Questions tagged [arch-linux]

Arch Linux (or Arch, pronounced /ˈɑrtʃ/) is an independently developed, Linux-based operating system for i686 and x86-64 computers. It is composed predominantly of free and open source software, and supports community involvement.

Arch Linux (or Arch, pronounced /ˈɑrtʃ/) is an independently developed, Linux-based operating system for i686 and x86-64 computers. It is composed predominantly of free and open source software, and supports community involvement.

What is Arch Linux

Following The Arch Way philosophy, Arch Linux is lightweight, flexible, simple and aims to be very UNIX-like. A minimal environment (no GUI) compiled for i686/x86-64 architectures is provided upon installation: rather than tearing out unneeded and unwanted packages, the user is offered the ability to build up from a minimal foundation without any preemptively-chosen defaults. Arch's design philosophy and implementation make it easy to extend and mold into whatever kind of system is required, from a minimalist console machine to the most grandiose and feature-rich desktop environments available: it is the user who decides what his Arch system will be.

Arch's simple init system is heavily inspired by the *BSD way of incorporating calls from a single file (rc.conf) rather than the SysVinit directory structure containing dozens of symlinks for each runlevel. System configuration is achieved through editing simple text files.

Modernity

Arch Linux strives to maintain the latest stable version of its software, and is based on a rolling-release system, which allows a one-time installation and continuous seamless upgrades, without ever having to reinstall or perform elaborate system upgrades from one version to the next. By issuing one command, an Arch system is kept up-to-date and on the bleeding edge. Arch incorporates many of the newer features available to GNU/Linux users, including modern filesystems (Ext2/3/4, Reiser, XFS, JFS), LVM2/EVMS, software RAID, udev support and initcpio, as well as the latest available kernels.

Software Packaging

Arch is backed by pacman, an easy-to-use binary package manager that allows you to upgrade your entire system with one command. Pacman is coded in C and designed from the ground up to be lightweight, simple and very fast. Arch also provides the Arch Build System, a ports-like system to make it easy to build and install packages from source, which can also be synchronized with one command. You can even rebuild your entire system with one command.

Supporting i686 and x86-64 architectures, Arch's Official Repositories provide several thousands of high-quality packages to meet your software demands. In addition, Arch encourages community growth and contribution by offering the Arch User Repository, which contains many thousands of user-maintained PKGBUILD scripts for compiling installable packages from source using the makepkg application. It is also possible for users to easily build and maintain their own custom repositories.

Source Integrity

Arch provides non-patched, vanilla software; packages are offered from pure upstream sources, how the author originally intended it to be distributed. Patching only occurs in extremely rare cases, to prevent severe breakage in the instance of version mismatches that may occur within a rolling release model.

Community

The Arch community is very dependable, lively and welcoming: all Archers are encouraged to participate and contribute to the distribution, be it helping with the development of the core software, maintaining packages, reporting or fixing bugs, improving the ArchWiki documentation, helping other users solving problems or just exchanging opinions in the forums, mailing lists, IRC Channels, or sharing one's knowledge or even self-developed applications. Arch Linux is the operating system of choice for many people around the globe, and there exist several international communities that offer help and provide documentation in many different languages.

Source: archlinux.org

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systemd-journald system logs are not persistent across boots despite Storage=persistent

I recently got a problem with systemd not preserving logs from previous boots. I checked several answers here and elsewhere but haven't found a solution. the problem is that the user log gets persistent across boots but system logs are…
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Install vagrant plugin on archlinux

I am trying to install vagrant plugin in ArchLinux and get error Marshal.load reentered at marshal_load. Here is output with debug on: vagrant plugin install vagrant-hostmananger --debug INFO global: Vagrant version: 1.9.4 INFO global: Ruby…
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How to build docbook 4.2 docs on Arch Linux?

I'm trying to build documentation for PostgreSQL HEAD. It requires docbook 4.2, which I installed, but still the problem exist. I described it in detail - including error messages, lists of packages, and configure options in mail to postgresql…
user13185
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Let's Encrypt w/ Apache 2.4.23 on Arch Linux produces "can't connect" error

I have a fully updated Arch Linux server running Apache 2.4.23. In the past I've successfully used StartSSL to enable HTTPS on my Apache web server. But now I'd like to switch to Let's Encrypt. Using certbot standalone, I've produced these…
hpy
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Enabling IPv6 for docker breaks hosts IPv6 connectivity resulting in neither having IPv6 connection

Preface: I am newbie in both Docker and networking stuff, especially, IPv6. Am a software developer, not system/network administrator. I am running Arch on Linode and am looking to set up Docker with IPv6 support. I could do with IPv4, and while I…
tomsseisums
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GSSAPITrustDns option missing from OpenSSH-6.7

I need to use the GSSAPITrustDns option to connect to a round robin service using Kerberos authentication. This works correctly using OpenSSH 5.3 and 6.6.1p1 on a selection of machines. I have an Arch linux machine that has OpenSSH 6.7 and my…
Morphit
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Arch: sharing a raw SCSI device via iSCSI?

I am working with some older SCSI devices on my Arch Linux installation. The information on the disks is actually needed on other systems. While I certainly could mount the disk on Linux and share it via SMB or something similar, what I really want…
fdmillion
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Enable core dumps in Apache

I would like to enable core dumps in my Apache web server. Since I have PHP 5.5 and OPcache my Mediawiki site crashes with the following error: child pid ... exit signal Segmentation fault (11) So I would like to get more information through the…
Nicolas
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systemd httpd stop very slow under Arch Linux

When I perform a: systemctl stop httpd Apache often takes minutes to stop. The command: apachectl gracefully-stop always stops immediately. Anyone have any idea what might be causing this? The commands: systemctl start httpd and apachectl…
Charlie
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Find reasons of shutdown

This morning I found the machine not running. Last Friday night everything was still running. I'm trying to find out what happened. I've had a look at "last" - besides the enigmatic "crashes" of last Wednesday there's nothing weird there. (no clue…
Jan Goyvaerts
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SuExec: “command not in docroot” Even Though It Is?

Arch Linux 2011.08.19 (Linux 3.4.2 i686) Apache 2.2.22 with SuExec PHP 5.4.4 (cli) via FastCGI My sites were all working fine earlier… I’m not sure when it happened because I noticed it over a week later (I’m guessing perhaps after a system…
Hugh Guiney
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Updating GoDaddy DNS from linux

I have the following setup: A domain registered with GoDaddy A plug computer running ArchLinuxArm with a dynamic public IP Updated Domain in GoDaddy DNS Manager to point to public IP of plug computer So far so good. However, I need to…
Alfero Chingono
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Apache won't start - unable to find IPv4 address of "(none)"

Due to browsing through stack exchange and google, I'm getting the feeling it has to do with my hosts file. Which is currently rw-r--r--, and contains: # 127.0.0.1 localhost.localdomain …
PMV
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Installing 32 bit libraries on arch linux

I can't seem to find the answer anywhere. So far I've figured out that I need to add (uncomment) [multilib] Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist On "/etc/pacman.conf" and then run: sudo pacman-key --init When I run: sudo pacman -S I get: …
Boaz
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How to hook an Ethernet over USB connection up to the host-Network?

I have a single board computer that I want to hook up to my lan/internet connection. The SBC doesn't have an Ethernet port, only a an embedded wireless chip which currently isn't working. But it does have USB and I figured that it should be possible…
rudib
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