Difference between pages "Make.conf" and "User:Tassietux"

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== What is the make.conf file? What is its purpose? ==
{{Person
Make.conf is portage's and Funtoo's main configuration file. It contains many variables that define how a package will installed in a Funtoo system. You can customize portage internal variables, such as, portage tree location, sources tarball location, overlays, to name a few. You can customize hardware specs, such as TMPFS, disk limits, GCC compilation flags to achieve best performance, etc. A great deal of this customization is done through the make.conf file. This page will attempt to explain the uses of the make.conf file, different variables that can be added to it, and their uses.
|Geoloc=-42.912681371144, 147.35660769045
 
|Location name=Hobart, Tasmania (Australia)
=== Where does this file reside? ===
|Blogs=
The <code>make.conf</code> file is found at <code>/etc/portage/make.conf</code> and <code>/etc/make.conf</code> though <code>/etc/make.conf</code> is its deprecated location.
 
to edit:
<console>
###i## nano /etc/portage/make.conf
</console>
 
=== Variables ===
 
{{file|name=/etc/portage/make.conf|lang=|desc=example make.conf variables|body=
CFLAGS="-march=amdfam10 -O2 -pipe"
CXXFLAGS="-march=amdfam10 -O2 -pipe"
INPUT_DEVICES="evdev"
VIDEO_CARDS="vesa nouveau"
MAKEOPTS="-j 2"
USE="mmx sse"
PYTHON_ABIS="2.7 3.3"
PYTHON_TARGETS="2.7 3.3"
RUBY_TARGETS="ruby21"
ACCEPT_LICENSE="*"
}}
}}
 
IRC: Tassie_Tux on #funtoo (freenode.net)
=== Accept All Licenses ===
{{file|name=/etc/portage/make.conf|lang=|desc=accept all licenses|body=
ACCEPT_LICENSE="*"
}}
 
=== Relocate Source Compile Directory ===
 
By default portage unpacks and compiles sources in /var/tmp/  it appends portage/pkg-cat/pkg to compile a package elsewhere such as /tmp/portage/pkg-cat/pkg
 
{{file|name=/etc/portage/make.conf|lang=|desc=unpack & compile sources in alternate location|body=
PORTAGE_TMPDIR="/tmp"
}}
 
=== Video_Cards ===
 
several options for the video cards variable exist.  see [[Video]]
 
=== Makeopts ===
MAKEOPTS can be used to define how many parallel compilations should occur when you compile a package, which can speed up compilation significantly. A rule of thumb is the number of CPUs (or CPU threads) in your system plus one. If for example you have a dual core processor without [[wikipedia:Hyper-threading|hyper-threading]], then you would set MAKEOPTS to 3:
 
{{file|name=/etc/portage/make.conf|lang=|desc=set portage to use 3 threads|body=
MAKEOPTS="-j3"
}}
 
If you are unsure about how many processors/threads you have then use /proc/cpuinfo to help you.
<console>
(chroot) # ##i##grep "processor" /proc/cpuinfo | wc -l
16
</console>
 
Set MAKEOPTS to this number plus one:
 
{{file|name=/etc/portage/make.conf|lang=|desc=set portage to use 17 threads|body=
MAKEOPTS="-j17"
}}
 
 
{{important|Use processors +1 if you use [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CFQ Completely Fair Queuing] I/O scheduler. If you use [http://ck.kolivas.org/patches/bfs/bfs-faq.txt BFQ] use only as many jobs as you have CPUs. However chances are that you use CFQ.}}
 
 
=== USE flags ===
 
USE flags define what functionality is enabled when packages are built. It is not recommended to add a lot of them during installation; you should wait until you have a working, bootable system before changing your USE flags. A USE flag prefixed with a minus ("<code>-</code>") sign tells Portage not to use the flag when compiling.  A Funtoo guide to USE flags will be available in the future. For now, you can find out more information about USE flags in the [http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/handbook/handbook-amd64.xml?part=2&chap=2 Gentoo Handbook].
 
Some hardware options should be turned on if they're not already.  To see what your hardware supports:
 
{{console|body=
cat /proc/cpuinfo
}}
 
{{file|name=/etc/portage/make.conf|lang=|desc=Example of Turning On Hardware Optimizations|body=
USE="mmx, sse, sse2, sse3, 3dnow, 3dnowext"}}
 
=== Input ===
some devices need defined such as synaptics for touch pads.
 
{{file|name=/etc/portage/make.conf|lang=|desc=synaptics example|body=
INPUT_DEVICES="synaptics evdev"
}}
 
=== Linguas ===
LINGUAS tells Portage which local language to compile the system and applications in (those who use LINGUAS variable like OpenOffice). It is not usually necessary to set this if you use English. If you want another language such as French (fr) or German (de), set LINGUAS appropriately:
 
{{file|name=/etc/portage/make.conf|lang=|desc=set system language to french|body=
LINGUAS="fr"
}}
 
[[Category:System]]

Revision as of 06:29, January 9, 2015


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Hobart, Tasmania (Australia)

IRC: Tassie_Tux on #funtoo (freenode.net)