You are free to substitute any of the above for whatever you want. Your swap partition is outside of ZFS and on a dedicated partition.The /boot/efi is an unencrypted FAT32 partition as per UEFI spec.The /boot pool is featureless and unencrypted.Only installing Gentoo on a single drive (Multiple drives in the same pool should automatically work).This should be all that's necessary to have a bootable USB. Select your USB Device from the Device drop down.Rufus is the USB Utility I recommend when on Windows. After that, we'll use it to make a bootable USB.įor the following commands, we will assume that your USB is /dev/sdg. You can download the "Admin CD" from the Gentoo Downloads page. Luckily, the Gentoo Admin CD provides the needed packages. You will need an ISO that contains OpenZFS. * /, /home on ZFS (Encrypted ZFS if desired) * /boot on ZFS (Featureless & Unencrypted) * UEFI-GPT (EFI System Partition - Unencrypted FAT32 partition as per UEFI Spec) This guide will show you how to install Gentoo Linux on x86_64 with: 1.9.6 Other stuff you might want to install.1.9.3 Take a snapshot of your new system. 1.9.1 Remove zpool.cache refresh flag from bootloader configuration.1.8.15 Generate the initramfs and move the file to its correct location. 1.8.14 Generating new zpool.cache file before/after reboot.1.8.13 Make the GRUB 2 configuration file.1.8.12 Installing the bootloader onto your drive.1.6.4 Set the bootable flag on the ESP partition.
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