How to Install Arch Linux

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Revision as of 11:12, 30 May 2025 by Paxton (talk | contribs) (More comming kater)
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Here's how

Before Install

Back up EVERYTHING to something, like a usb hard drive/usb ssd thing. Use balena etcher or rufus to flash the arch linux installer onto a usb drive, NOT your back up medium. In fact you shouldn't have the medium you used to back up your system plugged in at all during the install.

Before Formatting

First, check if your system is a uefi system by entering cat /sys/firmware/efi/fw_platform_size into the terminal. If it's either 32 or 64, you're using UEFI. If it doesn't exist, you're not. Enter ip link to figure out if you have internet. It it says DOWN then follow the next steps. If you're using Wi-Fi enter iwctl device list then iwctl --passphrase passphrase station name connect SSID and replace passphrase with your wifi password, name with the device from device list and SSID with your WiFi name. Check if the network works by pinging a website, like this one, with ping paxtonpenguin.com. Then enter timedatectl to set the clock. You should be ready to format the hard drive.

Using fdisk

Use the command fdisk -l to list the drives. You should see something like /dev/sda or /dev/nvme0n1, that's your hard drive/ssd that you can install onto. Then enter fdisk /dev/the_disk_to_be_partitioned but replace the /dev/the_disk_to_be_partitioned with your disk. Now is where you deviate depending on if you have a bios or uefi system.

UEFI format

When you run fdisk press g to make the partition table GPT and then press n to make a new partition. Make a 1 gigabyte (by typing 1g) for the UEFI boot partition. Make another partition at least 4 gigs in space for a swap partition (basically more ram) and 1 final partition that uses the rest of the disc for actual space by just pressing enter when asked for a size. Press t to change the type of a partition. Use the EFI Partition type for the 1gb partition. Linux swap for the 4gb+ partition for swap. Linux x86_64 root (/) for the rest of the drive. Save the changes and exit with w.

BIOS format

When you run fdisk press m for an mbr partition or g for a gpt partition. It depends which one you want to use (both are fine, but gpt is easier). Press n for a new partition and press p if you are using mbr. Make a partition that's at least 4 gigabytes for swap (basically extra ram) by typing 4g and another one that takes up the entire rest of the drive by pressing enter when asked for the rest of the drive. Press t to change the type of the type of the partitions, Linux swap for the 4gig partition and Linux for the other partition. Save and exit by pressing w.

The Format and Mounting

You could use other formats for the main drive (which if you're following this guide should be either /dev/whatever3 for uefi and /dev/whatever2 for bios, except don't actually use the word whatever in the commands), but ext4 is the default and best option. Type mkfs.ext4 /dev/root_partition and replace root_partition with that partition that took up the test of the drive (/dev/whatever3 or /dev/whatever2). mkswap /dev/swap_partition for the swap partition (i'm not making it pink in code parts). If you have a uefi partition, make the 1gb partition fat32 by doing mkfs.fat -F 32 /dev/efi_system_partition and replace efi_system_partition with /dev/whatever1 or whatever the partition is. Mount the root partition with mount /dev/root_partition /mnt and also replace the root_partition with whatever you replaced the other r_p with. Mount the uefi partition with mount --mkdir /dev/efi_system_partition /mnt/boot and replace the e_s_p thing with the uefi partition. Finally add the swap with swapon /dev/swap_partition and replace s_p with the actual partition.

Actually Installing

The last section sucked to write and now it's time to install Arch Linux by doing pacstrap -K /mnt base linux linux-firmware and also adding some other stuff to that command like nano for a easy to use text editor, because you'll need one. Also add dhcpcd to the command so you won't need to boot back into the installer again. Why yes i have done that before, it sucks. You also might need to add microcode for your cpu (amd-ucode and inter-ucode depending on your cpu), any firmware not in the linux-firmware package (sof-firmware for onboard audio, linux-firmware-marvell for marvell internet packages, etc.), and iwd for wi-fi. Did i just add that to pimp up this section? Yes, but it's infomational.

Configuring the System so it doesn't explode

First, make a fstab (file system thing) by doing genfstab -U /mnt >> /mnt/etc/fstab then go into the system to do more configuring by typing arch-chroot /mnt (i love arch-chroot). Add the time zone by doing ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/Region/City /etc/localtime but replace the Region and City with your Region and City, or closed city (for me it's America/Chicago, even though i live in minnesota). Type this to sync the time with the bios/uefi: hwclock --systohc. Then run locale-gen and un comment (remove the #'s) with your needed locales (like for me it's en_US.UTF-8)(you only need to uncomment the UTF-8 ones)