world

Advanced users may be interested in the Emerge wiki page.

Configuring and installing the Linux kernel

Now it's time to build and install a Linux kernel, which is the heart of any Funtoo Linux system. The kernel is loaded by the boot loader, and interfaces directly with your system's hardware, and allows regular (userspace) programs to run.

A kernel must be configured properly for your system's hardware, so that it supports your hard drives, file systems, network cards, and so on. More experienced Linux users can choose to install kernel sources and configure and install their own kernel. If you don't know how to do this, we provide ebuilds that will automatically build a "univeral" kernel, modules and initramfs for booting your system that supports all hardware. This is an extremely simple way of building a kernel that will get your system booted.

What is our goal? To build a kernel that will recognize all the hardware in your system necessary for booting, so that you will be greeted by a friendly login prompt after installation is complete. These instructions will guide you through the process of installing a kernel the "easy" way -- without requiring user configuration, by using a "universal" kernel.

Building the Kernel

   Note

See Funtoo Linux Kernels for a full list of kernels supported in Funtoo Linux. We recommend debian-sources for new users.

(chroot) #  echo "sys-kernel/linux-firmware initramfs" >> /etc/portage/package.use
(chroot) #  emerge -av sys-kernel/debian-sources sys-kernel/genkernel sys-fs/f2fs-tools sys-kernel/linux-firmware
(chroot) #  emerge -av gentoolkit intel-microcode iucode_tool

Go to /usr/src/linux and let's use genkernel:

(chroot) #  cd /usr/src/linux
(chroot) #  genkernel --menuconfig --no-clean --disklabel --fullname=$(uname -r)  all

See more about genkernel at Gentoo Genkernel

F2FS is not included by default; we must specify that we need it Under foo-->bar:

Filesystems-->Miscellaneous-->F2FS
> File systems ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
<*> F2FS filesystem support                                                               │ │
│ │[*]   F2FS Status Information                                                          │ │
│ │-*-   F2FS extended attributes                                                         │ │
│ │[*]     F2FS Access Control Lists                                                      │ │
│ │[*]     F2FS Security Labels                                                           │ │
│ │[ ]   F2FS consistency checking feature                                                │ │
│ │[ ]   F2FS fault injection facility                                                    │ │
│ │[*]   F2FS compression feature                                                         │ │
│ │[*]     LZO compression support                                                        │ │
│ │[*]       LZO-RLE compression support                                                  │ │
│ │[*]     LZ4 compression support                                                        │ │
│ │[*]       LZ4HC compression support                                                    │ │
│ │[*]     ZSTD compression support                                                       │ │
│ │[*]   F2FS IO statistics information                                                   │ │


Installing a Bootloader

   Note

An alternate boot loader called extlinux can be used instead of GRUB if you desire. See the extlinux Guide for information on how to do this.

Installing Grub

The boot loader is responsible for loading the kernel from disk when your computer boots. For new installations, GRUB 2 and Funtoo's boot-update tool should be used as a boot loader. GRUB supports both GPT/GUID and legacy MBR partitioning schemes.

To use this recommended boot method, first emerge sys-boot/grub. This will also cause grub-2 to be merged, since it is a dependency of ego boot update. (You may need to adjust GRUB_PLATFORMS if you are on a UEFI system. See UEFI Install Guide).

(chroot) #  emerge -av sys-boot/grub
(chroot) #  nano -w /etc/boot.conf

Then, edit /etc/boot.conf should now look like this:

boot {
	generate grub
	default "Funtoo Linux"
	timeout 3
}

"Funtoo Linux" {
	kernel kernel[-v]
	initrd initramfs[-v]
	params += real_root=/dev/sda3 rootfstype=f2fs
}

"Funtoo Linux (nomodeset)" {
	kernel kernel[-v]
	initrd initramfs[-v]
	params += real_root=/dev/sda3 rootfstype=f2fs nomodeset
}

Please read man boot.conf for further details.

Rootwait

If you are using a root partition on an nvme device, add the rootwait kernel parameter to force the kernel to wait for it to asynchronously initialize or the kernel will panic on some hardware.

Running grub-install (UEFI)

Finally, we will need to actually install the GRUB boot loader to your disk, and also run boot-update which will generate your boot loader configuration file:

For x86-64bit systems:

(chroot) #  mount -o remount,rw /sys/firmware/efi/efivars
(chroot) #  grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=/boot --bootloader-id="Funtoo Linux [GRUB]" --recheck /dev/sda
(chroot) #  ego boot update

For x86-32bit systems:

(chroot) #  mount -o remount,rw /sys/firmware/efi/efivars
(chroot) #  grub-install --target=i386-efi --efi-directory=/boot --bootloader-id="Funtoo Linux [GRUB]" --recheck /dev/sda
(chroot) #  ego boot update

OK -- you are almost ready to boot!

Troubleshooting

Sometimes problems can occur and the boot doesn't work.

Start with your favorite liveCD.

Let's go now chroot mount again. For this do:

mkdir /mnt/funtoo
mount -t f2fs /dev/sda3 /mnt/funtoo
mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/funtoo/boot
mount /dev/sda4 /mnt/funtoo/home
mount -t proc none /mnt/funtoo/proc
mount --rbind /dev /mnt/funtoo/dev
mount --rbind /sys /mnt/funtoo/sys
env -i HOME=/root TERM=$TERM $(which chroot) /mnt/funtoo bash -l

If things get tough, get in touch with the Funtoo community. See Getting_Help

Configuring your network

It's important to ensure that you will be able to connect to your local-area network after you reboot into Funtoo Linux. There are three approaches you can use for configuring your network: NetworkManager, dhcpcd, and the Funtoo Linux Networking scripts. Here's how to choose which one to use based on the type of network you want to set up.

A simple entropy daemon

The haveged project is an attempt to provide an easy-to-use, unpredictable random number generator based upon an adaptation of the HAVEGE algorithm. See more at Haveged official documentation.

(chroot) #  emerge -av sys-apps/haveged
(chroot) #  rc-update add haveged default

Network

Using NetworkManager

For laptop/mobile systems where you will be using Wi-Fi and connecting to various networks, NetworkManager is strongly recommended. The Funtoo version of NetworkManager is fully functional even from the command-line, so you can use it even without X or without the Network Manager applet. Here are the steps involved in setting up NetworkManager:

(chroot) #  emerge -av net-misc/networkmanager 
(chroot) #  rc-update add NetworkManager default

Desktop (Wired Ethernet)

For a home desktop or workstation with wired Ethernet that will use DHCP, the simplest and most effective option to enable network connectivity is to simply add dhcpcd to the default runlevel:

(chroot) #  emerge -av net-misc/dhcpcd
(chroot) #  rc-update add dhcpcd default

When you reboot, dhcpcd will run in the background and manage all network interfaces and use DHCP to acquire network addresses from a DHCP server.

Server (Static IP)

For servers, the Funtoo Linux Networking scripts are recommended. They are optimized for static configurations and things like virtual ethernet bridging for virtualization setups. See Funtoo Linux Networking for information on how to use Funtoo Linux's template-based network configuration system.

Above, we installed linux-firmware which contains a complete collection of available firmware for many hardware devices including Wi-Fi adapters, plus NetworkManager to manage our network connection. Then we added NetworkManager to the default runlevel so it will start when Funtoo Linux boots.

Wi-Fi

After you reboot into Funtoo Linux, you will be able to add a Wi-Fi connection this way:

root #  nmtui

This network configuration entry is stored in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections so that it will be remembered in the future. You should only need to enter this command once for each Wi-Fi network you connect to.

Using wpa_supplicant

If for some reason you don't want to use a tool such as NetworkManager or wicd, you can use wpa_supplicant for wireless network connections.

First, emerge wpa_supplicant:

(chroot) #  emerge -a wpa_supplicant

Now, edit the wpa_supplicant configuration file, located at /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf. The syntax is very easy:

network={
ssid="MyWifiName"
psk="lol42-wifi"
}

network={
ssid="Other Network"
psk="6d96270004515a0486bb7f76196a72b40c55a47f"
}

You will need to add both wpa_supplicant and dhcpcd to the default runlevel. wpa_supplicant will connect to your access point, and dhcpcd will acquire an IP address via DHCP:

(chroot) #  rc-update add wpa_supplicant default


Finishing Steps

Set your root password

It's imperative that you set your root password before rebooting so that you can log in.

passwd

Next Steps

If you are brand new to Funtoo Linux and Gentoo Linux, please check out Funtoo Linux First Steps, which will help get you acquainted with your new system. We also have a category for our official documentation, which includes all docs that we officially maintain for installation and operation of Funtoo Linux.

We also have a number of pages dedicated to setting up your system, which you can find below. If you are interested in adding a page to this list, add it to the "First Steps" MediaWiki category.

{{#ask: | format=ul }}

If your system did not boot correctly, see Installation Troubleshooting for steps you can take to resolve the problem.