On 07/24/2017 05:29 AM, Jelle van der Waa wrote:
On 07/24/17 at 09:40am, Bennett Piater wrote:
On July 24, 2017 9:36:39 AM GMT+02:00, Junayeed Ahnaf via arch-general <arch-general@archlinux.org> wrote:
All fine and good but I don't see arch being installed on something other than desktop/laptop. Of course there are niche cases as arch server I do not doubt but how much of arch install base is traditional desktop? I think it's rather high. You are missing the point. Many arch users don't simply install a desktop environment and use its defaults. If that's what you want, you may want to use another distribution, preferably one that focuses on your DE.
I use a very minimal setup without DE, and I don't want bloated catch-all solution that doesn't integrate nicely into my configuration, thank you very much.
Y'all seem to miss the point that provided on the ISO != installed on your machine. I for one, don't see a problem with networkmanager being installed on the ISO, nmtui works pretty well (as does nmcli), I'm not sure however how much the ISO size will blow up.
Thanks, jelle, for being the sole voice of reason here. :) The OP specifically asked about the archiso, not a "default installation" (of which there is, of course, none). For all the people here saying that NetworkManager is typically used by bloated Desktop Environments, this is of course wrong too. As jelle pointed out, nmntui/nmcli work great from a command-line environment; somewhat ironically, the network-manager-applet used by Desktop Environments is actually a *thirdparty* tool that communicates with the actual NetworkManager daemon -- if swiss-army-knife tools are your thing, NetworkManager is an amazingly capable, flexible, and powerful tool for configuring and managing any sort of network from whatever CLI or GUI environment you want. Installing the packagelist from the archiso into a chroot, then installing NetworkManager, indicates to me that on an i686 machine this would add 60 MB to the installation base, which I consider a very reasonable trade if it means getting rid of the horrible netctl. Seriously, nearly everyone knows that netctl should have died a long time ago. I am pretty sure most of the people who accidentally think netctl is somehow an okay networking tool wouldn't think so if they weren't led to believe it by its presence on the archiso; this in turn would lower the support burden on #archlinux@freenode, and quite possibly on the forums as well (though it feels like people panic over netctl-not-working on IRC more often than the forums). -- Eli Schwartz