I will ask you to confirm if everything you entered thus far is correct, if so press ‘Yes’ Once that is finished we are asked which desktop environment we want. Next it will ask for basic things, like timezone, hostname, username, and the passwords for both the user and root. Here it asks us whether we want to install a desktop environment, or a headless server.įor this guide, let’s go with Desktop Environment ‘./endeavour-ARM-install-V2.6.sh’ (or whatever the scripts filename is by then) you can also enter the first part of the filename, and press tab to autocomplete it.Īt this point the hardest part is done, and we should be in the terminal based installer. Once that’s done, run the script by entering: ‘chmod +x *.sh’ (this will make any shell script executable, but since there is only one in here, it should be fine) In order to make the script executable, simply enter following command: Next we will need to enter it’s directory by simply enteringĮntering ‘ls’ will show you the folder’s contents you will see something like ‘endeavour-ARM-install-V2.6.sh’ (version number will probably change in the future, but V2.6 is the version at the moment of writing) Simply enter ‘pacman -S git’ to install gitįollowed by following command to download the script: We’ll need this to download EndeavourOS ARM’s install script from the GitHub page Once update is complete, lets install git Go through the update process, like you would on any other arch install. Now we update the VM simply by doing the usual ‘pacman -Syu’ command To enable parallels downloads, simple remove the hashtag, then press CTRL+O to save, and CTRL+X to close nano Inside nano, we can navigate down with the arrow keys until we reach a line looking like this: Once nano is installed, we can edit the pacman config file by entering following command: When it is booted up you can log in with the following secure username/password combination:īut before we do that, we better activate the parallel downloads option for pacman.įirstly let’s install nano by entering ‘pacman -S nano’ When it first starts, it will spit out an error that it can’t find an iso image… you can safely ignore that… my guess is the creator still had his archboot iso mounted in the vm when he uploaded it. When it asks you if you moved or copied the VM, click ‘copied’ put it in the folder where your other parallels VM’s are stored, and simply double click it. Just download Arch Linux Parallels and extract. These are the kernel versions… I went with 5.16.x for this guide. (standard it has 2 cores, and 3gb’s of ram, but this can of course be increased afterwards through the parallels console)Īt the moment of writing there were 2 folders: I have found out an easier way to get EndeavourOS ARM up and running on a Parallels VM… Instead of having to install another linux bistro, and hijacking one of the virtual drives, I found a reddit post where one of the Arch devs (Tobias Powalowski) posted a link to an Arch Linux ARM *.pvm image for parallels.īasically this is a premade VM with a very minimal base arch install installed.
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