Gentoo Install

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Revision as of 17:10, 2 August 2006 by ZoneyJ (talk | contribs) (A little more added, more to come)
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WORK IN PROGRESS! DO NOT USE!

About Gentoo

Why Gentoo?

  • Many binary distributions make it difficult to locate the appropriate libraries for ZoneMinder to build properly. Packages for these distrubutions often do not include development libraries and headers necessary for building software from source.
  • A Gentoo system is highly configurable, and is easy to update and maintain.
  • Gentoo's portage package system in conjunction with the emerge command makes it much easier to


About ZoneMinder for Gentoo

There are some ZoneMinder packages (called 'ebuilds') available for Gentoo. However, they are not readily available in the mainstream package tree and are a few releases behind. It is best to compile from source.

Overview of a Gentoo Installation

  • Prepare filesystems
  • Mount filesystems
  • Copy over base system from CD
  • Retrieve latest package definitions from the internet
  • Build a kernel
  • Install necessary packages
    • grub
    • dhcpcd
  • Set up boot scripts


Installation

The quickest way to install Gentoo is to use the bootable LiveCD available at [1]. I've found that the automatic installer does not work very well and often errors out over simple CDROM read errors. Instead, use the commands from the Gentoo Install Guide to manually copy over the system to your hard drive.

Chrooting Your New System

That's it! You're ready to enter your new system environment. That's where chrooting comes in.

Setting USE Flags to Determine Compile Behavior

Gentoo has a neat concept of system management called USE flags. The USE variable is set by the file /etc/make.conf. In the USE variable, you specify what kinds of features you want included in packages. For example, if you set the 'apache2' use flag, any software that can take advantage of the apache webserver will be compiled to do just that. In addition, if you do not have apache installed and you try to install that same software, Apache will be automatically installed. There are many, many USE flags available. Many of them, along with their descriptions can be found here.

Here are the flags I use on my Gentoo system that's meant to be a media/ZM/camera server. USE="-3dfx -arts -berkdb -cups -doc -esd -flac -fortran -gnome -gps -gtk -gtk2 -hardened -imap -ipv6 -kde -nls -opengl -oss -recode -qt -X -xv apache2 mpm-prefork bzip2 mysql php encode exif ffmpeg fbcon gd java javascript jpeg jpeg2k matroska mime mmx sse mp3 mpeg ogg oggvorbis vorbis pcre perl quicktime readline samba ssl symlink theora usb v4l vcd wifi xml xml2 xvid"

As you can see, this says a lot about how my system behaves. I do not use an X Server, so I disabled X, gtk, gtk2, gnome, kde, qt, xv (everything having to do with a graphical desktop). I enabled things like apache2, php, jpeg, mpeg, v4l, xvid (anything media related).


Building a Kernel

Before Building a kernel, you may want to get some details about the hardware on your computer. You can do this using the tools on your LiveCD. Switch to another virtual console (Ctrl+Alt+F2-F6). These consoles are still running in the CD environment, NOT chrooted in the system you are building. From here you can do a dmesg|less and lspci to see what devices you have installed. Follow the standard procedure in compiling a kernel. The process usually proceeds as:

  1. make menuconfig, to configure the kernel
  2. make, to comile the kernel
  3. make install,
  4. make modules
  5. make modules_install

Necessary Packages ZoneMinder mentions a few packages that are required; namely php, mysql and apache. But in my experience it requires many more.

You'll need:

  • apache
  • php
  • mysql
  • ffmpeg
  • libperl
  • openssl
  • jpeg

Luckily, many of these packages are installed automatically as a result of dependencies. Gentoo will let you know what packages will also be installed with a selected package.

You may want:

  • pciutils, to get information about PCI devices to assist in troubleshooting.
  • usbutils, to get information about USB devices to assist in troubleshooting.
  • syslog-ng, to manage system logs. ZoneMinder will need to be configured to use it. (/etc/syslog-ng/syslog-ng.conf)
  • vixie-cron, for ZoneMinder to complete scheduled cron jobs.
  • samba, to exchange files with Windows clients/servers.
  • camsource, lets you view the same pictures your capture card is seeing. Can be useful for diagnosis.

ZoneMinder Compilation

You can retreive the ZoneMinder source by using the Links web browser and navigating to http://www2.zoneminder.com/downloads. If anyone has a better way, could you please amend the Wiki?