nice the part of "device wlan0 show" thatreally shows important info, some wifi cards must be enabled by the adapter first, keep that in mind just to comment in further videos
4:20 I will say just use your phone in UBS targeting mode to access internet because your wifi device may cause issue because every wifi device does work on linux
@@kskroyaltech I think this is like the most difficult to install and most tutorials get it wrong. So it would really come in handy if you would do it for us.
archinstall doesn't auto format nvme drive . i had to manually fully install archlinux , cause the auto formatting of nvme drive on my laptop was failing repeatedly even on different versions
Hey everyone, I'm having trouble with Arch Linux and Secure Boot. I installed Arch with Secure Boot turned off, and everything worked perfectly. But then I tried enabling Secure Boot later, and my boot menu (where you choose which operating system to start) got messed up. It shows a message saying the files are tampered with. If I turn Secure Boot back off, the menu comes back, but that's not what I want. I figured out the problem is because the normal Arch installer doesn't have a special boot menu program that works with Secure Boot. Secure Boot seems really strict and needs to check everything before it lets it run. The solutions I found online involve creating your own special codes (keys) and signing things, but that sounds super complicated! Honestly, I'm not comfortable messing with those kinds of settings. Has anyone else had this issue? Is there an easier way to fix the boot menu so I can use Secure Boot with Arch? Help a beginner out!
You are using a UEFI system with secure boot. Using Linux was never gonna be a easy option to begin with. The best thing you can do is read the arch wiki or see a online tutorial. Plus you are using arch so you should get comfortable configuring everything in your system to begin with and yes that does include your BIOS firmware settings to some extent However if you don't want to deal with all that you can install a distro like fedora which should work with secure boot turned on out of the box
@@kskroyaltech I disabled Secure Boot to install Arch Linux, and it worked perfectly. However, when I re-enabled Secure Boot after installation, the boot menu wouldn't load, and I received a "tampered files" message. Since I'm on a UEFI system, I understand the need for custom keys to verify the boot loader (GRUB). I've checked the Arch Wiki for solutions, which involve adding custom keys for verification. However, I'm hesitant to modify BIOS settings, especially since the Wiki warns about potential risks. I don't want to brick my system. I've searched for tutorials on loading custom keys for Secure Boot, but some comments mention users experiencing boot failures after following them. To avoid any issues, I'll be still use Ubuntu for now until a clearer Secure Boot guide for Arch Linux becomes available. P.S. While I understand disabling Secure Boot would allow me to use Arch, But I'd prefer to keep this security feature enabled.
I follow your guide step by step and when I reboot and run pc without pendrive, it prompts grub screen, when I choose arch Linux it start to boot, but right after boot when it suppose to load login screen, my pc loose connection with monitor. Monitor start to switch between hdmi1 hdmi2 ports etc looking for signal until it shuts down and pc is still runing. I cant get journal or anything becouse there is no screen working. Shortkey alt+ctrl+F2 dont work either. Do you know what might be the cause of this?
Just literally mixed your tutorial with stuff from the official installation guide for it to make the installation actually work because I already tried installing 10 times previously but the terminal only showed an error message Thanks for the half-help
This video helps you to install Arch Linux on a Standalone drive. Say Your computer has Two drives, one for windows and the other spare drive can be used for arch linux installation.
hey just want to confirm if this tutorial covers the ff: 1. swap file/ partition was not created (needed to support RAM and hibernation) 2. os-prober was not enabled in grub config for dual-booting PCs. I just watched a tutorial and it lacks those two above,
SWAP file can be created manually later. In my particular case I haven't used SWAP file because of sufficient ram available in my computer. Also You can setup OS prober after the installation if you have windows running on the other drives.
@@kskroyaltech OK thanks I will try it. When can we expect the raspberry pi 5 Achinstall guide? I know you get lots of requests but this one is a strange case. I cannot find any guide that result in successful installation. commentators on other videos say the same. Does raspberry pi 5 supports Arch?