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README.md
Arch Linux
John Hammond | September 29th, 2019
These are my notes and scripts while installing and setting up my Arch Linux environment.
I did this on my DELL XPS 15 laptop on September 29th, 2019. Following that, I began to set up a virtual machine for use at work. The virtual machine required a little bit of a different setup, so I decided to write these things down and try and automate the procedure.
The bootstrap.sh
script
This script is still in development, but it can be used to quickly take a freshly installed Arch Linux system to a fleshed-out and working state (per my own idea of "usable").
NOTE: The script is INCOMPLETE, and I will be continuously adding to it.
As of right now, the script will
- Set the locale, "arch" hostname, and EDT5EST timezone
- Create a new user (or use an existing one) you supply
- Configure
pacman
to use close mirrors - Install:
- sudo
- pulseaudio (and pavucontrol)
- git
- vim
- tmux
- X (and xrandr)
- base-devel
- i3 (and gnu-free-fonts)
- terminator
- dmenu
- firefox
- yay
- Configure Terminator to use my prefered theme
- Configure tmux to run on start of a shell
- Configure X to start i3 and for the first TTY to start the desktop
- Configure Vim to use the Sublime Text Monokai colorscheme
- Configure git with my preferred name and e-mail (change this if you use this)
- Made the /opt directory writeable by the user (I like to store tools there)
You can run the script right after a fresh install and you set up GRUB. Replace
john
with whatever username you want to be the one managing your system, that
you use from here on out.
./bootstrap.sh <john>
Installing
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!
When I did this on the virtual machine, I did not have results -- it had not booted in UEFI. This did not end up mattering much.
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!
On the virtual machine, I did not need to set any of this up. Because the VM was either bridged or NAT-d, it should have Internet. I did run these commands to snag an IP address (and I often need to do this on boot for the VM):
dhcpcd
dhcpcd -4
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.
In the case of the virtual machine, I would need to create these partitions "manually" with
cfdisk
I created a 1 GB partition for swap space and another 1 GB for the boot loader (probably don't need that much...) and the rest I reserved for the filesystem.
I would then run the appropriate commands with /dev/sda1
, /dev/sda2
, etc.
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 root password
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
At this point, the bootstrap.sh
script could be used.