05 March 2013

355. Compiling kernel 3.8.2 on Arch linux -- exploration

Edit: remove the sudo make install line -- it shouldn't be necessary and it triggers an error: 'cannot find LILO'

You can generate a good starting .config with make localconfig which creates a .config which prepares the modules which are in use by your system at that point. You can also get the old kernel config from /proc/config.gz which is probably a better approach.

I would guess that the approach described here is pretty much distro-agnostic.

Anyway, compiling the kernel:

mkdir ~/tmp
cd ~/tmp
wget http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v3.0/linux-3.8.2.tar.bz2
tar xvf linux-3.8.2.tar.bz2
cd linux-3.8.2/
cp /proc/config.gz .
gunzip config.gz
mv config .config
make oldconfig
make -j2
make -j2 modules
sudo make modules_install
sudo make headers_install INSTALL_HDR_PATH=/usr/src/linux-3.8.2
sudo cp arch/x86_64/boot/bzImage /boot/vmlinuz-3.8.2
sudo cp System.map /boot/System-3.8.2.map
sudo mkinitcpio -k 3.8.2-ARCH -c /etc/mkinitcpio.conf -g /boot/initramfs-3.8.2.img

NOTE: the naming isn't random. In order for grub-mkconfig to discover both the vmlinuz and initramfs files they need to be named vmlinuz-IDENTIFIER and initramfs-IDENTIFIER.img. The identifier can be anything.

Generate your grub.cfg:
sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg

Reboot, and do
uname -a
Linux titanium 3.8.2 #1 SMP Mon Mar 4 20:17:17 EST 2013 x86_64 GNU/Linux

03 March 2013

354. Some Arch linux post-installation steps/observations

I decided to temporarily switch my laptop over to Arch linux while keeping all my other boxes running debian. Luckily I had an old HDD which had Windows XP and Ubuntu (after a long hiatus from playing with Fedora Core and Mepis I got serious with Hardy Heron) that I could use -- I nuked the ubuntu install but kept the XP install for...some reason.

Still under preparation: Item 20 (chrooted firefox)

Anyway, here are some of the post installation steps I went through and some of my observations. It might help the odd debian person who explores arch. These are in addition to cosmetic things like installing the frippery extensions and faenza icon set for GNOME.

Index
0. Home partition during installation
1. There's no update-grub in Arch
2. Thinkpad
3. Changing Wallpaper in gnome 3.6
4. Get gdm to autostart
5. Get guake and conky to autostart
6. Adding a windows partition to grub2
7. Mounting ntfs partition
8. Skype and wine
9. Dropbox
10. 'apt-file' on Arch
11. Finding foreign (AUR) packages
12. No texmaker
13. systemd and network interface names
14. Virtualbox
15. grub2 theme
16. BankID
17. Truecrypt and "Failed to set up a loop device"
18. Can boot via USB but not SATA --
      "unable to find root device"
19. Problems with Guake and transparency in new tabs


0. Home partition during installation
I've covered installation of arch before (e.g. here, here and here). To have a separate home, partition your disk accordingly, and install as normal. Don't make any user while in archchroot though. Instead, edit the /etc/fstab to include the home partition, and create the user on booting from the new arch install.

UUID=b59b7022-eda1-40b8-b1e0-ada3f172ba90 /home  ext4  defaults, user_xattr  0 0

1. There's no update-grub in Arch
Instead you use
grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg

It also means that e.g. any windows installations won't be auto-detected. See below for how to deal with that.

2. Thinkpad
To get the video working you need to install xf86-video-intel
To get the mouse pad working you need to install xf86-input-synaptics
Install lm_sensors and acpi and run sudo sensors-detect to set up temperature and fan speed sensors, and battery status (acpi).
The LEDs seem to work at times with tp_smapi. Not perfect.

Problems:
the mute button doesn't work (mute immediately followed volume down works), nor does mute mic. I've tried a lot of options but so far no luck.

3. Changing Wallpaper in gnome 3.6
The debian devs may think they are simplifying things, but are often making things more difficult to discover. To change wallpaper go to the gnome overview, open Background, and click on the wallpaper in the centre of the window. THAT brings up a list over installed wallpapers etc.

4. Get gdm to autostart
systemctl enable gdm

5. Get guake and conky to autostart
sudo cp /usr/share/applications/guake.desktop /etc/xdg/autostart/

Create /usr/share/applications/conky.desktop:
[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Name=Conky
Comment=Conky
TryExec=conky
Exec=conky
Icon=conky
Type=Application
Categories=GNOME;GTK;System;Utility
StartupNotify=true
sudo cp /usr/share/applications/conky.desktop /etc/xdg/autostart/

6. Adding a windows partition to grub2
You'll need to edit or create something aking to /etc/grub.d/40_custom
menuentry "Microsoft Windows XP" {
    insmod part_msdos
    insmod ntfs
    insmod search_fs_uuid
    insmod ntldr\
    search --fs-uuid --set=root --hint-bios=hd0,msdos1 --hint-efi=hd0,msdos1 --hint-baremetal=ahci0,msdos1 B8AC3A4BAC3A0482
ntldr /ntldr
}
7. Mounting ntfs partition
sudo pacman -S ntfs-3g
sudo mkdir -p /media/winxp
sudo chown $USER /media/winxp

Edit /etc/fstab
UUID=B8AC3A4BAC3A0482 /media/winxp ntfs-3g noauto,uid=1000 0 0

8. Skype and wine
You need to edit /etc/pacman.conf and uncomment the multilib repos.
[multilib] SigLevel = PackageRequired Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist

sudo pacman -Syu
sudo pacman -S wine 
sudo pacman -S skype lib32-libpulse

I originally had a qt/qt4 conflict, but updating magically took care of that. Somehow.

NOTE that to get a useable 32 bit wine install you will need to specify this. See e.g. https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Wine#Using_WINEARCH

9. Dropbox
You need to get dropbox and dropbox-nautilus from AUR. Create /etc/xdg/autostart/dropbox.desktop
[Desktop Entry] Encoding=UTF-8 Name=Dropbox daemon TryExec=dropboxd Exec=dropboxd Startupnotify=true

(I first tried systemctl enable dropbox@$USER but it didn't get nautilus running properly with dropbox. The method above works.)
10. 'apt-file' on arch
...is done with pkgfile.

sudo pacman -S pkgfile
pkgfile --update
pkgfile -s libXv.so.1

11. Finding foreign (AUR) packages.
AUR packages won't update themselves so you need to uninstall and rebuild each time. To find your AUR builds, do
pacman -Qm

12. No texmaker
Texmaker is in AUR and builds fine. It's also easy to build on your own, but installing it with pacman makes it easier to keep tabs on it.

13. systemd and network interface names
My network interfaces always end up with weird names in Arch (w5pls etc.). To manually name your interfaces create e.g. 70-persistent-net.rules in /etc/udev/rules.d/
SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", DRIVERS=="?*", ATTR{address}=="00:27:9e:27:9b:20", ATTR{dev_id}=="0x0", ATTR{type}=="1", KERNEL=="eth*", NAME="eth0" SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", DRIVERS=="?*", ATTR{address}=="00:23:fb:b3:d2:c8", ATTR{dev_id}=="0x0", ATTR{type}=="1", KERNEL=="wlan*", NAME="wlan0"

14.Virtualbox
sudo pacman -S virtualbox virtualbox-host-modules linux-headers
sudo usermod -G vboxusers -a $USER

To load the vboxdrv module manually do
sudo modprobe vboxdrv

To auto-load on boot do
sudo su
echo "vboxdrv">> /etc/modules-load.d/virtualbox.conf
exit 

To sort out dkms:
sudo pacman -S dkms virtualbox-host-dkms
sudo systemctl enable dkms
sudo dkms install vboxhost/4.2.8


15. grub2 theme
The stock grub2 startup screen in arch is a bit bland. To spice it up, install grub2-theme-archlinux from AUR.

Edit /etc/default/grub and add
GRUB_THEME="/boot/grub/themes/Archlinux/theme.txt"
Then do
sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg

It looks a lot like the mockup here: http://xcracx.deviantart.com/art/Archlinux-Grub2-mockup-121231574

16. BankID

Install bankid via AUR:
wget https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/ne/nexuspersonal/nexuspersonal.tar.gz
tar xvf nexuspersonal.tar.gz
cd nexuspersonal
makepkg -s
sudo pacman -U nexuspersonal-4.19.1.11663-4-x86_64.pkg.tar.xz
sudo pacman -S nspluginwrapper firefox
sudo nspluginwrapper --install /usr/local/lib/personal/libplugins.so

It should now work under firefox. NOTE that in order to be able to test it using test.bankid.com you must change your useragent (see e.g. http://verahill.blogspot.com.au/2013/02/341-upgradinginstalling-bankid-on-64.html). However, it will work with e.g. skatteverket and sparbanken without changing the user agent.

17. Truecrypt and "Failed to set up a loop device"
The module loop isn't loaded. Either modprobe it, or make it load automatically on boot:
sudo su
echo "loop">> /etc/modules-load.d/loop.conf
exit

18. Arch won't boot -- "unable to find root device"
I could boot from the hdd when it was tethered via USB, but not when it was attached via a sata cable. The error was something along the lines of "unable to find root device".
I solved it by following this post. http://fanweiphysicist.blogspot.com.au/2012/02/unable-to-find-root-device-archlinux.html

19. Guake bug
On my laptop, with the xf86-video-intel drivers install, opening a new tab gives me a black background instead of a transparent one.
Not sure what the proper solution to this is, but when I set up an installation on another hdd and installed the f86-video-nv and ati drivers as well, I no longer had any issues with transparency.
(Long story short: I first installed Arch on a spinning 2.5" drive and used my laptop with it for a week. Satisfied that it worked well enough, I installed Arch to my SSD by tethering it via USB to a desktop with an external nvidia card and onboard ati graphics -- so I installed all three video drivers. Putting the hdd in the laptop, guake behaved as it should with proper transparency for all tabs. Not sure what the original issue was)

20. chrooted firefox -- in progress.
For now I've installed sandfox from AUR.

First of all, read this exchange to get a feel for the scope of chroots: http://kerneltrap.org/mailarchive/linux-kernel/2007/9/19/263398/thread#mid-263398. It's not perfect as a security tool, as it wasn't meant to be one. Having said that, security works in layers and this is one which is easy to implement and adds a little bit of security.

Chrooting a programme doesn't give you any privacy or prevents firefox from leaving traces (use an encrypted and anonymous tunnel and put the chroot in a truecrypt container to cover yourself a bit more).

sudo pacman -S devtools xorg-xhost
mkdir -p $HOME/tmp/jail
sudo mkarchroot $HOME/tmp/jail/arch64 base sudo firefox flashplugin
sudo chroot $HOME/tmp/jail/arch64
passwd
useradd -m sandbox
passwd sandbox
echo "sandbox ALL=(ALL) ALL" >> /etc/sudoers
echo 'export LC_ALL="C"'>>/etc/bash.bashrc
echo 'export LANG="C"'>>/etc/bash.bashrc
echo 'DISPLAY=:0.0' >> /etc/bash.bashrc
source /etc/bash.bashrc
exit

Launch the chroot with a script with something like this in it:
xhost +
sudo cp /etc/resolv.conf $HOME/tmp/jail/arch64/etc/resolv.conf
sudo mount -o bind /proc $HOME/tmp/jail/arch64/proc
sudo mount -o bind /sys $HOME/tmp/jail/arch64/sys
sudo mount -o bind /dev $HOME/tmp/jail/arch64/dev
sudo chroot $HOME/tmp/jail/arch64

You could also put 8.8.8.8 in resolv.conf (google dns).
Still not working properly (firefox segfaults)

353. Cygwin with octave and gnuplot on windows XP.

Here's my fourth Windows XP post.

Again, the goal is primarily to get Gnuplot and Octave working on Windows, together with sed, gawk and other tools for data processing. In this post that's done using cygwin on windows XP.

This is (in my opinion) a better alternative to installing the native gnuplot and octave packages (posts 350, 351, 352), especially as Octave in post 350 takes well over a minute to start, but only a few seconds through cygwin.

1. Download http://cygwin.com/setup.exe and run it. Set it to install from the internet, with c:\cygwin as the root directory. Pick a mirror which is reasonably close (e.g. mirror.aarnet.edu.au in Australia).

2. You're now asked to select packages.
Select octave (search for octave, click on 'skip' to change it to the version number), octave-forgegnuplot, xinit and xorg-server

3. Cygwin will calculate dependencies. cat, gawk, sed etc. are part of the base package and don't need to be explicitly selected.

I got a single error during installation, but it doesn't seem to have caused any obvious issues:
Package: libpango1.0_0 pango1.0.sh exit code 1
4. Launch Programs/Cygwin-X/XWin server.
Unblock if necessary.

Do
echo $DISPLAY
:0
to make sure that all is well. Run gnuplot and do e.g. 'plot x w lines' to make sure that all is working. Best thing? Octave only takes a few seconds to start... You may have to load packages in octave manually (e.g. 'pkg load all')



Links to this post:
http://blog.csdn.net/lllcfr1/article/details/8657143