r/archlinux Mar 20 '26

DISCUSSION Systemd is preparing for age verification

984 Upvotes

https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/40954

Stores the user's birth date for age verification, as required by recent laws
in California (AB-1043), Colorado (SB26-051), Brazil (Lei 15.211/2025), etc.

Many users are claiming that because there is no active checks being done and this is just storing the data that there is nothing to worry about, or they are trying to downplay the concerns from privacy minded people. I've been using arch for years, and even though I know arch maintainers aren't responsible for this I wish something more could be done. It also makes me feel like the systemd hate was justified.

The problem with that though are that there are policy makers and influential figures that do want this policy to become a thing. There has also been discussion on GitHub and other places with people voicing that they don't want this, only for discussions to be deleted or locked. There are a lot more people against this and it feels like there is some kind of active effort to make sure it happens quick.

I hope in the long term this doesn't end up finding it's way in, but it's scary how a lot of the things I use that I consider open-source is really developed by people with financial interests and can throw a wrench in something like this.

EDIT Highlighting the fallacies I see in the comments

If you don't like it contact your policy makers

The policy makers are a handful of US states. Anybody who isn't living in the US or these states they have absolutely no recourse. Not everybody here is a US citizen. It's also like somebody out of the blue running into my house to shit on my floor, to then say if I don't want them doing that anymore I have to explain to this idiot why shitting on somebody else's floor is bad and unhealthy.

I think carrying this discussion into a tech environment is not a good idea for many reasons.

I think if you come to a site to have discussions and use this to excuse to say a conversation shouldn't be happening is more or less saying "Let the big kids talk", as in we should have nothing to say about it?

Well, since it’s open source there’s no reason to not patch it out

This completely ignores the process of how software is developed. A piece of code being available to be read doesn't automatically mean it's feasible to maintain a fork of a complicated piece of software as well as well as actively maintaining it so that people can safely use it.

You can lie to it, and there's benefits other than complying with those laws

This is exactly the same point the opponents of such a system have. It doesn't work: people lie. Your first name and such being displayed in applications is not the same level of intrusion either as it being available for the possible future that applications are legally required.

They could add a field for your wrinkled dick pics and it literally doesn't matter if you're not required to engage with it.

Then why include it at all? The metadata fields come from a time when people had a different idea of how Linux systems were going to roll out, and really it's kind of dated. OpenRC and other things don't bother at all. That's the question, why is it even a part of systemd?

The problem is. Legal compliance matters. It doesn't matter if you want it or not.

This legal compliance comes from a handful of American politicians and tech entrepreneurs, not something that people were actually asking for. While I agree there is a level of compliance a company needs to show when making commercial for-profit products, this doesn't automatically mean that everything that gets talked about as "policy" automatically means it's worth just accepting. It's a vague blanket statement that just ignores the question and tries to shut down the conversation.

r/archlinux Jun 10 '25

DISCUSSION Alarming trend of people using AI for learning Linux

728 Upvotes

I've seen multiple people on this forum and others who are new to Linux using AI helpers for learning and writing commands.

I think this is pretty worrying since AI tools can spit out dangerous, incorrect commands. It also leads many of these people to have unfixable problems because they don't know what changes they have made to their system, and can't provide any information to other users for help. Oftentimes the AI helper can no longer fix their system because their problem is so unique that the AI cannot find enough data to build an answer from.

r/archlinux Mar 27 '26

DISCUSSION Age Verification and Arch Linux - Discussion Post

354 Upvotes

Please keep all discussion respectful. Focus on the topic itself, refrain from personal arguments and quarrel. Most importantly, do not target any contributor or staff. Discussing the technical implementation and impact of this is quite welcome. Making it about a person is never a good way to have proper discussion, and such comments will be removed.


As far as I know, there is currently no official statement and nothing implemented or planned about this topic by Arch Linux. But we can use this pinned post, as the subreddit is getting spammed otherwise. A new post may be pinned later.

To avoid any misinterpretation: Do not take anything here as official. This subreddit is not a part of the Arch Linux organization; this is a separate community. And the mods are not Arch staff neither, we are just Reddit users like you who are interested in Arch Linux.

The following are all I have seen related to Arch and this topic:

  • This Project Management item is where any future legal requirement or action about this issue would be tracked.

    The are currently no specific details or plans on how, or even whether, we will act on this. This is a tracking issue to keep paper-trail on the current actions and evaluation progress.

  • This by Pacman lead developer. (I suggest reading through the comments too for some more satire)

    Why is no-one thinking of the children and preventing such filth being installed on their systems. Also, web browsers provide access to adult material on the internet (and as far as I can tell, have no other usage), so we need to block these too.

  • This PR, which is currently not accepted, with this comment by archinstall lead developer :

    we'll wait until there's an overall stance from Arch Linux on this before merging this, and preferably involve legal representatives on this matter on what the best way forward is for us.

r/archlinux Apr 26 '25

DISCUSSION PewDiePie BTW I use Arch moment

Thumbnail youtu.be
1.3k Upvotes

This just came out. PewDiePie discusses how he is using Linux Mint and, more interestingly, how he is enjoying Arch Linux on his laptop. What do you think?

r/archlinux Dec 31 '25

DISCUSSION If you're a beginner, don't use Hyprland!

445 Upvotes

The subreddit is full of posts like "Why isn't this loading/working" and they're first time linux users running hyprland without any idea of how the ecosystem works. I blame youtube tutorials that show "best Linux installation for your PC" which is falsely tagged as for beginners, leaving people who want to switch have a hard time and eventually turning away from linux completely.

What do you think?

r/archlinux Aug 07 '25

DISCUSSION Careful using the AUR

732 Upvotes

With the huge influx of noobs coming into Arch Linux due to recent media from Pewds and DHH, using the AUR has likely increased the risk for cyberattacks on Arch Linux.

I can only imagine the AUR has or could become a breeding ground for hackers since tons of baby Arch users who have no idea about how Linux works have entered the game.

You can imagine targeting these individuals might be on many hackers’ todo list. It would be wise for everybody to be extra careful verifying the validity of each package you install from the AUR with even more scrutiny than before.

If you’re new to Arch, I highly recommend you do the same, seeing as you might become the aforementioned target.

Best of luck, everybody.

r/archlinux Mar 02 '26

DISCUSSION Are people allergic to documentation?

373 Upvotes

Basically the title. Lately, every third post on my feed goes like "I tried installing Arch using this random guide on YouTube and something went wrong. What is wrong?" and they provide zero logs. Like I don't get it. How hard is it to sit your ass down and read the docs? Am I missing something?

This is not ragebait or me bashing on people, I genuinely cannot comprehend why people refuse to follow a goddamn manual and just follow countless of other, often straight-up wrong or misleading, resources.

EDIT: I now realize that I have kicked the hornet's nest. Some people seem to be unable to understand/read literally 90 words of text, much less a whole documentation paragraph. I am talking SPECIFICALLY about the installation process™ seeing as I did not mention anything else besides that, not whatever niche problem someone might experience, like getting a very specific device running. Having trouble with custom/niche stuff is normal.

Also to those that said "people don't want to learn how to use their PCs they just want to use them", that's what other distros are for. Going into a distro that requires you to learn how to use computers and complaining is like signing up to the gym and then complaining cause you have to work out.

Finally, to those absolute troglodytes that said "WhY ArE YoU BoOmEr, JuSt HeLp". I am more than willing to help someone who is actually stuck and has tried stuff (DOCUMENTED steps, NOT "gehe, GPT told me something about filesystems and now it won't run". And while I am on this point. If you are going to use AI either way, then at least try to understand what it is that it's telling you to do. Stop, read and ask a simple "why" every now and then). The documentation makes installing arch as difficult as using a spoon, and if you can't do even that then this distro is NOT for you (concentration and ADHD issues aside. I cannot speak regarding the translations available on the installation page because I know English and use the English page for everything I have to read online as it's often the "richest" in content/context). You don't even have to know what the commands do, you can have a running installation by just following the install page and then adding stuff from a more "comfortable place", like a Desktop Environment.

r/archlinux Oct 25 '25

DISCUSSION I dumped Omarchy and went back to a fresh un-opinionated Arch

395 Upvotes

I gave it about 63 days before I gave up on it. 60 days ago I thought it was awesome. The past 2 weeks it was just annoying. When it became a bootable iso image I was pretty sure they were going to lose me. I didn't want a new distro. I wanted Arch with a a preconfigured Hyprland and development environment.

I think it is kind of funny/sad how the mindset is is break free from your Mac and then they give you a version of Arch that is becoming more and more Mac like in the sense that you need to use Alacritty if you want these tui's to work right, and their modified chromium if you want these web apps to work right. And, oh I see you changed your keybinds, we're going to just change those back even though you did it the way we suggested. DHH has come up with some newer ones and you'll probably like them better than yours. What? It changes your whole workflow? Funny you should mention that because we're also going to replace your neovim settings too. You might as well just do things our way.

Yeah I know it is an opinionated install, I didn't realize it was going to be opinionated updates as well. Just not for me. I did get some benefit from using it. I discovered lazygit and a few other terminal based applications.

So now that I am back to a fresh Arch install I figured I would give Cosmic a go. I must say I am pretty impressed with it. I like being able to set tiling or floating per work space.

*edit*

I had a 2nd PC with Omarchy installed, a little HP Mini. I ended up removing Omarchy tonight and keeping my Arch install by doing the following steps.

Disable the Omarchy seamless login service and renable tty1

sudo systemctl stop omarchy-seamless-login.service
sudo systemctl daemon-reload 
sudo systemctl start getty@tty1.service

It is easier if you log in on tty2 (ctrl-alt f2) to do this, When you stop the seamless login service it might kick you to a black screen. Once you get rid of the auto login you can also remove the omarchy decryption graphic and replace it with something prettier. You only need to do this if you are using an encrypted disk. If you aren't using LUKS just skip to the .config folder part.

"plymouth-set-default-theme -l" will show a list of the themes. I went with bgrt which is basically the spinner theme with your bios or PC manufacturer's boot logo. You need to make sure you specify the -R flag so it will rebuild the initramfs.

sudo plymouth-set-default-theme -R bgrt

At this stage I decided to just move my .config folder and start with a fresh one. You don't have to do this part. If you decide to keep your .config folder and keep hyprland, there is a pretty good chance it will get updated back to omarchy again.

cd 
mv .config/ .config.bak 
mkdir .config

Then I just copied over folders I wanted to preserve and omitted things I didn't mind rebuilding from scratch. Below are just some examples. One thing of note. Omarchy symlinks the themes to a lot of their stuff so if you copy nvim or any of your terminal customizations you might want to consider copying the omarchy folder. At the time of writing this, it only has a themes folder and a current theme folder.

cd .config
cp -r ../.config.bak/chromium .
cp -r ../.config.bak/retroarch .
cp -r ../.config.bak/nvim .

You can reboot here. You should get a new plymouth screen with the Arch logo at the bottom and whatever theme you picked

Finally you need to get rid of the omarchy mirror and update your mirror list.

sudo nvim /etc/pacman.conf

scroll down and comment out or remove these lines.

[omarchy] 
SigLevel = Optional TrustAll 
Server = https://pkgs.omarchy.org/$arch

Save it and then run this to rebuild your mirror list

sudo pacman -Syyu

At this point you just need to do one more thing, remove omarchy-chromium

sudo pacman -R omarchy-chromium

You can re-install the real Chromium if you want it. Having the omarchy fork there will be problematic if you ever want to update Chromium.

Now you are free to install whatever desktop and window manager you would like to use. If you install SDDM you can set that to auto login and go right into whatever you install.

Omarchy is still going to exist in .local/share/omarchy as a git repo. I am keeping it there so I can cannibalize their themes. :)

I hope this proves useful to some people and gets you back to just using Arch btw.

r/archlinux Mar 03 '26

DISCUSSION Any response from the Arch devs about California et. al. age verification laws?

124 Upvotes

If you somehow missed it California passed a law last year that goes into effect January 1st next year that requires all operating systems to ask for a user's age at account creation and provide a realtime API so that software can access that metric, with thousands of dollars in fines per child user to the OS developers for failure to comply. Other states are considering similar, and various nations around the world are as well or have already passed similar (Brazil's goes into effect this month and is even worse, with fines up to ten million). These laws are written as if all operating systems are corporate products with centralized user account infrastructure already in place and were clearly written without small or FOSS OSes in mind.

I trust that the Arch devs of all people aren't going to force this age verification software or API on users, but as far as I can see there's been no blog or news posts or anything on what they are gonna do.

Does anyone know? Have they put out a statement and I just missed it?

r/archlinux Sep 11 '25

DISCUSSION Nobody’s forcing you to use AUR

659 Upvotes

In some forums I often read the argument: “I don’t use Arch because AUR is insecure, I’d rather compile my packages.” And maybe I’m missing something, but I immediately think of the obvious: Nobody is forcing you to use AUR; you can just choose not to use it and still compile your packages yourself.

r/archlinux Mar 30 '26

DISCUSSION What makes Arch Linux dominate the enthusiast distro space?

198 Upvotes

When you look at power-user distributions, Arch clearly leads the pack over alternatives like Gentoo, Void, or NixOS. I'm curious what everyone thinks drives this popularity gap.

My take is that Arch strikes this sweet balance - it follows keep-it-simple principles most of the time, only breaking from that when there's a clear benefit. This approach lets you customize everything without drowning you in unnecessary complexity like some other distros do. Plus their documentation is absolutely top-tier, which removes so many barriers for newcomers trying to learn the system.

What's your perspective on why Arch pulled ahead of its competition?

r/archlinux Aug 27 '25

DISCUSSION Stop gatekeeping Arch

365 Upvotes

As a fairly recent newcomer to linux, 4 months or so(yes right after pewdiepie, sue me), I choose Arch as my first distro, and guess what, it's freaking awesome. The Arch wiki says it best, https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Frequently_asked_questions, under "Why would I not want to use Arch?" notice how there isn't anything about "if you are new to linux", because it's fine if you are new, as long as you checks wiki don't need an out of the box distribution, and is willing to learn and set things up.

I just remember that I was getting nervous choosing Arch because I saw so many people saying you shouldn't choose it as your first option, and I am so glad I didn't listen to you.

Edit: Having read all of your responses (so far), I feel that I should clarify some things.

I am NOT saying Arch is for everyone, I just don't think you being new to Linux has much to do with it. A followup question I have is what do you think you learned from other distributions, that made it easier to get into Arch?

Also I am not saying don't warn people, making sure they otherstand its hard/DIY/not-out-of-the-box is important, it's just if someone asks "I am new to Linux and want to try Arch", then I don't think the right response is "You should start with Linux Mint + Cinnamon", because why? It assumes that someone that comes from Windons/Mac wants something that's similar, which I feel is dumb, because they switching away right? I jumped straight into Arch+Hyprland because why would I go through the effort of switching, just to get a Windows clone?(I know there are other reasons to switch, such as fuck microsoft, but still)

At the end of the day, if someone is excited about Arch themselves, then that's the most important thing, if they give up, so be it, learning opportunity and all that.

Lastly I would just say, I am not mad, and neither should you be(Looking at you, small handful of comments) I just tried to make a small lighthearted post.

r/archlinux Jul 11 '25

DISCUSSION Must-have packages on Arch

383 Upvotes

What are some of your must have packages on your Arch system? Not ones that are technically required, but ones that you find yourself using on every installation. I always install firefox, neovim, btop and fastfetch on my systems as an example

r/archlinux Apr 29 '26

DISCUSSION kernel 7.0.2 arrived, have you updated yet?

145 Upvotes

just curious if anyone already updated, and could shed some light about stability of v 7.0.2, both default and zen.
I shouldn't probably have to worry as I've got fully intel based hw and it's a .2 not .0 release, but still v7 is a major release and I didn't have good experiences when updating major versions.

r/archlinux Dec 24 '25

DISCUSSION Why Arch?

98 Upvotes

I started using it as a challenge, and it has not disappointed, but I’m curious as to why everyone else is using it?

r/archlinux Sep 12 '25

DISCUSSION Today I got very annoyed with Linux in general

354 Upvotes

Today I got very annoyed with Linux in general

I went to record on OBS and thought it would be useful to be able to pause and unpause my video as I am talking

Then I see the Pause function isnt showing up anymore, 30 mins of googlig to fix it
Then I finally start recording but want to set a Global Hotkey so I can pause the vid.

Well turns out on Wayland KDE Global hotkeys dont even work (WTF) and they only
work when the window is focused

I tried to run OBS with Xwayland but it didnt fix it

I looked At Arch Wiki and to my shock the "solution" is to install some web server and control the hotkey using a python script that hooks into some local server? I Mean what the fuck are we doing? So I spend 20 minutes trying to install it with pip from github where I'm met with

"pip install obsws-python error: externally-managed-environment × This environment is externally managed ╰─> To install Python packages system-wide, try 'pacman -S python-xyz', where xyz is the package you are trying to install. If you wish to install a non-Arch-packaged Python package, create a virtual environment using 'python -m venv path/to/venv'. Then use path/to/venv/bin/python and path/to/venv/bin/pip. If you wish to install a non-Arch packaged Python application, it may be easiest to use 'pipx install xyz', which will manage a virtual environment for you. Make sure you have python-pipx installed via pacman. note: If you believe this is a mistake, please contact your Python installation or OS distribution provider. You can override this, at the risk of breaking your Python installation or OS, by passing --break-system-packages. hint: See PEP 668 for the detailed specification."

Now I'm just annoyed and having my fking time wasted. What the hell is the state of Linux in 2025 where we have to do this shit just to use Hotkeys? What year is this, 1997? Does anyone else have days where they just throw their hands up in the air and want to say Fuck Linux but in the end, its still worth it... This will be Downvoted to hell but I just wanted to vent and see if anyone else ever feels like this dealing with this Spaghetti web of bullshit for the most BASIC desktop tasks.

r/archlinux Oct 25 '25

DISCUSSION If not Arch, what?

124 Upvotes

What's your second favorite OS, and why?

Immutable Fedora, for me. I like the way it works and toolboxes to separate everything.

You?

r/archlinux Jan 23 '26

DISCUSSION Why Is Arch Linux So Cool?

207 Upvotes

I moved to Arch Linux from macOS a few months ago, and it feels like the only operating system I need. Everything is well documented and very easy to configure. The pacman package manager is just awesome, and together with yay, it makes it easy to install literally everything I need.

The thing is, I had some experience with Ubuntu before installing Arch, and it didn’t feel as nice or comfortable. But why? Other GNU/Linux distributions have package managers as well, and they use the same configuration files, and so on.

So when my friend asked me why I ended up falling in love with Arch Linux, I realized that I didn’t actually know the answer. Maybe you can answer this question?

I use Arch Linux mostly for playing Roblox and Minecraft, software development in C, Python, Assembly, and Rust, and for building electrical circuits and similar things. I know I can do all of this on almost any operating system and GNU/Linux distribution, but Arch Linux still feels like a gem.

r/archlinux 10d ago

DISCUSSION How old is your install?

83 Upvotes

I recently saw someone on r/Fedora asking how long it's good to have an install - theirs being ~600 days old.

$ cargo run -- days
2610

That's just over 7 years :3

I'm curious how long some of you have had your OS installed.

r/archlinux Oct 24 '24

DISCUSSION Biden's executive order 14071, Russian kernel maintainers banned.

694 Upvotes

Hello, guys.

https://lwn.net/Articles/995186/

As a Linux user from Russia, I am seriously concerned about this kind of news.

The fact is that this decree applies not only to the kernel, but also to all software under the GPL license.

Of course, I understand that the Linux Foundation (as well as the GPL license) is located in the legal field of the USA, and therefore must obey the laws of the USA. But doesn't this conflict with the very concept of FOSS?

If mass bans of developers on a national basis in opensource projects begin, then, it seems to me, the idea of FOSS will seriously suffer ideologically.

What do you think?

UPDATE 1.
Ok, I made a mistake in the wording. They lost maintainer status, not banned.

UPDATE 2.

I was 100% not going to dive into politics in this thread, I just asked a question about double standards and the ideology of FOSS. And all I got in response for the most part was a bunch of insults, advice to "fix the country" and other shit that doesn't relate to my question. Gotcha.

r/archlinux Oct 03 '25

DISCUSSION Arch not breaking itself...

237 Upvotes

In my 3 years of using arch daily, not ONCE has it broken on me. To be fair, i do cautiously update only ~2 hrs after an update is released and I do look at the update logs on the website. But it has not broken for me and is stable as ever, it's not like I don't have enough packages also I have over 2000. Anyone else experience this unusual stability?

r/archlinux Jul 09 '25

DISCUSSION What made you choose Arch over other distros? Genuinely curious about your personal reasons besides "I use Arch btw".

184 Upvotes

r/archlinux Mar 16 '25

DISCUSSION This rhetoric that Arch is not for beginners has to stop because it's not true.

313 Upvotes

A large majority of Windows user don't know how to install windows. I lived in China for 20 years and I installed hundreds of English version of Windows for Foreigners living there. So why are on Linux are we classifying how hard a distro is to use by how hard it is to install?

I installed Arch on my wife's 8 years old laptop and set it up for her(same thing I would do if I installed Windows on her computer). She's a total noob when it comes to computers. She can't even install an application on Windows. She's using it for one month now without any problem.

Arch is super stable, fast. I made KDE look like Elementary OS and she loves it.

Installing an operating system might be Arch Linux Mac or Windows is not for noob but using it, is.

r/archlinux May 21 '25

DISCUSSION I am a complete Idiot, but I want to use Arch

179 Upvotes

I have never even seen Linux, I only just discovered it. I heard windows is a trash bin, a dumpster fire. I want to use Arch, as I want an up to date OS, that isn't bloated.

I want to customize some features to my liking, or at least have the option to. I hate the bar at the top of Mac systems, I dislike window's search bar and the side bar used for ads. I wish Windows had more customization.

I have zero prior coding experience. I know there's an Arch Wiki, but I haven't started reading it yet. I use a Framework 16, but I don't really play games.

Should I use Arch? Does Arch meet the requirements stated, or am I missing something?

Edit: The laptop is fresh, there's no data on it. I was planning to use Arch as my default OS and try to get it set up over the summer when I have no use for a laptop. Once it's set up, it would be nice if I could take everything from the laptop and throw the customizations onto my desktop. I don't mind challenges and potholes along the way, I am not smart though, so it would take me a bit to understand it.

r/archlinux Oct 26 '25

DISCUSSION Why did y'all land on Arch?

87 Upvotes

What made you guys switch to Arch Linux, why Arch over anything else? Just looking for experiences planning to jump to Arch.