dice wrote:they should just stick to the arch way
The ISO boots to a root shell rather than the new installer so the command line method is still available and I can't see this changing in the future.
I quite like the new installer because it uses a Python module to make it easily extensible and it doesn't use ****ing bash. It doesn't support non-UEFI systems (yet) and it defaults to systemd-boot & systemd-networkd but I like those anyway.
It is most likely early days for it, ill give it kudos for actually working without issues in my case. But it is still limited in its current form, lack of verbosity, partition and filesystem choices. But as you say the manual method is available as default.
]]>they should just stick to the arch way
The ISO boots to a root shell rather than the new installer so the command line method is still available and I can't see this changing in the future.
I quite like the new installer because it uses a Python module to make it easily extensible and it doesn't use ****ing bash. It doesn't support non-UEFI systems (yet) and it defaults to systemd-boot & systemd-networkd but I like those anyway.
]]>I tried it out today, it works but only if you like a boot and root setup. Very minimal installer and imo they should just stick to the arch way.
]]>