If you plan on experimenting with overclocking you will need an external USB hard drive or USB flash drive of adequate size. This choice depends solely on whether or not you want to overclock your RPi or not. Next you will need to decide what you will be using as the main drive. Passwd: password updated ~]$ systemctl reboot
Passwd: password updated ~]$ pacman -S ~]$ visudo ~]$ useradd -m -g users -s /bin/bash ~]$ passwd kyau Then you can format your SD card with the image using the following command, filling in the path of the downloaded image and replacing the device node with the device node you found with fdisk (e.g. If you are using a Linux machine you can simply search for the device node of the SD card you have inserted with the fdisk -l command. This tutorial is essentially a replica of my normal Arch Linux: System Installation guide with RPi (Raspberry Pi) specific notes included.Īs always we will follow the Arch Linux philosophy, meaning these tutorials are geared at being simple and efficient.įor use in the creation of this tutorial I used the following environment:ĭownload and image your SD Card with the image located at Arch Linux ARM.
#Change timezone linux raspberry pi how to
The following tutorial is a collection of notes on how to install the Arch Linux distribution on the Raspberry Pi hobbyist device.