i actually documented something for once, so i could reference it myself later. asking for some feedback on this, but it is quite long so i get it if you don’t read it all or care. figured some newbie might stumble upon this in the future and get something out of it.
- First of all, make sure you have the Void installation guide open. Most of this is just hand holding you through their instructions. For what it’s worth, I think it’s valuable to have another newb explain how they went about getting things done.
- Install latest ISO
- Download the base image, which should look something like: void-live-x86_64-20210218.iso
- If you’re doing this properly, ensure that the
sha256sum.txt
andsha256sum.sig
files are authentic. The Void docs hold your hand for this step.
- Do the Disk Mounting Thingy
- I use balena but you can use any other similar tool.
- Boot machine and change Boot Device List ranking to USB first
- Shut computer off -> press Enter (that’s the key I spam for my ThinkPad, it might be different for your machine) -> move USB HDD up to #1
- Plug USB in and Boot up
- Select Enter on the first option: Void Linux (no RAM)
- Or choose the RAM option if you want superspeed. It’s not really necessary and I get paranoid when doing things non-default.
- Configure the WIFI with wpa_supplicant
-
Create symbolic links and start the services
sudo ln -s /etc/sv/dhcpcd /var/service
sudo ln -s /etc/sv/wpa_supplicant /var/service
sudo sv up dhcpcd
sudo sv up wpa_supplicant
ip link show
-
Configure your network now that we know the interface (for me, that’s wlp58s0)
wpa_cli -i {wifi interface}
-
Within the wpa_cli interface, set up the network
scan
scan_results
add_network set_network 0 ssid "MYNETWORK" set_network 0 psk "secret"
enable_network 0 0K
-
Test your wifi
ping google.com
-
Save your configuration
wpa_supplicant -B -i wlp58s0 -c /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
- Enter the Void Installer
- Do the thing (going to expand on this later, I actually feel like I should study this step and understand what it is I’m doing before I tell anyone to copy me).
- For now, this video helped a ton.
void-installer
- Update the package manager
sudo xbps-install -u xbps
- Update the uhh rest of the stuff
sudo xbps-install -Su
- Restart the services:
xcheckrestart
- On error, install the following dependency: xtools
sudo xbps-install xtools
- Reboot to get latest kernel version after update
sudo shutdown -r now
- Install packages:
- After install, I got started with: xorg, pulseaudio, i3-gaps, dmenu, alacritty, firefox, nnn, sxiv, Zathura, htop, node, rust, and ofc nvim. This will keep me going for a while.
sudo xbps-install -Su xorg pulseaudio i3-gaps dmenu alacritty firefox nnn sxiv zathura htop nodejs rustup
- On error, install the following dependencies:
sudo xbps-install base-devel libX11-devel libXft-devel libXinerama-devel freetype-devel fontconfig-devel
- Edit .xinitrc (in your home directory) to run i3-gaps on load
exec i3
- Update packages, just in case and reboot
- Honestly, I just do this out of paranoia and habit. Every time I open a terminal session I just update everything.
sudo xbps-install -Syu
reboot
- Some issues I faced dealt with audio, which I found was quite common. Ensure you have pulseaudio installed, and if that doesnt work, apparently alsamixer also works pretty well. Just make sure to change your i3 config (/.config/i3/config) to bind the alsamixer settings and not the default pulseaudio bindings.
Is it just my app freaking out or is this post 2 years old?
This makes lemmy almost not usable for me. If I sort posts by active or hot, I get 80% posts that are older than 2 years. Always with new comments.
I belive that fixing the sorting algorithms is extremely important for lemmys success.
But if a post is receiving discussion, then it IS active. Back in the olden days we would waylay people for not using the search to find previous posts rather than make a new one. If a thread is active and relevant, its age shouldnt just blast it out of existence.
The constant churn of “only new posts are relevant, anything older than a day is functionally archived” of the modern internet landscape is a bad thing in my opinion.
Of course posts older than a day are still useful. But how useful is an experience report on an OS that is over 2 years old? I have no idea about Void Linux, but whenever I seek a tutorial on something, I limit the search to 1 year, because stuff changes. Take the discussions on VPNs recently for example. For many people a lot changed due to policy changes from some VPNs. All threads regarding those VPNs that are older than 3 months should be viewed as archived.
One could argue that a post from programming humor is still as funny as it was 2 years ago. But I don’t want to see the same post over and over again, just because someone wrote a comment in it. And old posts aren’t gone and can be found if one wants to. But I don’t want posts to stay on my front page for years.
I don’t know much about Void Linux. What is it’s selling point that makes it unique?
If memory serves, no systemd and musl as a first-class c std lib. Something of the sort.
They have a version with musl alongside a glibc version. Probably use the glibc version if you want to use any compatibility layers (like Proton in Steam).
Edit: And yes, runit is used instead of systemd, as well as the xbps package manager being a favorite of some.
Void was my first linux distro, good memories…
Awesome! Nice guide
Thanks for the contribution!