Installing a . deb package on Arch - Unix Linux Stack Exchange This method attempts to install the package using the debian packaging format on Arch, which is not recommended due to possible danger of corrupting your installation If using this method it is recommended to be ready with a rescue disc image of Arch backup of the user data space
arch linux - How to manually download and install libcrypto. so. 1. 1 and . . . Use the link provided in the answer to the question you linked to find the package of the Arch Linux site You can also search for any package in the official repositories You can also search for something like libcrypto and it should list the packages that provide those libraries In this case the openssl package provides both of the
command line - How to determine Linux kernel architecture? - Unix . . . x86_64 GNU Linux indicates that you've a 64bit Linux kernel running If you use see i386 i486 i586 i686 it is a 32 bit kernel To determine if the hardware is capable of running a 64-bit kernel grep flags proc cpuinfo Look for the following in the output (all flags retrieved from this stackoverflow answer for the same question )
arch linux - ping displays Name or service not known - Unix Linux . . . I am running Arch Linux on a Raspberry Pi Suddenly: I am unable to ping to a website I am unable to access a website from the browser I have two more computers (all running Arch Linux) connected to the Internet, where I can ping and use the Internet Also, etc resolv conf is identical on the other computers:
arch linux - How to give user root permissions? - Unix Linux Stack . . . You should read the Arch Wiki page on sudo sudo ("substitute user do") allows a system administrator to delegate authority to give certain users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or all) commands as root or another user while providing an audit trail of the commands and their arguments
arch linux - Very high memory usage with nothing running - Unix Linux . . . I'm running Arch Linux with GNOME 3 38 X11, and have an issue where I'm at idle (after using the computer for a while and closing everything) using around 8-9GB of RAM I know about linuxatemyram, and I don't think this is the issue, since free -m prints the following: