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Kerim Saparov2020-01-11 18:08:37
linux
Kerim Saparov, 2020-01-11 18:08:37

Does installing and using Gentoo/Arch distributions make me a Linux pro?

For I read everywhere that if you use Gentoo or Arch, then you are a pro, and if not, then you know nothing about Linux.
Who can say anything about this? Are these distributions worth spending time or learning specific tasks with Linux?

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14 answer(s)
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Ronald McDonald, 2020-01-11
@goldnova

No, installing Gentoo makes you a good copy-pastor of manuals.
Source: personal experience.

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Vladimir Korotenko, 2020-01-11
@firedragon

Pros use the tool they need at the moment, otherwise monopenisually

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CityCat4, 2020-01-12
@CityCat4

As a person who has recently become disillusioned with Gent (and spent three years on it), I can say that installing and using Genta makes you a person who will "wait for ebuilds" all his free time :) A pro is a person who knows how to solve a problem for a minimum term with minimal cost, using Genta or something else...
Genta is not a corporate distribution. I would even call it "fatal" - because I have to devote all my free time to studying the intricacies of its work that are completely unnecessary to me - otherwise it is almost impossible to resolve issues with the fact that something suddenly stopped working after the next update - and until you get to the bottom of the very basis of how it works - you'll figure it out.
Of course it will work - just like other distributions - but it takes a hell of a lot of time and effort to keep it running, not worth it.
I plan to move to either Artix or Devuan (these are Arch and Debian forks respectively without systemd)

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Ruslan, 2020-01-11
@msHack

The pros sit on Debian and BSD

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Andrey, 2020-01-11
@anerev

The pros know the answer

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rionnagel, 2020-01-11
@rionnagel

Only very stupid people who, in reality, did not work normally, can assert this. The choice of distribution kit is not particularly important. It all depends on how you will use it and what tasks to solve.
ps. The kali exception is the choice of shkolotrons who want to dabble in mum hacking.

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OnYourLips, 2020-01-12
@OnYourLips

No, these are just home distributions.

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fdroid, 2020-01-11
@fdroid

The pros choose LFS . Install it, then we'll talk.

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Karpion, 2020-01-12
@Karpion

In addition to the operating system itself, you need to know the applications. And here it depends on whether it is a server or a slave station. And a lot of what else.

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Alexander Karpov, 2020-01-12
@Alkarp55

The professional earns money, the rest are amateurs.

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Altima Altima, 2020-01-12
@Amitla

No. This makes it possible to install the system in such a way that later all or almost all will be forgotten. At least that's how it worked out for me with gentoo. The only thing to remember is that you need to update a little more than once every six months, so that hell with unresolved dependencies does not happen and you don’t have to rake it all up. Even now, after the death of the motherboard on my computer, I moved the hdd with jent to my parents' computer, which I now actively use. And then sometimes I turn to my jent and update it. So we are not waiting for the money to accumulate for a new config.

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xotkot, 2020-01-11
@xotkot

if you have a firearm, this does not mean that you are a good shooter, but the likelihood of this is of course more
using Gentoo / Arch does not automatically make you a pro, but this will at least indicate that you are not an average Linux blonde
about copy- paste manuals
I think there are few pros who have not started studying an unfamiliar system without copy-paste manuals

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ArtyomPozharov, 2020-01-12
@ArtyomPozharov

Knowledge in this industry is different for each person. In general, one can call an artist drawing with a stylus on a Pixelbook and a sysadmin on Gentoo purely GNU/Linux users.
The same Richard Stallman (founder of the GNU project) and Linus Torvalds (inventor of the Linux kernel) can be called professionals, etc. Those. those people who came up with this system, and not those who simply use other people's developments.

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glebtv, 2020-01-12
@glebtv

Installing arch or gentoo per se won't make you a pro, but if you already have experience with linux - in everyday use of such a distribution, it helps a lot to understand the internal details in more detail, just because of the need to find solutions to problems.
Such a distribution can completely break when upgrading, and at first it will be often, especially if mindlessly copy-pasting configs. Up to the need to boot from a flash drive into a chroot.
But the bonus is fresh versions of everything and a huge sea of ​​good quality packages.
If you are just starting out, start with debian/centos, or at least with ubuntu

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