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Hi
I have been trying for nearly two weeks to get arch linux installed but I cant seem to get it right.
I followed the wiki http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beg … stallation
I found that there are a few differences between that wiki and what I found on my installation. Firstly hwdetect does not get run from the installation as it says in the wiki. After the install I have been trying to get the network card working. the network does not appear in ifconfig, but I do see the card in lspci. when I run hwdetect it tells me to mount /sys as it cant find it.
I do not know what to search for in the forums
the iso version I am using is 0.7.2, two friend(where I got it from) have installed it with no problems
Thanks for your help
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0.7.2??
http://www.archlinux.org/download/
I bet it's still possible to install with 0.7.2 and bring your system up-to-date afterwards, but for beginners it's _strongly_ advised to use the latest ISO.
1000
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The wiki is pretty current, and the Beginner's guide is too. 0.7.2 is about a year old now, so different features have been added/removed since then.
IIRC, you will be met with a kernel panic right off the bat with a 0.7.2 install that will require a change in the initrd line in GRUB..
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Thanks for the help I'll try download, I dident really want to since Here is South africa inet is expensive. But I've been told archlinux is the best one to use If you want to learn.
Thanks again
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Arch is also the best one to waste your bandwidth with updates. If downstream is expensive for you, I'd strongly recommend another distribution.
Todays mistakes are tomorrows catastrophes.
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I'd second that, Arch is a rolling release distro, so I typically download a few meg of updates every day.
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If downloading is a concern and learning is a primary goal take a look at Slackware.
Slackware is the closest you will find to Arch in terms of configuration, speed, reliability and learning to use Linux/Unix.
R.
Last edited by ralvez (2007-11-21 13:59:44)
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If downloading is a concern and learning is a primary goal take a look at Slackware.
Slackware is the closest you will find to Arch in terms of configuration, speed, reliability and learning to use Linux/Unix.R.
I was gonna recommend Slack also, but Slack 12 is a full DVD to download...maybe Vector Slax, or Zenwalk (Slack-based) would be more practical?
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