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GNOME

Base GNOME Packages

Base GNOME packages for the full GNOME experience. Bundle with other packages to prevent package conflicts providing the same functionality.

TIP: Include any and all packages you want installed in a list to pacman. That way pacman will resolve package dependencies correctly and not install packages that would cause conflicts with other packages later on in the setup; e.g. the gnome group installs pulseaudio, but pulseaudio and pipewire (see below) are conflicting packages, meaning they can't both be installed at the same time prompting you to remove one or the other. Explicitly selected packages take precedence over packages auto-selected via dependencies.

pacman -S gnome gnome-extra

Video Acceleration

Drivers for hardware accelerated desktop rendering, improving performance and fidelity.

Intel

pacman -S mesa vulkan-intel intel-media-driver libva-intel-driver
yay -S intel-hybrid-codec-driver

AMDGPU

pacman -S xf86-video-amdgpu libva-mesa-driver vulkan-radeon amdvlk 

Nvidia

Nouveau open source driver

pacman -S libva-mesa-driver mesa-vdpau
yay -S nouveau-fw

Proprietary driver

pacman -S nvidia nvidia-utils # Includes Vulkan driver

Audio

Use PipeWire as a more current and modern low-latency sound server. Also better suited for WebRTC screen sharing and screen recording in Wayland sessions (GNOME uses Wayland by default)

pacman -S pipewire pipewire-pulse pipewire-jack pipewire-alsa wireplumber

Bluetooth

pacman -S bluez bluez-utils
systemctl enable bluetooth

Spell Checking

pacman -S hunspell hunspell-de hunspell-en_US hyphen hyphen-de 

Printing

pacman -S cups logrotate system-config-printer
systemctl enable cups
systemctl enable logrotate.timer

Firefox

pacman -S firefox firefox-i18n-de
echo "MOZ_ENABLE_WAYLAND=1" >> /etc/environment
echo "MOZ_WEBRENDER=1" >> /etc/environment

Alternatively, navigate to about:config and set gfx.webrender.all to true to enable WebRender compositor.

Hardware Decoding

Set the following in about:config

media.ffmpeg.vaapi.enabled                     => true
media.ffvpx.enabled                            => false
media.rdd-vpx.enabled                          => false
media.navigator.mediadatadecoder_vpx_enabled   => true

Setting up display manager

Start GDM on boot

Start the GNOME Display Manager (GDM) on boot to be presented with a graphical login screen.

systemctl enable gdm

When using Nvidia proprietary drivers

For the longest time Nvidia only supported their EGLStreams interface for Wayland sessions. Despite GNOME having support for both EGLStreams and the more popular GBM interface, the GNOME Display Manager disables the Wayland session via a udev rule, if it detects the proprietary driver is in use, to prevent problems with the login screen not showing.

To force enable GNOME's Wayland session even with the proprietary Nvidia driver installed, check the following filesfiles:

  • /etc/gdm/custom.conf: Make sure the line WaylandEnable=false is commented out (should be by default)
  • /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/61-gdm.rules: Make sure the line DRIVER=="nvidia", RUN+="/usr/lib/gdm-runtime-config set daemon WaylandEnable false" is commented out
    • GNOME 41 and later: Make sure these lines are all commented out
      DRIVER=="nvidia", ENV{GDM_HAS_VENDOR_NVIDIA_DRIVER}="1"
      DRIVER=="nvidia", RUN+="/usr/lib/gdm-runtime-config set daemon PreferredDisplayServer xorg"
      SUBSYSTEM=="drm", KERNEL=="card[1-9]*", ENV{GDM_HAS_NVIDIA_DRIVER}=="1", RUN+="/usr/lib/gdm-runtime-config set daemon WaylandEnable false"
      

    Keep in mind that Wayland depends on Kernel Mode Setting to function properly, so it is necessary to include the appropriate kernel modules in the kernel image and the setting the kernel commandline parameter to enable KMS support for the proprietary Nvidia driver!

    1. In /etc/mkinitcpio.conf add the following modules:
      MODULES=(nvidia nvidia_modeset nvidia_uvm nvidia_drm)
      
    2. Rebuild the kernel image
      mkinitcpio -P
      
    3. Add the following kernel commandline parameter to your boot manager configuration
      nvidia-drm.modeset=1
      

    Set Keymap for GDM

    NOTE: Executing this command while chrooted into an installation will produce an error that the locale could not be found. Set after rebooting the system.system, press CTRL + ALT + F3 when GDM shows up (or any F-key between 2 and 7) to switch tty, log in via the command line and execute the command as root.

    localectl set-x11-keymap de
    

    Plymouth

    ATTENTION: The maintainer of gdm-plymouth.service is discouraging this method and advising to use regular gdm.service.

    Optionally, as an alternative, install gdm-plymouth (AUR) for a smooth transition from boot splash:

    yay -S gdm-plymouth
    systemctl enable gdm-plymouth
    

    See instructions at Plymouth page on how to set up Plymouth.

    Generate well-known user directories

    xdg-user-dirs-update
    

    Misc additional packages

    Additional packages you might want:

      Name Description gthumb: Image viewer with simple editing capabilities lollypop: Music player for GNOME seahorse: Secrets manager (login credentials, SSH key passphrases, GPG keys) fwupd: Firmware update manager; allows UEFI capsule updates in GNOME Software if supported by firmware gnome-software-packagekit-plugin: Manage Arch packages in GNOME Software
      pacman -S gthumb lollypop seahorse fwupd gnome-software-packagekit-plugin
      

      Remove potentially unwanted packages

      GNOME Dev Tools

      pacman -Rsc accerciser devhelp glade gnome-builder sysprof
      

      User Software

      pacman -Rsc gnome-recipes
      

      Games

      pacman -Rsc five-or-more four-in-a-row gnome-chess gnome-klotski gnome-mahjongg gnome-mines gnome-nibbles gnome-robots gnome-robots gnome-sudoku gnome-taquin gnome-tetravex hitori iagno lightsoff polari quadrapassel swell-foop tali
      

      Customize GDM (wallpaper, logo, message)

      1. Create directories:
        mkdir -p /etc/dconf/profile
        mkdir -p /etc/dconf/db/gdm.d/
        
      2. Create config files
        touch /etc/dconf/profile/gdm
        touch /etc/dconf/db/gdm.d/01-login-screen
        
      3. Contents of /etc/dconf/profile/gdm
        user-db:user
        system-db:gdm
        file-db:/usr/share/gdm/greeter-dconf-defaults
        
      4. Contents of /etc/dconf/db/gdm.d/01-login-screen
        [org/gnome/login-screen]
        banner-message-enable=true
        banner-message-text='Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet'
        logo='/path/to/image.file'
        [org/gnome/desktop/background]
        picture-uri='file:///path/to/background.jpg'
        
      5. Update gconf to apply configs
        dconf update