These are my notes and setup scripts while installing and preparing my Arch Linux environment.
 
 
Go to file
John Hammond 16747e3295
Added things to get set up on my VM
2019-10-01 08:41:02 -04:00
README.md Added things to get set up on my VM 2019-10-01 08:41:02 -04:00
Xauthority Added stuff and things 2019-09-30 22:35:25 -04:00
vimrc Added stuff and things 2019-09-30 22:35:25 -04:00
xinitrc Added stuff and things 2019-09-30 22:35:25 -04:00

README.md

Installing Arch Linux

John Hammond | September 29th, 2019

This are my notes while installing and setting up my Arch Linux environment.

I did this on my DELL XPS 15 laptop on September 29th, 2019.

Downloading the ISO

I downloaded the archlinux-2019.09.01-x86_64.iso from here: https://www.archlinux.org/download/. I searched for a United States mirror and chose one: specifically, I used: http://mirrors.acm.wpi.edu/archlinux/iso/2019.09.01/

Burning the ISO to a Disc

I still had Ubuntu at the time, so I burned the Arch Linux ISO to a disc with [Brasero].

Booting the Arch Linux Live Disc

On my DELL XPS 15, I needed to spam the F12 key when booting to get to the menu and choose "Boot from CD". I made sure to boot in UEFI.

Once I got into the Arch Linux prompt, I followed the instructions from their Installation Guide.

I didn't need to change the keyboard layout, so I went on just to verify the UEFI boot mode:

ls /sys/firmware/efi/efivars

This had results, so I knew I successfully booted with UEFI. Good enough!

Connecting to the Internet

On my DELL XPS 15, I wanted to connect to the Internet right away. To get started, I needed to know the name of the interface I was working with.

ip link

In my case, my interface name was wlp59s0.

Now I needed to actually connect to my Wi-Fi. I used netctl to keep it easy.

cp /etc/netctl/examples/wireless-wpa /etc/netctl/home
vim /etc/netctl/home

With that configuration file, I could fill in the interface name, SSID, and Wi-Fi password.

net start home

At that point, I could connect to the Internet!

Updating the Time Service

timedatectl set-ntp true

Partitioning the Disks

I used this command to determine which devices are set up already.

fdisk -l

In my case of my DELL XPS 15, I had /dev/nvmen1p1, /dev/nvmen1p2 and /dev/nvmen1p3 all set up (because I did have Ubuntu installed on this previously).

My /dev/nvmen1p1 was the EFI partition for GRUB, /dev/nvmen1p2 was my EXT4 filesystem, and /dev/nvmen1p3 was my swapspace.

If you needed to partition the drive manually, like you were setting up in a virtual machine, I would recommend using cfdisk.

In my case, I needed to format these partitions with their appropriate purposes.

mkfs.ext4 /dev/nvmen1p2
mkswap /dev/nvmen1p3
swapon /dev/nvmen1p3

I handled the /dev/nvmen1p1 EFI partition later, when I would install GRUB.

Mounting the Filesystem

mount /dev/nvmen1p2 /mnt

Installing Arch

pacstrap /mnt base

Configure the system

genfstab -U /mnt >> /mnt/etc/fstab

Chroot into the new filesystem

arch-chroot /mnt

Setting the timezone

ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/EST5EDT /etc/localtime
hwclock --systohc

Localization

sed 's/#en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8/g' /etc/locale.gen
echo "LANG=en_US.UTF-8" > /etc/locale.conf

Hostname

echo arch > /etc/hostname

cat <<EOF >/etc/hosts
127.0.0.1 localhost
::1	      localhost
127.0.1.1 arch.localdomain arch
EOF

Set root passwd

passwd

Install GRUB

pacman -Sy grub os-prober

When I was installing via virtual machine, I just needed to:

grub-install /dev/sda
grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg

When I was installing on my hard drive I did:

grub-install /dev/nvmen1p3
grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg

DO NOT forget to copy over a network profile for netctl and install netctl and network-manager so you still have internet access when you reboot into the real system

Adding a new user

mkdir /home/john
useradd john
passwd john

Getting Internet

When I was on a virtual machine, I needed to run these commands to get an IP address.

dhcpcd
dhcpcd -4

Installing Sudo

pacman -Sy sudo

Installing Audio Drivers

sudo pacman -Sy pulseaudio pavucontrol

I needed to restart my computer after running these commands for the sound to start. (There was probably a service, but I couldn't find it...)

Getting yay and AUR Support

First get ready to work with PKGBUILD files:

sudo pacman -S --needed base-devel

Then get yay:

git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/yay.git
cd yay
makepkg -si

Correcting .bashrc

I copy and pasted the default Ubuntu bashrc from here:

Installing tmux

pacman -Sy tmux
echo 'source "$HOME/.bashrc"' > ~/.bashrc

Installing xrandr
----------------

pacman -S xorg-xrandr


Setting proper monitor size
--------------------------

xrandr --output DP-3 --scale 2x2 --mode 2560x1080



Getting monokai in vim
----------------------


First I downloaded vim-plug. [https://github.com/junegunn/vim-plug](https://github.com/junegunn/vim-plug)

curl -fLo ~/.vim/autoload/plug.vim --create-dirs
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/junegunn/vim-plug/master/plug.vim


Then, I could modify my `~/.vimrc` file to what it is now.
Then I would run `:PlugInstall` from within vim and it would install the module for me.

Tmux would act strange though -- I would need to be sure to remove all of the tmux
sessions before I could see the vim changes take effect.

```bash
tmux ls # to see the running sessions
tmux kill-session -t 2   # to kill the other sessions

Installing OBS-Studio

yay -S obs-studio

Installing FontAwesome

yay -S ttf-font-awesome

This is incomplete. I need to keep working on this (1109 September 30th 2019)