You are not logged in.
First time arch user, so sorry in advance for lack of knowledge. Apologies out of the way, after a fresh install of arch linux and GNOME, I attempted to switch from wifi-menu to NetworkManager, only to be greeted with "No Networks" while scanning for wireless connections. I've disabled my netctl profiles using systemctl, though it didn't seem to make a difference.
Output of 'systemctl --type=service':
UNIT LOAD ACTIVE SUB D>
accounts-daemon.service loaded active running A>
colord.service loaded active running M>
dbus.service loaded active running D>
gdm.service loaded active running G>
kmod-static-nodes.service loaded active exited C>
lvm2-lvmetad.service loaded active running L>
lvm2-monitor.service loaded active exited M>
netctl@wlan0\x2dJUSTIN\x20SMELLS\x2d2.4.service loaded active exited A>
NetworkManager.service loaded active running N>
polkit.service loaded active running A>
rtkit-daemon.service loaded active running R>
systemd-backlight@backlight:intel_backlight.service loaded active exited L>
systemd-backlight@leds:asus::kbd_backlight.service loaded active exited L>
systemd-fsck@dev-disk-by\x2duuid-6714\x2dDAF9.service loaded active exited F>
systemd-homed.service loaded active running H>
systemd-journal-flush.service loaded active exited F>
systemd-journald.service loaded active running J>
systemd-logind.service loaded active running L>
systemd-modules-load.service loaded active exited L>
systemd-random-seed.service loaded active exited L>
systemd-remount-fs.service loaded active exited R>
systemd-repart.service loaded active exited R>
systemd-sysctl.service loaded active exited A>
systemd-tmpfiles-setup-dev.service loaded active exited C>
systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service loaded active exited C>
systemd-udev-trigger.service loaded active exited u>
systemd-udevd.service loaded active running u>
systemd-update-utmp.service loaded active exited U>
systemd-user-sessions.service loaded active exited P>
systemd-userdbd.service loaded active running U>
udisks2.service loaded active running D>
upower.service loaded active running D>
user-runtime-dir@1000.service loaded active exited U>
user@1000.service loaded active running U>
wpa_supplicant.service loaded active running W>
LOAD = Reflects whether the unit definition was properly loaded.
ACTIVE = The high-level unit activation state, i.e. generalization of SUB.
SUB = The low-level unit activation state, values depend on unit type.
35 loaded units listed. Pass --all to see loaded but inactive units, too.
To show all installed unit files use 'systemctl list-unit-files'.
I've managed to connect to the internet using netctl/wifi-menu, though as I said, disabling these doesn't seem to do anything. I'm assuming I've made some oversight but I've spent days working on this and scouring the wiki with no luck. Apologies for the likely poorly constructed thread, I'm new to this and genuinely don't know where to begin, and thanks in advance for any help.
Last edited by Seikatsu (2020-03-25 19:04:43)
Offline
I've disabled my netctl profiles using systemctl
What was the *exact* command that you used? I think you're supposed to use netctl(1) to manage the unit files.
Can we also see the output of
systemctl list-unit-files --state=enabled --no-p
Offline
Seikatsu wrote:I've disabled my netctl profiles using systemctl
What was the *exact* command that you used? I think you're supposed to use netctl(1) to manage the unit files.
Can we also see the output of
systemctl list-unit-files --state=enabled --no-p
systemctl disable and systemctl stop... as for the output:
UNIT FILE STATE VENDOR PRESET
var-lib-snapd-snap-brave-63.mount enabled disabled
var-lib-snapd-snap-core-8592.mount enabled disabled
var-lib-snapd-snap-core-8689.mount enabled disabled
var-lib-snapd-snap-core18-1668.mount enabled disabled
var-lib-snapd-snap-gtk\x2dcommon\x2dthemes-1440.mount enabled disabled
var-lib-snapd-snap-gtk\x2dcommon\x2dthemes-1474.mount enabled disabled
autovt@.service enabled disabled
dbus-org.freedesktop.nm-dispatcher.service enabled disabled
display-manager.service enabled disabled
gdm.service enabled disabled
getty@.service enabled enabled
NetworkManager-dispatcher.service enabled disabled
NetworkManager-wait-online.service enabled disabled
NetworkManager.service enabled disabled
snapd.socket enabled disabled
remote-fs.target enabled enabled
16 unit files listed.
Offline
Please don't full quote unnecessarily, it degrades the readability of the thread.
systemctl disable and systemctl stop
How did you manage the space in "netctl@wlan0-JUSTIN SMELLS-2.4.service"?
the output
Hmm, that doesn't show the netctl units
Can we see
ls -lR /etc/systemd/system
Offline
Seikatsu wrote:I've disabled my netctl profiles using systemctl
What was the *exact* command that you used? I think you're supposed to use netctl(1) to manage the unit files.
Can we also see the output of
systemctl list-unit-files --state=enabled --no-p
Messing around further with netctl and disabling the profiles using it solved my issue, thanks a bunch for pointing me in the right direction, more than appreciated.
Offline