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AerynOS/lichen#45 <- Would this be sufficient as a workaround for now? |
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Iam running it for about a week now, I have i3 1215u with 8 gigs of ram, the installation was smooth and I chose gnome, there is some flickering here and there but itis good, I wish kde was in the repo :) |
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cpu: ryzen 7 5800x3d
gpu: Nvidia rtx 4070 12gb OC
mobo: 570x
ram: 64gb
Monitors: 2
Installation Process:
That's got to be one of the cleanest terminal installers I've seen. Installation was quick, and pretty easy.
It would be cool if it could find a completely empty drive and format it, It feels a bit off having to quit the installer, open gparted, set up partitions and reopen the installer.
Something as simple as the installer pausing and telling the user that it can't create the boot partition and or use unformatted space and let the user set up partitions and continue would be a great improvement.
First install:
I wanted to try cosmic, I saw the warning, but I figured why not. After I reboot it only loads one monitor, and the password field is selected, but there's no user name. I entered my password, but it didn't work.
I couldn't see a mouse and I couldn't navigate with tab, but if I clicked then it would take me off the password field box so I assumed a mouse was working.
Second install:
Gnome installation went even smoother, just because I already had the partitions set up. Everything booted up, both monitors came on and I gotta say everything felt smooth. I was impressed with the system monitor, moss ran quick, and default scaling looked great. For an Alpha it feels really good.
I didn't see apache httpd, nginx, or caddy in moss and because I'm most familiar with apache, I decided to try to build it. APR, APR-util, and APR-iconv are also not in the repo, which depends on having expat libs. The expat libs were in the repo, but apr-util couldn't find them. You must configure apr-util with the
--with-expat=$dir --with-apr=$aprDir
I could have probably built apr where it installed the libraries better, but it defaulted to /usr/local/apr/, and the expat libs were in /usr/local/lib/
After all of that Apache httpd would finally build. I had to create a user and group for apache and configure httpd a bit, but it did start, and serve up a page.
After I got that running I decided to install the nvidia drivers and to a reboot, and that's where my journey ends. On the reboot, I am just presented with a black lit up screen, Nothing ever loads, no debug messages work, I can't access a tty, nothing.
I am very hopeful for this operating system though. I absolutely love the feel of it.
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