Just a heads up: I do not encrypt the boot partition in this video, which means your keyfile can be compromised using another live ISO image. If you want to be extra secure, skip the step for putting the keyfile in the FILES=() line in the mkinitcpio.conf This does mean you'll have to enter your password twice, however. I have another video in the pipeline where we'll be looking at different options for securing the boot partition in this setup as there are a few options to achieve this each with their own caveats! Thanks to everyone who pointed this out
@akialwayz8 ай бұрын
Will creating efi partition and lvm partition first and then adding /boot, swap, / (root) in lvm (no need for home for me) work? That way only one password is required right? Or will it not work because some part of luks is in encrypted lvm? I'm a newbie, trying to make sense how this works. Ty for the video, rest of it is very easy to understand and helpful.
@_sneer_8 ай бұрын
It is not “extra secure”. If keyfile is not encrypted then the system is basically wide open, no point of encryption at all.
@ketchup9018 ай бұрын
Which means there is no point in encrypting anything in the first place
@_sneer_8 ай бұрын
@@ketchup901 exactly.
@wadeduvall70267 ай бұрын
BTW, the correct way to do this is to put the keys on / partition (encrypted) and point crypttab to them.
@Klusio198 ай бұрын
Insanely well-made and aesthetic video! I use Arch btw
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@traderdha7 ай бұрын
Hi. Is the disk encryption really required? I was a windows user and installing Arch Linux now.
@dreamsofautonomy7 ай бұрын
@@traderdha It is not! Only if you're extra paranoid, like I am. You can skip it entirely otherwise :)
@grantstoltman14698 ай бұрын
Did a new Arch install last week so the release of this was perfect timing. I walked through step-by-step exactly and ran into zero issues. The only "maybe" error I noticed was the annotation for a typo in your original code at 14:12. Annotation "should be /dev/nvme1n0p3" should actually be "/dev/nvme0n1p3"
@user-wb7ot7kt3x8 ай бұрын
I'll probably never need this tutorial but I appreciate your attention of detail. Good job!
@eygs4935 ай бұрын
why?
@joetheman747 ай бұрын
Another super easy and more powerful USB tool would be Ventoy. You simply install Ventoy on to the USB thumb drive. It sets itself up as bootable. Now you can drag as many Linux .iso as you want or can fit on the drive. Ventoy will automatically add them to it's menu. When you boot from the Ventoy drive a nice looking menu is displayed listing all the different Linux .iso you have available. You can even put other OS on there too. It is the easiest way to make a multi OS bootable drive. Pretty cool option.
@Voshchronos6 ай бұрын
I love Ventoy so much, such a great software.
@eduardofgomes015 ай бұрын
Totally agreed, I use ventoy it's really amazing
@GaleonGuitar5 ай бұрын
I don't know if it is just me but it seems like the entire process of initializing the installation and Live Boot takes a lot longer on Ventoy even if you have a modern USB 3.0 (probably due to all the files being compressed inside the .ISOs) . This is my only complaint and the reason i still have a separate usb drive exclusive for windows 10/11 installers when people ask me for help formatting their PCs.
@raggebatman4 ай бұрын
Probably user error but I never got Ventoy to boot UEFI/GPT, so I just write the ISO to another USB with the right format :P
@SleepTime-Dark3 ай бұрын
@@raggebatmanJust select these options on ventoy gui, and i think this should work
@orangejuche8 ай бұрын
Excellent video, cleared up some of the problems I'd encountered installing Arch in the past.
@javiergomezve8 ай бұрын
I use arch, btw
@Batwam08 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing 👍
@Daoist_Oak8 ай бұрын
I use Arch, BTW. PS: let's keep the chain going.
@spike73198 ай бұрын
Who asked?
@nothiiiiiiiing8 ай бұрын
I use arch btw. @@Daoist_Oak
@imTyp0_8 ай бұрын
@@Daoist_OakI use arch, btw
@YusufKhalifadev8 ай бұрын
the video super enjoying to watch keep it up bro, looking forward for your next arch video
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed! Thank you.
@kad3n4703 ай бұрын
I followed the entire guide with encryption aswell everything worked amazing great explanations!!!!
@felixfourcolor8 ай бұрын
Thanks to you that I know you can use SSH to install from another device. This makes the installation process so much more convenient, I wish the arch wiki included this tip.
@denji-03 ай бұрын
dude i feel like your video gave me the best first arch install i could get!!..(especially partitioning)..awesome stuff
@mansoormohamedali8 ай бұрын
Are you the same person who makes Dream of Code? I adored your videos and the approach to teach it is inspiring. Including this one. Keep it up. And thank you.
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
Yes I am! You found me :)
@mansoormohamedali8 ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy Nice 🎉.
@ForeverZer08 ай бұрын
After installing Arch scores of times over the years, I am fully on-board with simply running "arch-install" and being done with it. I use a basic setup with two drives, encryption only on the system/boot drive, so nothing fancy that requires anything the install script cannot accomplish faster. It isn't perfect by any means, but it gets it done, and makes Arch much more accessible to Linux newcomers.
@dragondove61978 ай бұрын
I extremely recommend to use ventoy for usb boot up steps. ventoy is a grub distro installed on flashdisk and can boot iso files under root directory of flashdisk partition. That's much easier to use than dd command.
@sarimbinwaseem8 ай бұрын
Definitely....
@AnxulJyoti7 ай бұрын
You must use arch btw
@sarimbinwaseem7 ай бұрын
@@AnxulJyoti 😄
@SadguruKrupa-ob5wm11 күн бұрын
Great guide with detailed explanations! The world needs more people like you :)
@anakinsonone8 ай бұрын
I'd really like to see how to make your own 'Desktop Environment'; like what are the different things that make up a 'desktop environment' and so on. BTW, this video is what I definitely needed, another Arch Install video 😂.
@whoman03858 ай бұрын
a desktop environment is still just a window manager but it also comes with its own suite of apps, like calculators, text editors, terminals etc..
@jackof4ll8 ай бұрын
My first distro was arch and I couldn't get to do some basic things which made me frustrated since I was new and didn't find comprehensive stuff that covers i3wm with automatic disk mounting (NVME) Nvidia drivers ( to prevent screen tearing in the web browser) as so forth.
@luimu3 ай бұрын
@@jackof4lllol this mf doesn't find information on the most widely documented distro that exists
@ShadowriverUB8 ай бұрын
Arch is kind of sweet sport between ready up distros and gentoo
@Malephex3 ай бұрын
This reminds me of setting up Slackware in the 90's. I never want to back to that.
@momensy21366 ай бұрын
Bro we need a video for your terminal setup including tmux and neovim. Great video btw ❤
@JCO20028 ай бұрын
I totally understand. Recently I needed a new hammer. I devoted a couple of months to gathering the ore, learning how to refine it, and then casting the perfect hammer head. Next is carving a perfect handle for it - once I've constructed my own chisels, from scratch. Gathering all the necessary info with my Linux Mint desktop.
@madeyeQ8 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@SnowyRVulpix8 ай бұрын
😂
@JCO20027 ай бұрын
@iaros.h Yep, I was being a bit facetious. But on the other hand, that's what the friends and colleagues to whom I talk up Linux expect - major ordeal, having to use the terminal, etc. I'm talking several with PhD's! I have to stress that there are versions (Distros) like Mint, where you install it, take 10 minutes to figure out, and you're good to go.
@SakkakuTamashi8 ай бұрын
I wish I had this guide when I started using arch back in 2016 EDIT: a couple of nice additions would be secure boot (maybe even with TPM) and plymouth for graphical password display and splash screen
@patrickdee73658 ай бұрын
secure boot would need any kernel module dependent package need to get signed, this gets very stupid at some point, ubuntu does this if you want that but not even fedora sign those packages
@SakkakuTamashi8 ай бұрын
@@patrickdee7365 the way I do it is by generating a unified kernel image that bundle everything so you have to sign (pacman hooks actually do this for you) stuff twice (kernel and fallback)
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
Agreed! I added a pinned note about encrypting / securing boot on this setup! I'll be doing a follow up video on how to do so :)
@yaakoss8 ай бұрын
@@patrickdee7365 you can sign the modules automatically via a script.
@SakkakuTamashi8 ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy I'm glad my feedback has been useful
@yaakoss8 ай бұрын
Nice video! However the boot partition is still unencrypted and also unsecured. It would be nice to have an upgraded version with UKI and secureboot which gives you even more security. On some systems you can even go without any bootmanager then. Or use systemd-boot or rEFInd
@WERTBON8 ай бұрын
GRUB supports putting the kernel not on the EFI System partition (Or seperate boot partition) and with a patch also supports unlocking luks2 containers. I would generally say it's unneeded to have a separate boot partition, instead just leave it on your main partition. On my Laptop, I have a setup with a 2MiB EFI System partition, which only holds GRUB and absolutely nothing more (You could also sign it with secure boot keys optionally) and a Root Partition containing everything which is encrypted using a luks2 container. To start my Laptop, I always need to enter a password in order to decrypt the root partition and boot into the system. systemd-boot doesn't support the kernel and initrd not on the EFI System Partition, so you would need to sign it, to actually secure it. rEFInd, to my knowledge, doesn't support unlocking luks2 containers, so you would need another solution for that. GRUB might be the best option, if you want to expose the least attack surface, which with just being the bootloader, is pretty minimal.
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
You''re correct! An encrypted boot partition with TPM is fully secure. I'm going to be adding it to this setup in a coming video.
@yaakoss8 ай бұрын
@WERTBON. Grub does support luks2 yes, with a patch it even supports argon2i but then it is slow as hell while decrypting the partition. If you use UKI that is located on the EFI partition and secured by own secureboot keys then you do not need the boot manager to decrypt the partition. Like i said you do not even need a bootmanager on some mainboards/computers. I use rEFInd because of its nice UI. But systemd-boot would also work without any issues. As for the TPM with additional password it even adds an extra layer of security
@UncleJemima6 ай бұрын
rEFInd for life ✌️
@duncan-mcrae18 күн бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomyany idea when this future video is coming out?
@maxine49737 ай бұрын
GAH you've finally got me. I am ordering a intel NUC to install Arch on right now
@rnzqt7 ай бұрын
Would love to see a "setting up arch for development " video. Switched away from m$ recently, and exploring different distros for my daily work machine
@brainstormsurge1542 ай бұрын
Would love to see a video on how to setup a self-hosted password manager and encrypted backup. I know there's other videos out there but I just love the way you present things.
@pabloqp79298 ай бұрын
Sudoers tip: you can also use the oneliner `EDITOR=nvim visudo`
@devbites778 ай бұрын
Great video detailing the process step by step. Most appreciated!
@TerminalzPain5 ай бұрын
I don't use Arch, but if I ever did go to install it, I would deffo follow this guide, really well made!
@JTCF8 ай бұрын
Cool! I really liked this video. I have been using Arch for a long time, and I'm used to installing it manually, didn't have a chance to test the new and shiny arch installer. Although my partitioning is very simple, ESP plus root and no encryption. But I do use a very much custom graphical environment, Sway with much of additional cosmetic apps. Now I am using gentoo and I think the handbook currently is much better than the previous time I tried to do it. I've decided to try out gnome as well, and the installation turned out to be extremely simple because you pretty much just select a profile and tell portage to compile and install everything. I decided to keep using systemd, thankfully the gentoo documentation has improved a lot and supplies much more useful information for systemd profile users. And also I recently transitioned to UKI system, I can boot my linux system even without a bootloader, cool! But I do use rEFInd for dual-boot/triple-boot nicely. Oh, did I mention I have 2 linux systems in one btrfs partition with roots divided into subvolumes? Yeah, pretty cursed yet cool I think.
@0x1fe18 ай бұрын
I use NixOS btw ❄️
@stingfiretube3 ай бұрын
Firstly thank you for the video. I'm not sure if you've sped up this video but it seems too rushed like you wanted to catch a flight. I've lost count of the number of times I had to rewind 10 seconds, to get to a command that only remains on screen for 1 second.
@dreamsofautonomy3 ай бұрын
Most of my content is fast paced. There is a setting on KZbin player to play at x0.75 and the command list is available on GH as well!
@stingfiretube3 ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomyYeah eventually I did have to slow it down. But besides that, it was a good video, and possibly the only one that addresses setting up LVM+LUKS for multiple drives. I'm just happy the computer booted.❤️
@rubipowahsupernombre9648 ай бұрын
Nice video! I wish I've seen this one while installing arch manually.
@MuhammadNurIslomToxtamishhoji-8 ай бұрын
you explained all of this so easy, for a moment I thought maybe it's easy :D
@brainwater8 ай бұрын
Only put the swap size to be bigger than the RAM if you want to be able to suspend to disk. In addition, i highly recommend considering going without swap if you have 32GB or more of RAM. This info is based on HDDs not SSDs, and was from ten years ago, but it likely still applies. Especially with an HDD swap on high memory systems you can get thrashing so bad your system is unusable for hours at a time. Due to the way the kernel scans for pages that can be swapped out to provide more file system cache, with 4k pages it can easily take extra processing to find pages to swap out that are not gotten back by having a slightly bigger cache. The desired behavior when a system is running out of memory is very likely to kill the offending process while maintaining interactivity, which swap causes the opposite behavior.
@ForeverZer08 ай бұрын
Totally agree. I still use it for an old budget laptop that I repurposed into a dedicated Plex/mpd server, but for my primary machine that has 32 GB, I never bother using swap, it is simply a waste of memory. There is also zram which can be setup for "just in case" situations if one is not comfortable completely foregoing any memory caching for whatever reason..
@raggebatman4 ай бұрын
I always heard the recommendation was to have swap, even if you have 32+ GB of memory and even if the swap space is only 512 MB in size. Due to some programs that expect swap to exist or something... They are both arguments for and against swap, so I wonder which is really better. Or if it's a case of no swap being "non-standard"
@ancestrall7948 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot man thanks to your tutorial and another website that I used as a complement the Arch installation went smoothly
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
I'm very glad to hear that!
@DefaultLP8 ай бұрын
Really amazing! Arch has always been a double edged sword for me. On one hand it's incedible for what it offers. On the other hand you have to do everything yourself. And while I'm not confident enought to switch from Debian right now, it certanly helped me understand Arch better. So thank you!
@paultapping95104 ай бұрын
I cannot recommend EndeavourOS enough. It's literally just arch with a nice installer and a decent after-install helper script. You can install whichever DE you're familiar with and other than remembering to use pacman or yay not apt-get you will probably not even notice a difference.
@HelpsmallbusinessesАй бұрын
outstanding video! Thanks for the guidance.
@mcg67624 ай бұрын
I think you might be slowing down your drives by writing to every single block the first thing you do. The drives have no way of knowing which blocks contain actual data and are forced to retain everything and the wear leveling algorithms get slower. This might improve over time if you have trim enabled since the os tells the drive which blocks it is discarding when deleting a file.
@metal-beard8 ай бұрын
This was really informational video. Looking forward to more.
@typingcat8 ай бұрын
Back up the header (or something like that) of LUKS partition. Last time I used it, that thing had only a single copy of the header at the beginning of the partition, and when with some mechanical error that part was corrupted, not a single file could be retrieved even though I knew the password and I used full-disk scanning of disk recovery tools. I think I heard that newer versions of LUKS has two headers so that it could still work if one header gets corrupted, but just to be sure.
@W0lfCL4 ай бұрын
I haven't ever used the disk encryption when installing arch, since I don't have a laptop so I don't leave my PC in public, buf I had no idea it's possible out of the box Great video! I'll defo show it to friends who are afraid of installing arch, bc you explain everything in a very simple manner
@hanhthien29484 ай бұрын
Nerd
@W0lfCL4 ай бұрын
@@hanhthien2948 I mean if u ended up on this vid u're pretty much a nerd too
@Mywifeleftme34 ай бұрын
My wife left me
@φαιιοΕπίσης3 ай бұрын
I use Arch btw btw btw
@vishwaravi453 ай бұрын
Definitely you are arch user
@Fouss_83 ай бұрын
Just trap her in your basement
@voltage54932 ай бұрын
I use Arch btw
@chrikke2 ай бұрын
I stole her
@kebman8 ай бұрын
The overwrite, does it make any sense on an SSD? AFAIK it makes sense on magnetic drives, but the SSD is a completely different system with a grid of NAND gates. Plus it's got a limited amount of writes.
@h.hristov7 ай бұрын
Yes, it does make sense.
@editremix79918 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for presenting this information to your audience. I have been using Arch-based Garuda Linux for about 1 and a half years. In the past years, I tried to install raw Arch Linux, but I failed. I hope I can install Arch Linux by scratching it thanks to your video. I'm happy with Garuda Linux for now, but this video will help me understand Arch Linux faster. Thank you for sharing your valuable information.
@kallekula847 ай бұрын
this stuff is great, wish you had made this a year ago when I installed arch linux the first time! haha
@ltecheroffical6 ай бұрын
As a mac user this is really convincing, I might start using both
@erictrinque65138 ай бұрын
Have a Beelink Ser6 Pro with the 6800h and 64gb running ProxMox and Virtualized TrueNas Scale. 32tb on 4 spinning HDDs. so much power in such small and power efficient packages its incredible.
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
Did you upgrade the RAM yourself? I'm still in the market for upgrading it.
@erictrinque65138 ай бұрын
yup dropped in a 64gb kit of Silicon power ddr5 4800, not the fastest i could get but the price was right. and ddr5 being what it is its still VERY fast @@dreamsofautonomy
@tux-x3z2 ай бұрын
Will it work with secureboot enabled? Btw, nice video!
@mick_io7 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. That was a journey!
@arlaxia8 ай бұрын
Not only was this thorough, but the editing was great! What video editing software do you use?
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
Thank you! I use Davinci Resolve, as it's the only one I've found that works well on Linux. I tried moving to adobe suite but found it to be not as good as DR. I still need to learn how to get faster with editing though 😅
@arlaxia8 ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy Never heard of it, might check it out. In any case, hoping for more videos like this!
@sarimbinwaseem8 ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy oh DR.. the best at editing and grading...
@Bielocke8 ай бұрын
What a beautiful guide this was!
@rexby8 ай бұрын
respect for the font size in the terminal
@nyctinasty47535 ай бұрын
As someone who has heard the legends of Arch Linux install being "very manual" & difficult, and has already played a bit with an Arch based distro (though one with a Calamares installer) - this video made me my brain go *"wait... i thought this would look harder."*
@annotated_8 ай бұрын
you can also set up secure boot or maybe even dual boot if you're feeling fancy just to make the entire process even more complicated and mind boggling with a side of an acute headache. (idk why GRUB and secure boot likes to give me the most trouble lol) I use arch on USB btw! :)
@ForeverZer08 ай бұрын
For basic no-fuss booting when nothing fancy is required, I am fully on team systemd-boot nowadays.
@Kaffeejunk1e8 ай бұрын
I'm using Windows since 98, mostly for gaming. Even today i use 11 for gaming because i don't find ways to configure the gaming hardware within linux. On my old Laptop i use Linux Mint a few years now to learn and understand better how linux works. Arch Linux, as the video shows, is very hard for beginners if you don't know all the commands and what you have to do to install everything you need. Especially if you don't know what packages you need or how they are called etc. This guide helps a lot to learn what you have to do and what happens on the machine. But to understand everything i stil have a long way to go. Or just stay in the middle between windows and arch -> Mint (or Debian/Ubuntu based Distros) 🙈
@hrmf328 ай бұрын
you can learn windows or arch, but arch is soo much better.
@sumanth30367 ай бұрын
Wow. Beautiful. Can you also make a video about how you make these videos and animations in Arch? Your workflow basically. Thanks a lot.
@cloud56998 ай бұрын
I'm already comfortable installing Arch manually, but this was a great guide on encryption and security, great video!
@twenty-fifth4208 ай бұрын
Lol, you kind of propagandized my mind Dreams, evident by the fact you read my mind by making a video I will always probably need in the future
@mailman20976 ай бұрын
amazing bro... its 2024, and i am literally stuck installing another linux os on my very temperamental 💩 minipc ... at least now I understand how it all works on a high level under the hood.. btw i tried arch but was overwhelmed and gave up too easily.. now i will arch on..
@hammer4you8 ай бұрын
@dreamsofautonomy Your videos are amazing! Please don't stop. Now for absolute happiness we urgently need the i3w video guide. Thank you!
@mchi22146 ай бұрын
Same, gentoo is the way. I have two profiles gnome and hyprland. Two days to compile using j4. Arch is a walk in the park
@TheClubPlazma8 ай бұрын
Thank you .Great work
@barreltitor14198 ай бұрын
Would love to see a video on remote VNC setup (tigerVNC perhaps?), thank you!
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
This is a great idea! Thank you.
@victortesla29358 ай бұрын
20:03 you switched from Mac to linux 😱 and yet you're still so skilled at Linux! How did you acquire such knowledge?
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
Haha I use both. Linux is my daily driver, but macOS is for video editing and filming typically. I've been using linux far longer than mac however!
@KristOFF-T8 ай бұрын
Have you ever tried out ventoy? It's pretty damn cool. You have to install it once, and never format it again. Just copy all the isos to the pendrive, and never reformat. You can also store additional stuff, and because you don't need to reformat, you don't have to move it to a different drive every time you want to install an OS.
@ghislain-bernard8 ай бұрын
Excellent video, thank you very much.
@SnorreSelmer8 ай бұрын
Excellent video! I don’t run Arch, BTW. I used to, and I’m going to install it to a VM so I can try to get back into it again. I need something I can use for k8s development, so I need to figure out how to get all the tools I need installed.
@yellowked4 ай бұрын
Using GNOME on Arch because it's easier is like eating a cake but drinking diet coke because it has fewer calories Great video btw, I'm installing Arch at this very moment
@VorpalForceField2 ай бұрын
I would recommend Not putting swap in an lvm .. More than likely all your physical volumes will have been allocated at setup .. It's unlikely for you to ever shrink data from a logical volume to add extra space to swap.. and mostly ..any overhead you add to swap is a detriment to the performance of and already serious bottle neck.. Not to mention completely unnecessary.. Swap already supports raid like features.. simply setting the priority level in your fstab allows you to delegate swap behavior.. set swap at block level then set pri=1 to all the swaps and they will distribute performance across all those with that same priority level.. even across multiple drives, which makes adding drives to increase LV size to increase swap size mute... On a side note .. if I understand correctly in how the data is stored on and SSD... unlike spindle drives, I dont know that you gain anything by random writing the drives to hide boundaries... Excellent Video .. Thank You .. Cheers :)
@tusharsnx7 ай бұрын
This made me respect Windows OOBE even more
@roganl7 ай бұрын
Excellent Video, as per always! I wanted to save you keystrokes by suggesting 'Ctrl-L' in lieu of 'clear'... FWIW - muscle memory dies hard, I know.
@AniAdamPashut8 ай бұрын
is this the second channel of dreams of code? anyway, great vid
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
it is! You found me
@pvarela652 ай бұрын
Congratulations on the very well made and useful video that I just discovered. I am an Ubuntu user for many years and want to start using and exploring Arch. From the comments I can infer that everyone had a sweet and smooth journey installing Arch following your guide, so I must be using something very stupid because although I can complete the installation I never get the grub menu to appear on starting the computer. I tried the same ISO using the arch install script and it works flawlessly. During the manual installation I noticed I got an error during the build processes. Looking carefully to your video I noticed that you also get the same error during the first build but not in the subsequent ones. Do you have any idea what I might be doing wrong? Thank you.
@oimateusaqui8 ай бұрын
5 TBs only?? I think you should add more 😁 Just kidding, I'm thinking about using Arch, but I'm still not sure
@NipunDrall6 ай бұрын
This is a good one I use Arch, btw
@actellimQTАй бұрын
idk who might need to see this but if you have to use the `--removable` flag in `grub-install` you'll need to change the location of your second `grub-mkconfig` to /boot/efi/EFI/BOOT/grub.cfg.
@roa40318 ай бұрын
The easiest way to connect to wifi while installation is to use usb tethering. You have to configure wifi after installation anyway and it is easier to do it after installing desktop environment.
@incognito_user_name2 ай бұрын
This is a really good install video, but I am at a loss for how to setup TImeshift with this layout. Are you still planning a video for setting up snapshots?
@TheLazyJAK8 ай бұрын
Dang, you know Linux pretty well. Any ansible videos soon?
@xuedi8 ай бұрын
downloading the iso and the hashfile from the same server does nothing, maybe a verification of the integrity, getting the hash file from an trusted different source should be the way to go ...
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
That's what the key signing is for. Additionally, you can compare the hash on the arch website as well.
@aa8982468 ай бұрын
great video
@socio98077 ай бұрын
You know, I think no beginner will ever follow this video, so installing Gnome as something a beginner would enjoy was a little funny :D Don't get me wrong, it's an excellent tutorial, one I'll follow when I eventually switch to bare Arch, but you're going way to fast with everything. Maybe it's just an issue with synchronizing the VO with the footage, but sometimes you describe one command while the terminal is already one step ahead, which is completely confusing when each command throws a few lines text afterward. Btw. did I get that right that you're using the original 1TB ssd just for the os? Wouldn't it be better to switch it to a smaller one and add that 1TB on top of the 4TB you added at the beginning?
@swastikpatel2348 ай бұрын
insanely awesome work dude , your terminal looks beautiful can you make a video on how to acheive such a terminal , i am using ubuntu btw
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
I absolutely can and will!
@JamesSmith-ix5jd7 ай бұрын
If I recall correctly SSD controller can't distinguish between random and legit data, so by filling it with random you are hurting its ability to do trim properly. Not sure how it works in nvme.
@UnePouleSDF8 ай бұрын
I managed to wipe my disk out. But it's still a great video ;)
@rexby8 ай бұрын
It would be nice to be able to enter the password remotely on boot, for example via ssh. This is convenient for the case of remotely turning on a computer, for example via Wake on Lan.
@sshivam69558 ай бұрын
I finally know what that first and last sector means 😂 (i m new to Linux and started with Arch Hyprland)
@spr3ez8 ай бұрын
I use arch btw. Also I use neovim as an editor btw
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
One of us!
@halfsourlizard93198 ай бұрын
I use Ed btw.
@martinlarsson66216 ай бұрын
First of all, many thanks for this great video, it gave me the courage to finally jump in and try arch which I've been wanting to do for a long time. I did some things my own way, mainly using sddm, and systemd-boot, and building my own customized desktop environment on wayland with hyprland, waybar and some other stuff. I am dual-booting Windows for gaming, and need to enable secure-boot, which seems easy using sbctl package, however, I ran into a lot of issue with this when using grub (this was before switching to systemd-boot), it took a while to solve and included changing where my EPI is mounted which is the reason I am even writing this comment, from the arch-wiki: ``` Note: /efi is a replacement[6] for the historical and now discouraged ESP mountpoint /boot/efi. The /efi directory is not available by default, you will need to first create it before mounting the ESP to it. ``` That's all, just wanted to mention that the mountpoint which is showed here is now adays discouraged. Personally I went the route of having the /efi, with an additinoal /boot mountpoint using the XBOOTLDR which I feel is a really clean solution
@dreamsofautonomy6 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this! I plan on looking at secure boot some more. It seems like moving to systemd-boot is probably the right move in the future as well.
@weench8 ай бұрын
It is good video, useful! Thx
@shanukumawat61708 ай бұрын
Love to see a video on Hyprland ❤
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
This is a great idea!
@viktor48407 ай бұрын
Helpful, thx!
@flip01728 ай бұрын
Nice I liked the way you installed arch. Would it be possible to make a video on a dual boot with windows + secure boot?
@halfsourlizard93198 ай бұрын
Why would you defile a beautiful Arch installation with Windoze?!
@Talking__Ben4 ай бұрын
"I will need just a little bit more storage" *quintuples the storage*
@roa40318 ай бұрын
the best tutorial video I have ever seen
@dreamsofautonomy8 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@hrmf328 ай бұрын
@@dreamsofautonomy can say the same, seen some Arch installs, so far guess this one was the best one.
@Kartik_95127 ай бұрын
Very confusing, why the hell are you attaching an extra disk anyways?
@SyntaxLexx8 ай бұрын
This was more ASMR than Arch
@halfsourlizard93198 ай бұрын
You say that as if using Arch isn't generally tingly and relaxing...
@halfsourlizard93197 ай бұрын
@iaros.h somebody doesn't use Arch btw 🙄🤦♀️
@TON-vz3pe8 ай бұрын
LFS: Hold my beer Archie.
@dabeops7 ай бұрын
Hello, thanks for this tutorial. It's really helpful. I have a suggestion btw: the order in the arguments seems incorrect(GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT ): cryptdevice=UUID=:luks_lvm root=/dev/mapper/arch-root resume=/dev/mapper/arch-swap. What do you think?
@GeorgeChochtoulas8 ай бұрын
I prefer using gnome with ArcMenu, Dash to Panel and Wireless HID extensions to get a something like "GTK KDE Plasma"