![]() Create root partition with n with default number, default first sector, default last sector and select 8300 “Linux filesystem” as the type.Create boot partition with n with default number, default first sector, last sector at +512M and select ef00 “EFI System” as the type.Check for different drives and partitions with lsblk and then start to partition with gdisk /dev/nvme0n1 (or whatever the disk is).Make sure the clock is synced with timedatectl set-ntp true.Check for internet connectivity with ping.Connect the computer via Ethernet (recommended) or run iwctl to log into Wi-Fi.If it doesn’t, your system does not support UEFI and this guide is not for you, and you should refer to the official Arch Linux Installation Guide instead. Run ls /sys/firmware/efi/efivars to check if that directory exists.Insert the USB stick into the target computer and boot it from thereĪs soon as you can see the Arch Linux prompt, you are ready for the next step.Don’t forget to replace the two paths with the correct ones. Run sudo dd bs=4M if=path/to/input.iso of=/dev/sdx oflag=sync status=progress to write the ISO to the USB stick.Run sudo umount /dev/sdx or whatever the USB stick is.In that case, just run the ISO from your favorite VM management tool like QEMU. You can skip this step if you just want to run Arch Linux in a VM. Download the latest ISO from the Arch Linux website. ![]() It is heavily based on the Arch Linux wiki’s installation guide, so if you’re ever stuck, just refer to it and the rest of the wonderful Arch wiki. It deliberately contains no unnecessary words or bling. This is a step-by-step guide to installing Arch Linux on UEFI with full disk encryption. ![]()
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