To open /etc/pacman.conf with a text editor, I would recommend nano. Type in the terminal `nano /etc/pacman.conf`, possibly using sudo if you need it.
You should check out this article, it will help you with online instructions about arch linux stuff. Best of luck with the eeePc!
]]>* On machine with little memory, set iommu=off in your kernel boot parameters to get some extra 64 MB RAM back.
* When creating an ext4-filesystem switch off the 64-bit option if you don't have big harddisks (which you usually don't
have on those machines anyway): mkfs.ext4 -O ^64bit /dev/sda1
can you make a step by step info im not getting it?/
]]>close(6) = 0
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/usr/share/icons/hicolor/scalable/apps/tint2conf.svg", O_RDONL
statx(6, "", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT|AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT|AT_EMPTY_PATH, STATX_BASIC_ST
mmap2(NULL, 18151, PROT_READ, MAP_SHARED, 6, 0) = 0xb7edd000
brk(0x1518000) = 0x1518000
munmap(0xb7edd000, 18151) = 0
close(6) = 0
--- SIGSEGV {si_signo=SIGSEGV, si_code=SEGV_MAPERR, si_addr=NULL} ---
+++ killed by SIGSEGV (core dumped) +++
Segmentation fault
Opening the SVG is just the last operation, assuming librsvg is reading it afterwards.
But it could also by just a co-occurence..
==> Creating install root at /scratch/tmp2
gpg: /scratch/tmp2/etc/pacman.d/gnupg/trustdb.gpg: trustdb created
gpg: no ultimately trusted keys found
gpg: starting migration from earlier GnuPG versions
gpg: porting secret keys from '/scratch/tmp2/etc/pacman.d/gnupg/secring.gpg' to gpg-agent
gpg: migration succeeded
==> Generating pacman master key. This may take some time.
gpg: Generating pacman keyring master key...
Copying by hand most likely rendered binaries non-runnable due to broken shared library references.
Reinstalling might be the better option here.
-> attica: local (5.105.0-1.0) is newer than extra (5.101.0-1.0)
-> bluedevil: local (1:5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (1:5.26.5-1.0)
-> bluez-qt: local (5.105.0-1.0) is newer than extra (5.101.0-1.0)
-> breeze-icons: local (5.105.0-1.0) is newer than extra (5.104.0-1.0)
-> frameworkintegration: local (5.105.0-1.0) is newer than extra (5.99.0-1.0)
-> kde-cli-tools: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.23.5-1.1)
-> knewstuff: local (5.105.0-1.0) is newer than extra (5.100.0-1.0)
-> kwin: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.4-1.0)
-> libaccounts-glib: local (1.26-2.0) is newer than extra (1.26-1.0)
-> libblockdev: local (2.28-4.0) is newer than extra (2.28-1.0)
-> libksysguard: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.5-1.0)
-> oxygen: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.5-1.0)
-> plasma-browser-integration: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.5-1.0)
-> plasma-desktop: local (5.27.6-1) is newer than extra (5.26.5-1.1)
-> plasma-systemmonitor: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.5-1.0)
-> plasma-wayland-session: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.5-2.0)
-> plasma-workspace: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.5-2.0)
-> powerdevil: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.5-1.0)
-> purpose: local (5.105.0-1.0) is newer than extra (5.104.0-1.0)
-> solid: local (5.105.0-1.1) is newer than extra (5.105.0-1.0)
-> systemsettings: local (5.27.6-1.0) is newer than extra (5.26.5-1.0)
functional Plasma 5 wayland/X11 desktop
greetings
]]>There is no such thing on Archlinux (and Arch32) as a fallback kernel, this would
sometimes be handy if you mess ub /boot/vmllinux (or if it breaks). But usually it's
as easy to boot from a rescue stick/CD/whatever and just recover the old kernel
(and also redo the mkinitcpio with correct customization).
I also removed the 'archlinux' in the populate, as all packages are only signed with the 'archlinux32' keys and none with the 'archlinux' keys.
This makes the populate process much faster. OTOH, if you need the keys from upstream for checking some packages for upstream on
a Arch32 system, you can still populate them too.