Handbook:Parts/Installation/Finalizing/ko

Adding a user for daily use
Working as root on a Unix/Linux system is dangerous and should be avoided as much as possible. Therefore it is strongly recommended to add a user for day-to-day use.

The groups the user is member of define what activities the user can perform. The following table lists a number of important groups:

For instance, to create a user called john who is member of the wheel, users and audio groups, log in as root first (only root can create users) and run :

If a user ever needs to perform some task as root, they can use  to temporarily receive root privileges. Another way is to use the sudo package which is, if correctly configured, very secure.

Removing tarballs
With the Gentoo installation finished and the system rebooted, if everything has gone well, we can now remove the downloaded stage3 tarball from the hard disk. Remember that they were downloaded to the / directory.

Documentation
Where to go from here? What are the options now? What to explore first? Gentoo provides its users with lots of possibilities, and therefore lots of documented (and less documented) features.

Definitely take a look at the next part of the Gentoo Handbook entitled Working with Gentoo which explains how to keep the software up to date, how to install more software, what USE flags are, how the Gentoo init system works, etc.

We also have an official Gentoo Wiki where additional, community-provided documentation can be found. The documentation team also offers a Documentation overview which lists a fine selection of Wiki articles. For instance, it refers to the localization guide to make a system feel more at home.

Gentoo online
Everyone is of course always welcome on our Gentoo forums or on one of our many Gentoo IRC channels.

We also have several mailing lists open to all our users. Information on how to join is contained in that page.

Enjoy your installation. :)