- poorly tested or undocumented. The last I checked, both builds used the
- Tianocore toolkit, and so support booting BIOS/legacy boot loaders on
- UEFI-based PCs.</li>
+ poorly tested or undocumented.</li>
+
+<li><b>ALT Linux</b>—This RPM-based distribution is experimenting
+ with using rEFInd on EFI-based computers. As I write, the ALT
+ developers haven't yet nailed down booting from an optical disc (it's a
+ tricky and delicate task, especially when preparing a "hybrid" image),
+ but they're working on the problem. They have an RPM of rEFInd; see <a
+ href="http://packages.altlinux.org/en/Sisyphus/srpms/refind">this
+ page</a> for details.</li>
+
+<li><b>Gentoo Linux</b>—An official ebuild of rEFInd is available; see <a
+ href="https://packages.gentoo.org/packages/sys-boot/refind">here</a> for
+ details and <a href="https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Refind">here</a> for
+ Gentoo's official rEFInd documentation.</a> A separately-maintained overlay
+ exists (see <a href="https://github.com/sveyret/sveyret-overlay">here</a>),
+ which can be compiled with TianoCore and may be more up-to-date.</li>
+
+<li><b>Slackware</b>—As far as I know, an official rEFInd package is
+ not available as part of Slackware; however, a <a
+ href="http://slackbuilds.org/repository/14.1/system/refind/?search=refind">Slackware
+ package from SlackBuilds</a> is available.</li>