ArchWiki talk:Requests

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Revision as of 01:15, 25 November 2018 by Svito (talk | contribs) (→‎Language checking: re, close: request fulfilled)

Latest comment: 25 November 2018 by Svito in topic Creation requests
Note: Questionable edits should be reported directly on the page itself via an appropriate article status template, or on the respective talk page.

Is the wiki missing documentation for a popular software package or coverage of an important topic? Or, is existing content in need of correction, updating, or expansion? Write your requests below and share your ideas...

Creation requests

Here, list requests for topics that you think should be covered on ArchWiki. If not obvious, explain why ArchWiki coverage is justified (rather than existing Wikipedia articles or other documentation). Furthermore, please consider researching and creating the initial article yourself (see Help:Editing for content creation help).

HOWTO: SAMBA PDC + LDAP

How to configure SAMBA PDC + LDAP in Arch Linux? (Moved from another page. Hokstein 19:57, 16 September 2007 (EDT))

Left-Handed Adjustments for Desktop Environments

I was thinking it would be helpful for lefties if there were a list of configuration options for each desktop environment that facilitate left-handed use of mice and touchpads. I'm not sure if this is related enough to Arch to include in this wiki, but I haven't had a lot of luck finding information for my own DE (KDE) let alone for others. I will start writing down information, and if no one else thinks there should be a separate page for this, I'll just add the information I find to each individual DE's page. —ajrl 2013-08-11T15:09−06:00

I think a separate page is better. -- Fengchao (talk) 11:58, 12 August 2013 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Input methods

Currently there is no page on ArchWiki properly describing various input methods generally. There is only Internationalization#Input_methods_in_Xorg, but it has several problems:

  • missing descriptions
  • X compose key does not fit in
  • GTK has a default "simple" input method featuring the Ctrl+Shift+u shortcut for entering a unicode character (this was added recently into a wrong article: [1]) - again, no description
  • no description of XIM - outdated, but sometimes used as fallback?

So this is quite enough material to start a new great article ;)

-- Lahwaacz (talk) 18:23, 18 December 2013 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Update to note: While Internationalization#Input_methods_in_Xorg itself still remains a stub, we had editors contributing language specific instructions which were set as subpages of the article:
Internationalization/Japanese and Internationalization/Korean
--Indigo (talk) 21:57, 11 January 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]

DRI

An article, or even stub that links to resources, explaining what DRI is, why it's important, differences between DRI 1, 2, 3, how DRI1 is no longer supported as of xorg-server 1.13, simple xorg.conf code explaining the DRI section, enabling the composite and render extensions there, these and more. Just my thoughts.

ldns

ldns is a core package with no wiki documentation. It is also relatively new in the world of DNS tools and is not well covered on the Internet. Documentation of basic features and what it is not (eg a replacement for bind) would provide a valueable resource. MichaelRpdx (talk) 20:07, 17 February 2014 (UTC)Reply[reply]

The description of the ldns package is "Fast DNS library supporting recent RFCs". The official homepage mentions that several example programs are included with the library, the official docs is probably best for programmers. -- Lahwaacz (talk) 21:37, 17 February 2014 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Linux console

I was thinking that a new page for the console would be a good idea. The Wikipedia:Linux console article gives a short general overview, but obviously doesn't concern the configuration. Since it's an independent system, configured separately from any graphical environment, it would bring together several related sections across multiple articles in one place. It's a fairly complex system and difficult to cover in any depth in small sections across other articles (such as Fonts). I've put together a basic example, User:Teppic74/Linux_console. -- Teppic74 (talk) 17:11, 3 July 2014 (UTC)Reply[reply]

See User:Isacdaavid/Linux_Console for a newer draft. -- Alad (talk) 09:14, 28 August 2016 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Sounds interesting, but I don't know how deep you want to go in the description, it may be too much for a single page as, according to your outline, the resulting article would cover all Fonts#Console fonts, Keyboard configuration in console, part of Extra keyboard keys, Map scancodes to keycodes and Extra keyboard keys in console. The keyboard configuration is split mainly because the configuration for Xorg is connected to it, I don't know how this would be done if the low-level description is moved. On the other hand, some of these articles could use some reorganization, so it may still be possible... -- Lahwaacz (talk) 13:17, 4 July 2014 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I feel this is part of the problem, that the details concerning the console are tacked on to other articles rather than being naturally associated with them. As things stand, I think the documentation is lacking. I don't think a huge amount of information is needed, it would just be helpful to be in one place, as the console is mostly isolated from the rest of the system. The other articles could link to the console article for further details. Another possibility is separate articles exclusively for the console display and keyboard, but they're obviously part of the same topic. -- Teppic74 (talk) 18:48, 4 July 2014 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I created Linux console with User:Teppic74/Linux console#Implementation, Keyboard shortcuts#Virtual console and Fonts#Console fonts. I also moved Keyboard configuration in console to Linux console/Keyboard configuration. --Larivact (talk) 11:43, 22 September 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Sublime-text

I think creating a page and mentioning ways to improve sublime-text integration with Gnome would be a good idea. The trick is if you run sublime with --class=<filename of sublime text .desktop file, e.g. sublime_text_3>, it would help Gnome and XFCE to group sublime instances with its respective desktop file. This is mentioned in the comments of the aur package but I think it's better that this would be in the wiki.--183.amir (talk) 12:41, 19 December 2014 (UTC)Reply[reply]

iPXE

iPXE is a powerful network boot program with many features. Currently, there is no iPXE specific page to describe iPXE in details. There are some pages mentioning iPXE in the wiki, mostly related to network booting, without any further instruction on how to get iPXE to work. So I think it's worth to add a page with detailed iPXE explanation in the wiki. Alive4ever (talk) 10:08, 21 July 2016 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Missing redirects

--Larivact (talk) 15:35, 21 October 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Language checking

A handful of programs have spellchecking through aspell, hspell and hunspell, many of which are GNOME programs and can use all mentioned spell checkers through gspell/gtkspell/gtkspell3/enchant. It would be nice to have an article that covers this topic in particular installation recommendation for English and other languages and configuration (in particular language priority).

Some notable information from gspell upstream: [2]

 At least on GNU/Linux, it is better to install hunspell. aspell can be
 considered deprecated and doesn't work well with gspell. If both hunspell and
 aspell are installed, Enchant prefers hunspell by default.

Relevant (not sure how much today) article: https://penguindreams.org/blog/aspell-and-hunspell-a-tale-of-two-spell-checkers/

We could also comprise a list of software which has spell checking support and link to their articles for specifics:

Aspell exists as a stub. Hunspell does not exist.

Redirects: Spell checking and Grammar checking. Main article Language checking or expand Localization?

-- Svito (talk) 00:29, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Good idea, I went ahead and created the article. Ad first quote: Aspell isn't deprecated and gives IMO better results than hunspell. I think Aspell should probably be merged into the new article --Larivact (talk) 09:52, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Thank you, did not expect quick response on this, let alone much interest. I've gone through your edits yesterday and today and have nothing more to add. I like resulting article, feel free to merge remaining content from Aspell. -- Svito (talk) 01:15, 25 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]

PDF, PS and DjVu

I think we should merge our content on PDF, PostScript and DjVu to a new PDF, PS and DjVu article.

This would mean merging List of applications/Documents#PDF and DjVu, PDF forms, DjVu and Ghostscript.

We could then also have sections listing different commands on how to decrypt password-protected PDFs, combine PDFs, split PDFs, rasterize PDFs, etc.

--Larivact (talk) 12:02, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Another iteration of [3]? (By the way, please remove discussions one-by-one next time, see Help:Discussion.) Not sure how this one is different - the content should be there before we consider creating a new article, and move content from List of applications. -- Alad (talk) 15:58, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]
No, this is announced. Thanks for reminding me to separately close discussions. I agree that the content needs to be created first and am working on it at User:Larivact/drafts/PDF, PS and DjVu. --Larivact (talk) 16:04, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Thanks I guess. Note that just announcing something without giving everyone the proper time to respond isn't really worth much. In this case the odd title (is there any other wiki article which contains a comma?) is something I'd wanted to discuss before merging everything. -- Alad (talk) 23:16, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I know, I just considered this creation non-controversial. Excluding PostScript from the title would be arbitrary. But if you can give some compelling reasons to change it, I'll do the work of renaming the article. --Larivact (talk) 23:26, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Also none of the command-line examples in [4] or explanations in [5] OR [6] were merged. If you're going to arbitrarily decide on what "notable changes", at the very least you should explain why. :/ -- Alad (talk) 23:19, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]
We don't need to give examples for every command, djvulibre provides 19 command-line tools, the new article links the ddjvu man page, the explanations from Ps2pdf were not particularly noteworthy, the new article links the Ghostscript online documentation. I do not consider bug descriptions without workarounds or bug reports ArchWiki-worthy. --Larivact (talk) 23:26, 24 November 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Modification requests

Here, list requests for correction or other modification of existing articles. Only systemic modifications that affect multiple articles should be included here. If a specific page needs modification, use that page's discussion or talk page instead and one of the article status templates.

As a rolling release, Arch is constantly receiving updates and improvements. Because of this the Arch wiki must be updated quickly to reflect these changes.

Should we remove or archive obsolete articles?

[Moved to ArchWiki talk:Administrators#Should we remove or archive obsolete articles?; keeping the section subtree here to prevent backlink breakage until the whole discussion is closed. — Kynikos (talk) 08:05, 12 April 2016 (UTC)]Reply[reply]

List of suggested solutions

Enforcement

Restoring revisions and redirection
Separation of archive content
Double redirects
Rename Template:Deletion
How to archive templates

Renamed software

Gummiboot

Gummiboot is included in systemd since 220-2 as systemd-boot. Relevant search: gummiboot -- Lahwaacz (talk) 14:05, 30 August 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]

index.php in url address

Admins of Arch Wiki, do you noticed, that in every page address begins with https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php?title=? Why? It is uncomfortable. Why could not you do just article name after https://wiki.archlinux.org/? — Agent0 (talk|contribs) 22:48, 6 March 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Administrators can't configure the entry-point urls, that's something that should be done in LocalSettings.php, which however is currently unpatchable because of FS#35545.
Nonetheless I agree with you, urls could be prettified by removing "index.php/", I think wiki.archlinux.fr has the best configuration in this respect. Documentation is in mw:Manual:Short URL/LocalSettings.php. Backward compatibility wouldn't be a problem since urls can be easily rewritten by the http server.
Kynikos (talk) 01:49, 7 March 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I have noticed, that article's path became https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Page_title. Better, but still with ugly index.php. I agree with you, french arch linux wiki did varian which I wanted: just clearly https://wiki.example.com/Page_title. But according to [7] it is not recommended in some cases. As I understand, it just do not allow you (Pierre) to use some titles as articles, for example https://wiki.example.com/favicon.ico, but really, what reason to have such articles =D. And another problem may be that it may require root access to hosting server. Does wiki.archlinux.org is running on virtual server or it is hosted on a normal server? — Agent0 (talk|contribs) 09:59, 17 August 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
This could now be done, seeing as FS#35545 has been implemented. — Ekkelett (talk) 06:53, 6 March 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Good point. Instead of totally shortening it, we should follow [8] in my view. The french version appears to be ending in what's referred to as unsupported configuration in [9] and you don't want to make things like processing robots.txt complex, because it will likely reveal bugs in proxies we don't want to care about. --Indigo (talk) 10:57, 6 March 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]
For the records at least also KDE UserBase uses root titles, but I agree that it's better to keep a prefix. Wikipedia and Gentoo use "wiki/", while archlinux.de uses "title/". In our case I'd avoid "wiki/" since we already have it in the third-level domain; I like "title/", but also "w/" or "t/" are interesting options. — Kynikos (talk) 08:44, 7 March 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I may have been too quick dismissing root titles, just saw the unsupported statement and because of that thought it's more to it than the favicon.ico example used above. We could ask devops about opinion in due course. Regarding a prefix: A singular "w/" or "t/" is not self-speaking as "title/", I like that too. --Indigo (talk) 15:31, 10 March 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Change drive naming/accessing to UUID?

Trying to install drives with/out Luks, LVM on internal, external drives is quite complicated currently. Following the ralated articles suggest different ways of reaching the goal. Many different drive name conventions are suggested, eg.:

  • /dev/sda2
  • /dev/md0
  • /dev/mapper/md/0
  • /dev/mapper/vgroup-lvm-root
  • /dev/vgroup-luks/root
  • ...

Some of them don't work with portable external drives. This overcomplicates setting up encrypted drives in different situations. My suggestion is, to change all drive related articles to one specific solution of addressing drives universal. Currently I think of UUDI drive naming as a way to go. This would ease the process of drive naming in all kinds of situations:

  • The reader is guided through system setup along one red line
  • Troubleshootiing "no drie found" is strait forward
  • Many sections become clearer to read even when not reading the whole article
  • Articles are easier to write and maintain
  • Beginners have an easier read and geta better idea of how to access drives
  • Accessing internal/external encrypted drives is easy

' LMV or other virtual file systems are easier to describe and setup

Ok, I know it is a big suggestion. I wanted to bring it up here, bacause I have the impression that following one primary path would help a lot - everyone involved. It doesn't need to be done in one day. While I think to have one suggested guideline would be a good start. Then with thain mind, we all have it easier to change those sections while Writing/editing Wiki entries.

T.ask (talk) 11:22, 30 March 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Hi, To your own examples above: using an UUID for a /dev/mapper/* device declaration is generally unnecessary (the uniqueness of the device is determined when it is mapped). I think you overestimate the amount of users who actually require setting up the examples where it really matters (e.g. external drives). What I don't understand is why you consider using UUIDs being easier to read/describe. For starters the terribly long UUIDs will break formatting in many cases, e.g. making code blocks in-text not possible. An UUID itself gives no contextual hint, something that a device name does. If you look at the three examples in Persistent block device naming#Boot managers, you really find the UUID one the easiest?
I think you are certainly right in that we may lack crosslinks to Persistent_block_device_naming in some articles where it may be important to use an UUID. Maybe we also need an example section to illustrate singular important points in Persistent block device naming and maybe there are individual articles/sections where content should indeed use a form of persistent naming straight away.
Suggestion: How about using Talk:Persistent block device naming to assemble a list of particular article sections with content where persistent naming should be made more prominent? That way we could also figure if and which examples may be useful to be added. --Indigo (talk) 17:47, 30 March 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Hi, I started this topic because "by design" Linux has so many ways to assign drives and the Wiki uses them kind of "randomly". Finding the best drive naming method for the Wiki is my intention. Giving the reader a hand, by enabling him/her to understand one way of accessing drives and collect all the others somewhere.
I'm suggesting UUIDs, because they can be used for local and mobile situations. They are easy to use. The UUID format is universal and is independent of the location (local/mobile) or the context (LVM, Raid, Luks, ...) in which they are used.
The reason why I'm bring this up is, that it seems, the wiki has currently no standardized form of drive path declaration. If we can find one practical method, it will be easier to write, edit and maintain articles. Everyone involved will know then, which method is the recommended.
Therefore, I wanted to start an open conversation, to find ideas to improve the situation. I guess, UUIDs are also a good choice, because they are easy to substitute with pseudo code, eg.:
  • "mount /dev/disks/by-uuid/e9ea05ce-0ccb-87a1-c71e-90fab8be1944 /mnt"
could then be written as:
  • "/dev/disks/by-uuid/[UUID] /mnt"
instead of having the choice of:
  • "mount /dev/sda3 or
  • /dev/mapper/vgroup--lvm-root or
  • /dev/md/0 or
  • /dev/md0 or
  • ... /mnt"
The reader immediately knows:
  • "I just need to alter [UUID]"
There is no need to know of all possible alternative methods making use of the Wiki example. Because the user already learned (Beginners Guide) how to determine UUIDs those examples are well adoptable.
Reduced uncertainties like the reader had before:
  • Can I use that example's local path in my case, too?
  • What's my case anyway? And how is it different for the one provided?
  • Is my drive IDE, SATA or ... what?
  • Where and how is the correct format of my drive/partitions's path?
  • I need an example to boot my USB drive everywhere. That provided example doesn't work for me. Where is the article I need to know?
  • I skimmed through many articles, no success so far. There must be one, but where?
  • I have an Luks, Raid, LVM (or mixed) situation here. The current article just uses /dev/sdi3. What to do?
  • Which article do I need to read first? I can't use the current example. How about alternatives?
The reader's issue is, that "/dev/sdb3" drive paths aren't that descriptive without the knowledge of how and when they are used as written. They are nice for that particular situation, but may immediately loose their meaning in other use cases?!
If we could pick out one drive naming method the Wiki uses, then we are able to eliminate many of the upper soliloquies and ...
  • We get a good article structure for the writer, reader and maintainer.
  • The provided method will work in either situation (local/mobile/..).
  • All alternative methods can be listed in one conversion article/table.
The reader can quickly move on reading the article:
  • Great, I already know how to determine UUIDs. I just change it..
As you mentioned, crosslinks then point to one subpage, where the conversion to other alternative methods is explained.
Don't get me wrong, I don't want to imply something is wrong with the current way the Wiki does it. This just a natural process how something grows. A bit of standardization may help here.
I'm for UUIDs so far, because are easily exchangeable and can be written as [UUID] in the Wiki.
OMG, I wrote a huge wall of text. Sorry for that. It's not easy and very time consuming writing down what I wanted to say. as a non-native speaker. I hope, it's now easier to understand what my intention was. I'm kind of uncertain that I found the right words. --T.ask (talk) 13:24, 31 March 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Thank you for elaborating on the background of why you propose it. No need to apologize at all for taking the time to give input how to improve our wiki! I just want to add two thoughts on it:
(1) One reason descriptive device declarations (/dev/sda/...) are easy to grasp is that everyone is used to them. It starts when you open any partitioning tool - you start it for a device from the /dev tree. Try to find the term "UUID" in the manpage of cfdisk/cgdisk/parted (fdisk has it, the others not a mention). With this I don't want to say your intention to introduce the user early to use persistent naming is wrong, just that using descriptive naming is common and, thereby, accessible to the reader.
(2) I like your idea of using a "/dev/disks/by-uuid/[YOURUUID] /mnt" format (we call other instances of such 'pseudo-variables'). Still, if you used it in an article context, e.g. an encrypted LVM, you would still have to more verbosely describe which dev/blockdevice/vg/lv UUID is meant to be mounted on /mnt. I still can't really picture for myself how writing and reading it is easier in general.
As I wrote above, I agree we might need to pinpoint the advantages of persistent naming more, but we do some already (e.g. right from the start: Beginners' guide#Generate an fstab). In short I believe we are better off with the way we have it (no rule on it, as long as the contribution fits the article contributed to all editors may choose what's best in context). That's it from me. Looking forward to read feedback & other opinions. --Indigo (talk) 20:46, 31 March 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
IMO man page examples are sometimes a bit behind "new standards". That's natural and this shouldn't prevent us from moving a bit more forward. With Arch we have UUIDs - lets use them :)
In case the user doesn't know UUIDs, we will guide him/her to a short conversion-table/article on how to switch to UUIDs. Actually it's much easier to grasp than often thought:
  • Just enter lsblk -f and it's obvious which UUID points to which drive in any context (raid, luks, lvm, ...). As this Get UUID example shows, just copy the corresponding UUID and use it with all UUID Wiki examples. IMHO it's quite easy.
I see where you are coming from, while I'm confident the reader will learn fast how UUIDs work. A new user will not even know which other options have been there before. Moreover, as the reader is already familiar with UUIDs he/she won't experience future problems with moving drives around. The experienced user just reads the conversion-table/article.
You see, I'm quite confident that the user will grasp UUIDs easily. Also, this will prevent him/her from experiencing future problems. We just need the courage to do the first step. It's not something we need to do in one day. We have all the time to slowly move into one direction.
That's why I would also appreciate other opinions on this topic here.
T.ask (talk) 12:45, 1 April 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Hi, T.ask, thank you for discussing this, however I'm not sure if this is all only theoretical or you have a precise idea of how to put it into practice, because after reading all the discussion I haven't understood very well how this idea would change our articles. At this stage you must choose one of our important articles, e.g. LVM, and explain us how the article would change in details, so we can discuss on something more tangible. — Kynikos (talk) 14:37, 2 April 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Hi, Kynikos. Yes, it's always better to have a good practical example if things seem to be complicated. I'm quite busy right now. When I find the time, I will start changing the Wiki (slowly) as I mentioned before. LVM is a nice example, while I would like to start with those sections which are easier to adapt and more commonly used. Especially if I need to add a new subsection (How do you work with UUIDs) beforehand. --T.ask (talk) 10:44, 21 April 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
As I said, it would be better if you showed us an example here or in your User page before starting to actually "chang[e] the Wiki". Take your time of course :) — Kynikos (talk) 02:30, 22 April 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]

FAQ

The FAQ could use an entry like "After upgrading my kernel, I can't mount USB devices", preferably linking FS#16702. See [10] for a case where users are not aware of this. -- Alad (talk) 22:55, 18 September 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]

+1, but I'd place it into General troubleshooting. -- Lahwaacz (talk) 07:52, 19 September 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Pacman hooks

Hooks support is mandatory as of 2016-04-23 [11], and .install files in the repos are gradually being outphased: see DeveloperWiki:Pacman Hooks -- Alad (talk) 15:32, 29 April 2016 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Subpages in the main namespace

Subpages in the main namespace are finally enabled [12], so e.g. GRUB/Tips and tricks is now a true subpage of GRUB. Among other benefits, there is now an automatic link on each subpage leading to every existing parent page, so manual phrases like "See GRUB for the main article." on top of subpages are now useless and should be removed. -- Lahwaacz (talk) 19:17, 23 July 2016 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Drop of i686 support

Following [13] I've done these edits for the moment:

There are so many other articles that need updating, and also the edits above will need to be amended after November 2017. I think it's better to decide here whether we remove all the i686 content immediately, or we keep it until the final deprecation and do the cleanup then.

Kynikos (talk) 08:57, 26 January 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Hi, I think for some of content it will depend on further decisions of the devs along the timeline, e.g. will there be changes to arch= options. We should wait a little to see how the migration plan looks like. IMHO it is useful to start updating once a topic is clear, i.e. before the deadline. Another moving target is whether a community effort to keep i686 somewhat establishes itself; any such would have an impact on what to change how.
In general I believe the related content changes will be so wide ranging that we should open a Archwiki:Requests/Drop of i686 support (or a top-level link like Archwiki:Drop of i686 support - easier to crosslink) to link to from here. Better to keep overview.
--Indigo (talk) 09:32, 27 January 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

I think it's good to keep Migrating between architectures around, it's also linked at least from the FAQ.

Kynikos (talk) 08:57, 26 January 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

About Makepkg#Build 32-bit packages on a 64-bit system and Install bundled 32-bit system in 64-bit system I'm not sure, perhaps they may be useful for somebody during the transition?

Kynikos (talk) 08:57, 26 January 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

schroot redirects to Install bundled 32-bit system in 64-bit system. I think we should continue to have a page showing an example of setting up an schroot. It's sometimes useful to run Fedora, Ubuntu, etc in schroot. I suppose the article should be altered (and re-titled) to use something other than 32-bit Arch as the example. Bobpaul (talk) 17:46, 17 July 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Looks like Install bundled 32-bit system in 64-bit system has been archived, but there are still some incoming links. There is also Building 32-bit packages on a 64-bit system but I don't know how outdated that is. Lonaowna (talk) 14:34, 14 December 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

For some x86_64 capable hardware there are 32-bit UEFI restrictions. Example section: Unified Extensible Firmware Interface#UEFI Firmware bitness. It needs to be checked whether i386.efi bootloader files will continue to be built after i686 is dropped (FS#52772). Depending on result, it may be useful to rebase Category:Boot loaders content to x86_64 early on?

--Indigo (talk) 08:45, 30 January 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Turns out my prior research was bad, 32-bit efi files are not packaged anyhow. Hence, users requiring those need to generate them, see FS#52772 for details. Still it is useful to weave this info in when references to i686 are eliminated in Category:Boot loaders articles. --Indigo (talk) 09:24, 2 February 2017 (UTC)Reply[reply]

Bot requests

Here, list requests for repetitive, systemic modifications to a series of existing articles to be performed by a wiki bot.

Package links to wiki links

It'd be nice if a bot went around changing links to packages that have a wiki entry to links to the wiki entry (e.g. change git to git), possibly also for aur packages (e.g. dropboxAUR to dropbox). Jabranham (talk) 19:42, 31 July 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]

It's not that simple because package links like in git#Installation, List of applications and probably many other places should not be replaced. -- Lahwaacz (talk) 19:35, 11 August 2018 (UTC)Reply[reply]