So I added, like the wiki pages proposed, the "sabayon"-overlay to the portage tree. Doing this I found that there is another overlay called "sabayon-distro".
The only thing I found so far about the differences of the two overlays is this:
http://www.sabayon.org/article/splitting-sabayon-overlay
lxnay wrote:After 2 months of hard work, Enlik and I (but mainly him) completed the split of the Sabayon Portage overlay. But what is it about?
It all started when Pacho Ramos kindly asked us to separate ebuilds that could be upstreamed (towards Gentoo) and ebuilds that only contained Sabayon business logic.
Since our overlay was quite fat, it really took us several weeks to accomplish the request… {omg here}
After the split, we ended up having: overlays/for-gentoo.git and overlays/sabayon.git git repos containing respectively the “sabayon” and “sabayon-distro” layman repositories.
So, layman -fa sabayon will now pull the for-gentoo.git overlay, which contains new cool stuff geared towards Gentoo users as well.
And, as said above, layman -fa sabayon-distro will give you the rest of our ebuild stuff.
So I still wonder what is what.
As a sabayon user, I add the overlay "sabayon" to have the sabayon specific things in my portage tree? So portage does not see not-installed-packages supplied by entropy without this overlay?
As a gentoo user, I add the overlay "sabayon-distro" to have the sabayon stuff, which a sabayon user already has because he uses the binay-packages of entropy/ equo? And because "sabayon-distro" doesn't contain sabayon specific stuff, gentoo user won't turn there system into sabayon (or more likely break it) by using this overlay?


