Yeah, I would say Gentoo is more accurate for pain, “oh, I forgot to enable JPEG support by default, guess I’ll have to recompile my entire system”. Either way both of them might be slightly painful to setup the first time but they’re a breeze to maintain, back when I was using Funtoo I could copy my world and config files to a new computer and get an almost identical copy of my system running in a day or so when things finished compiling but without any further intervention from my side.
Yeah, when I first heard of NixOS I tried it, but I found it way more complicated than what I was anticipating, so I ended up desisting. Also it sounds like a great idea for a server or some reproduceable machine, but might be a bit too much for a personal computer. But I do get the appeal, and might eventually try it again, but AUR is such a comfy blanket hahahah
Yeah, I would say Gentoo is more accurate for pain, “oh, I forgot to enable JPEG support by default, guess I’ll have to recompile my entire system”. Either way both of them might be slightly painful to setup the first time but they’re a breeze to maintain, back when I was using Funtoo I could copy my world and config files to a new computer and get an almost identical copy of my system running in a day or so when things finished compiling but without any further intervention from my side.
While cool, nearly the same thing can be done with NixOS, skipping the compilation times.
Yeah, when I first heard of NixOS I tried it, but I found it way more complicated than what I was anticipating, so I ended up desisting. Also it sounds like a great idea for a server or some reproduceable machine, but might be a bit too much for a personal computer. But I do get the appeal, and might eventually try it again, but AUR is such a comfy blanket hahahah
I’d say Gentoo fits more for patience
Gentoo’s patience is measured in hours, Debian’s patience is measured in months.