Re-add partitions to GRUB after installing Arch - archlinux

While installing Arch Linux by following the beginner's guide at https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginners%27_Guide , I installed GRUB as my bootloader. However, on rebooting, I find my previous Ubuntu option has disappeared and I am left only with Arch.
I would like to know how I can re-add my other disk partitions to GRUB, as I can find no comprehensible tutorials anywhere else.
Thanks.

Boot to archlinux and run as root:
grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
Make sure os-prober is installed if not then install it using:
pacman -S os-prober
Its there in beginner's guide. Read Tip in green color.

Related

Libcamera command not found after installing it

Having a terrible time with the raspi related problems. One of them concerning the libcamera. I have Ubuntu 22.04 64bit on my raspi and I have installed the libcamera package with the command sudo apt install libcamera_*. The problem is that whenever I run a command with libcamera it tells me command not found!!! Any solutions?!! The camera is detected and supported. Thanks in advance for your help.

problems with Arch linux installation commands

It's my first time trying to install and using Arch linux, I was trying to install it in VirtualBox in Mac Os mojave, when i did arch-chroot /mnt(after all the configuration), then tried to nano /etc/locale.conf it just printed command not found.
I've already tried with vim or other commands like sudo or apt to install a plain text editor but it's always the same and I also tried twice but nothing changes.
PLEEAAASE, I need help.
In Archlinux you should use pacman -S to install packages
try this :
"pacman -S nano"
you can see more information here:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/pacman#Installing_packages
You can install it with the Linux kernel etc.
For installing the kernel you use
pacstrap
so just add nano, vim or whatever text-editor you like to use.
For more information: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Installation_guide

Direnv not allowing me to allow

I've installed direnv (v2.18.2) onto my Ubuntu 16.04 machine using:
sudo snap install direnv
as per the website, and added the line:
eval "$(direnv hook bash)"
to my ~/.bashrc file as per the instructions. When I navigate into the directory with my .envrc file, the following message shown:
direnv: error .envrc is blocked. Run `direnv allow` to approve its content.
Sweet. So I run direnv allow, and I'm immediately hit with exactly the same error. I've also tried using direnv allow . but that doesn't seem to help. Also, completely restarting my laptop hasn't helped either.
All the advice I've seen is for direnv not finding the .envrc file, but here it is finding it, it's just not allowing me to allow it.
I know this is not a propper solution, but I encountered this aftering installing from a snap on Linux Mint.
After I uninstalled the snap and installed it from aptitude I did not have any issues.
While the OP is on Ubuntu I ran into the same problem with the snap installed binary on CentOS 7.7.
I worked around the problem by installing a go binary and then building direnv from source: git clone https://github.com/direnv/direnv.git; cd direnv; make; make install which got me direnv 2.21.2 in /usr/local/bin

I just installed graphite on my mac, but some fonts are huge

I just installed graphite on OSX, and managed to get the web app running this command:
python /opt/graphite/bin/run-graphite-devel-server.py /opt/graphite
I'll eventually move it to ubuntu, but in the mean time, some fonts are enormous:
Any thoughts on how to fix this?
I chased this down to an issue with the newest version of cairo. I removed cairo and installed 1.12.6. I posted the instructions here gist.github.com/relaxdiego/7539911
Its the cairocffi that handles the fonts and other display parameters. Sometimes installing only cairo doesn't work. In the above case you should always troubleshoot by ensuring proper and complete installation of the cairocffi package. By complete I mean all the dependencies for cairocffi.
The frequently required are:
1. libffi-devel (for rpm based operating systems)
sudo yum install libffi-devel
2. libffi-dev (for debian based operating systems)
sudo apt-get install libffi-dev
3. parse_lookup
sudo pip install parse_lookup
This is the Github page for cairocffi.

RubyODBC Cannot allocate SQLHENV

I'm trying to connect to SQL Server on Ubuntu 9.04 using Ruby. I translated and followed all the steps outlined in getting OSX talking to SQL Server from here:
http://toolmantim.com/articles/getting_rails_talking_to_sqlserver_on_osx_via_odbc
Everything is working on the FreeTDS and unixODBC end. I can see and query the database using tsql.
When I try to access the database from Ruby using IRB I get the following error:
DBI::DatabaseError : INTERN (0) [RubyODBC] Cannot allocate SQLHENV
Has anyone run into this and what can I do to solve this?
I started getting this error when I upgraded to Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic Koala). Your tip regarding installation order of the Ubuntu packages didn't work for me.
It seems the fix was to manually compile ruby-odbc.
wget http://www.ch-werner.de/rubyodbc/ruby-odbc-0.9997.tar.gz
tar xzvf ruby-odbc-0.9997.tar.gz
cd ruby-odbc-0.9997
ruby extconf.rb --with-dlopen
make
sudo make install
System
Ubuntu 9.10 64 bit
I had to specify the odbc directory in the rubyodbc install
wget http://www.ch-werner.de/rubyodbc/ruby-odbc-0.9997.tar.gz
tar xzvf ruby-odbc-0.9997.tar.gz
cd ruby-odbc-0.9997
ruby extconf.rb --with-odbc-dir=/usr/lib/odbc --disable-dlopen
make
sudo make install
I had the same problem.
But on Centos 5.5 not Ubuntu
Tried many forums/solutions with no joy.
The error message hints at a missing reference to unixODBC.
Which was setting using LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable.
Found another way to set path, by creating
/etc/ld.so.conf.d/odbc.conf.
add unixODBC location to file ie /usr/local/lib.
Run, sudo ldconfig.
Go fig that I actually got this working after submitting my question. What I ended up doing was uninstall libdbd-odbc-ruby and libdbi-ruby and then reinstalling them by installing libdbi-ruby first and then installing libdbd-odbc-ruby. I guess when I installed them before, something must of messed up.
BTW, following the instructions to recompile Ruby-ODBC on Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic) required installation of either the libiodbc2-dev or the unixodbc-dev package. When using libiodbc2-dev, I got segmentation faults when my Ruby program tried:
connection.select_all('select top 15 * from log_device_healths')
..but no problem when using unixodbc-dev instead.
Tim Morgan's solution didn't work for me. However I was able to get things working by installing an older version of libodbc-ruby (0.9995) from here:
http://mirrors.kernel.org/ubuntu/pool/universe/libo/libodbc-ruby/libodbc-ruby1.8_0.9995-1_i386.deb
Additional details are available from Carsten Gehling's blog:
http://gehling.dk/2010/02/the-woes-of-libodbc-ruby1-8-and-debian-ubuntu/
Be careful though -- Ubuntu's Update Manager will happily "upgrade" this version of libodbc-ruby to the broken 0.9997-2. I accidentally overwrote the older version this way only to end up back here, trying to figure out how I fixed it last time.
Well, it seems my other answer stopped working for me. This thread helped me to solve the issue in another way, and I wanted to share it here.
sudo gem uninstall ruby-odbc
sudo rm /usr/local/lib/site_ruby/1.8/x86_64-linux/odbc.so
cd /tmp
wget http://mirrors.kernel.org/ubuntu/pool/universe/libo/libodbc-ruby/libodbc-ruby1.8_0.9995-1_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i libodbc-ruby1.8_0.9995-1_amd64.deb
If you're not on a 64-bit platform, you'll need to download a different Debian package.
Basically, what solves the problem is installing version 0.9995 of the ruby-odbc Ubuntu package.