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Well, I have finally taken the step to install Arch Linux (not from LiveCD), but I have a problem. In order to make a connection to the Internet I have to load the module eth0, because I want to load it each time I have decided to put it in rc.conf instead of modprobe. The problem is though I don't really know what the name of my eth0 is. I'm using a live CD to connect to the internet, and I have taken a ook in the modprobe on the LiveCD but it's empty. Is there a way I can find out what eth0 device I have?
Since I can connect to the Internet it must have worked, but I have no idea where to find it?
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And another thing I would like to know is, if it's handy to load a kernel with SCSI? Because I don't know if I use them, I know I have IDE, but SCSI I don't know...
Is there a good chance an average PC has SCSI?
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About eth0: while running live cd run lsmod to see what modules are automatically loaded - put them in MODULES in your rc.conf. Your network module will be among them. Then you can eliminate or add modules that you want.
About scsi: chances are you don't have scsi devices in your average pc :-) Also if you upgrade your kernel to 2.6.6 you will not need scsi emulation for burining cds/dvds.
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Thnx I think that worked! Do I have to turn ROUTES=(!gateway) to ROUTES=(gateway) now?
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That depends on your config. If you manually configured eth0 and gateway then you should remove ! but if you are using dhcp then leave it as it is. Simply speaking if networking works don't change it :-)
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Woohoo, everything worked! I updated Pacman, I updated the system and I have installed KDE. I also uncommented exec startkde and commented everything else. I have a question though, when I give the command: startx I get the X environment instead of KDE, do I have to run XFree86 config first to solve that?
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I ran XFree86Config, but unfortunately it still only starts X instead of KDE. What could it be..?
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edit your .xinitrc file in there you should find something like startkde remove the # from that line .... then startx
Mr Green
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Hi, thnx for the reply. I already gave that a try (as in the manual) but unfortunately no effect, so I opened up rc.conf and I added KDM to DEAMONS, now it starts up KDE from the beginning (when it boots), but the browser font looks terrible, unreadble even, there is a huge space between the letters and I can't change them no matter what fonts type I try (the browser font looks like the log-in screen font). It also crashes some program (get an error about the crash during loadup of KDE). I think that has to do with my XFree86 config. I was thinking to install Mandrake and copy that XFree86 file to Arch.
Also is it supposed to download all files from "extra"? I got the error that it couldn't download 1 filre (but I'm not sure and it might be my mistake and I misread it).
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Knoppix has a good XFree86 autoconfiguration, do you happen to know if it is possible to use the XFree86 it creates?
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First install and run hwd (pacman -S hwd) - it's in staging repo http://xentac.net/~tur/repos.php. Hwd (hardware detection http://amlug.net/new-projects/hwd/hwd.html) will not change anything itself it will only advise you some changes. It will also generate sample XF86Config. About fonts: try also installing some additional font packages (pacman -Ss fonts will show you what's available. I advise you to install at least ms fonts). You can also config fonts from kconfig in kde. And the last thing: do not install all files from extra :-) just the ones you need.
Before asking next question be sure to read first http://www.archlinux.org/docs/en/, http://wiki.archlinux.org/ and search forums (there is search option in the right top corner). Also you can have faster response on arch linux irc channel (see arch linux homepage).
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Oke, I will.
Thnx!
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