Known issues and solutions
This is a wiki post; please edit as necessary.
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Nvidia card owners
- We simplified nVidia driver installation. This means we dropped legacy drivers.
-
We recommend to switch over to Nouveau drivers if your card is mentioned here and the feature you need is not in red TO DO here for your particular card.
-
If you however still need proprietary drivers, you may want to execute the following to ensure all parts of the nVidia drivers get installed properly:
sudo mhwd -a pci nonfree 0300
If proprietary drivers don't fix everything, please click the ► at the beginning of this line to view more info
- try installing kernel 5.4 LTS (Long Term Support)
- If that doesn’t fix it, take a full system backup, go to a console using Ctrl+Alt+F2 and:
-
Backup
/etc/X11/mhwd.d/nvidia.conf
if you ever edited that manually -
remove all nVidia related drivers and applications:
pacman --remove nvidia*
-
Note which applications are being removed and keep them handy in a list
-
Install the driver first:
mhwd --install video-hybrid-XXX-nvidia-prime
(Where
XXX
isamd
orintel
if you have hybrid graphics or the whole thing isvideo-nvidia
if you’re on an nVidia-only system) -
reboot and see if you at least get a screen.
-
Install all the other applications from your handy list that you still need one by one.
-
Restore
/etc/X11/mhwd.d/nvidia.conf
if you ever edited that manually -
If that wouldn’t solve the issue open a new issue here referring to this update and posting at a minimum the full output of:
inxi --admin --verbosity=7 --filter --no-host --width
If you however still have issues with your Nvidia card, you may open a new thread in our forum: Graphics & Display - Manjaro Linux Forum or look at our tutorial on compiling old Nvidia drivers.
-
For AMD GPU users having a black screen with kernel 5.10
Please click the ► at the beginning of this line to view more info
Due to a bug in the AMD drivers, please try the following first:
For GRUB:
- Open a terminal or a TTY
- Open
/etc/default/grub
in your favourite CLI editor (nano
vi,
emacs`) - Find the line:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="
- Add
amdgpu.dc=0
- Save
- Execute
sudo update-grub
and reboot
For systemd-boot:
- Open a terminal or a TTY
- Open
/boot/loader/entries/manjarolinux5.10.conf
in your favourite CLI editor (nano
vi,
emacs`) - Add
amdgpu.dc=0
to the end of the lineoptions
- Save & reboot
For rEFInd:
- Open a terminal or a TTY
- Open
/boot/refind_linux.conf
in your favourite CLI editor (nano
vi,
emacs`) - Find the line:
"Boot using default options" "root=
- Add
amdgpu.dc=0
- Save & reboot
Possible 2 Min delay on shutdown with Gnome
Please click the ► at the beginning of this line to view more info
- If you got the problem with shutdown delay (about 2min) on Gnome, here is a workaround:
-
Edit
/usr/lib/systemd/user/gnome-session-restart-dbus.service
in your favourite editor asroot
and addSlice=-.slice
as a line all by itself like this:[Service] Type=notify Slice=-.slice ExecStart=/usr/lib/gnome-session-ctl --restart-dbus
-
Click this link For more information
-
Touchpad on a ThinkPad stops working
- Restart again, please.
You get [PKGNAME] warning: directory permissions differ on [Directory name]
followed by:
Filesystem: NNN package MMM
Please click the ► at the beginning of this line to view this solution
-
The solution:
sudo chmod MMM DirectoryName
Where obviously MMM is the second number you see (the correct one)
- The explanation:
Your package expects the security permissions to be MMM but your system is set to NNN. This is just a warning (today) but to ensure you remain up-to-date with the latest and greatest security rules it’s advised to execute the above command.
Systemd error message: .slice: Failed to migrate controller cgroups
If you have a similar error message like this:
systemd[1004]: -.slice: Failed to migrate controller cgroups from /user.slice/user-1000.slice/user@1000.service, ignoring: Permission denied
… you may need to add this Grub parameter to your /etc/default/grub
file in line GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT
: systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=true
. To update your grub menu, call: sudo update-grub
. For more information on that issue, see also Arch Forum.
Older Issues
Python 3.9 Requires Rebuilds
Instructions for quickly and easily rebuilding affected AUR packages:
# Install yay
sudo pacman -S --needed --noconfirm yay
# Rebuild AUR python packages
yay -S --noconfirm $(pacman -Qqo "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages")
libtraceevent>=5.9-1 update requires manual intervention
2020-10-23 - Sébastien Luttringer
The libtraceevent package prior to version 5.9-1 was missing a soname link. This has been fixed in 5.9-1, so the upgrade will need to overwrite the untracked files created by ldconfig. If you get any of these errors
libtraceevent: /usr/lib/libtraceevent.so.1 exists in filesystem
when updating, use
pacman -Syu --overwrite /usr/lib/libtraceevent.so.1
to perform the upgrade.
Arch Linux - News: libtraceevent>=5.9-1 update requires manual intervention
OpenVPN connection times out.
Workaround: donwgrade openvpn (2.5.0-1 => 2.4.9-2).
For a proper solution follow this bug report on Arch Linux: FS#68480 : [openvpn] running unprivileged with iproute no longer working
PAM and PAMBASE got updated, which might prevent you from login
Due to updates from pambase and pam you might take care about any .pacnew
files in /etc/pam.d
as for example pam_tally, pam_tally2 and pam_cracklib got deprecated. Read in the ArchWiki about managing those files.
Typical issue:
For recovery, it is enough to boot with kernel option “systemd.unit=rescue.target”, then proceed into /etc/pam.d and merge “system-auth” and “system-auth.pacnew”
System takes a long time to boot
If you’ve got errors like Failed to start Network Manager Wait Online.
you can try removing systemd
from passwd
and group
in /etc/nsswitch.conf
as described here
Update: If you can see the line
dbus-daemon[1453]: [system] Connection has not authenticated soon enough, closing it (auth_timeout=30000ms, elapsed: 45146ms)
in in your dbus log ( journalctl -b -u dbus
), the new/better workaround is to switch cups from service to socket as described here:
systemctl disable cups.service
systemctl enable cups.socket
I think I’ve some font problems
With the update of fontconfig some major rules how fonts get applied changed. Make sure that your system has ttf-dejavu
installed. A more in depth explanation can be found here.
Gnome-shell-extension-pop-shell is currently incompatible with wayland
… and causes the system to freeze when the first window is tiled and can render it unbootable. Solution is a hard reset and disabling either pop shell or wayland. If the system becomes unbootable, use a live USB to edit /etc/gdm/custom.conf to disable wayland and reboot.