Install Arch Linux via SSH
This article is intended to show users how to install Arch remotely via an SSH connection. Consider this approach when the host is located remotely or you wish to use the copy/paste ability of an SSH client to do the Arch install.
On the remote (target) machine
Boot the target machine into a live Arch environment via the Live CD/USB image: this will log the user in as root.
At this point, setup the network on the target machine as for example suggested in Installation guide#Connect to the internet.
Secondly, setup a root password which is needed for an SSH connection, since the default Arch password for root is empty:
# passwd
Now check that PermitRootLogin yes
is present (and uncommented) in /etc/ssh/sshd_config
. This setting allows root login with password authentication on the SSH server.
Finally, start the openssh daemon with sshd.service
, which is included by default on the live CD.
PermitRootLogin yes
from /etc/ssh/sshd_config
.On the local machine
On the local machine, connect to the target machine via SSH with the following command:
$ ssh root@ip.address.of.target
From here one is presented with the live environment's welcome message and is able to administer the target machine as if sitting at the physical keyboard. At this point, if the intent is to simply install Arch from the live media, follow the guide at Installation guide. If the intent is to edit an existing Linux install that got broken, follow the Install from existing Linux wiki article.
Installation on a headless server
This section describes installation of Arch Linux on a headless server (in my case an Intel NUC box) without a keyboard, mouse or display. It involves three steps:
- Create a modified Arch Linux live image using Archiso. The modification is designed to do three things:
- Automatically connect to the (possibly password protected) WiFi network at boot time.
- Run the SSH daemon at boot time
- Create an
/root/.ssh/authorized_keys
file for root containing your public key. The default/etc/ssh/sshd_config
allows root to log in over SSH using public key authentication.
- Boot the headless machine into a live Arch environment by inserting the installation medium containing the above modified boot image and powering it up.
- Wait for a minute or so to allow the headless machine time to boot up and connect to the WiFi network. From your existing machine (with keyboard and display) SSH into the live Arch environment on the headless server and complete the installation as described in the Installation guide.
The rest of this section describes the first step of creating a modified live image. All of this done on a machine with an existing Arch Linux installation which will typically also be the machine from which you plan to SSH into the headless machine.
- Install Archiso and then as explained in Archiso#Setup copy the releng profile to a suitable folder:
cp -r /usr/share/archiso/configs/releng/ /root/archlive
- Create a file defining your network SSID, password and public key file. This can be merged into the script file described below, but I prefer to keep some separation between code and data.
/root/archlive/my-build-config.sh
SSID=your_wifi_network_ssid PASSWORD=your_wifi_network_password PUBLIC_KEY=/path/to/your/public/key
- Create a customized build script that installs requisite packages, enables desired services and copies the public key file to the boot image. This script does several modifications in the boot image:
- It copies the public key into root's
.ssh/authorized_keys
. As explained in Archiso#Adding files to image, this has to be done by creating askel
directory withinairootfs/
and copy the files there. SSH is very particular about file permissions and we must set these permissions as well. - It sets up the boot image to connect to the WiFi network at boot using NetworkManager and its command line interface nmcli. There are several steps involved in this:
- Install NetworkManager as well as the Wireless drivers and firmware which in my case is linux-firmware. As explained in Archiso#Installing packages, installation of additional packages is accomplished by adding these packages to the lists of packages in
packages.x86_64
. - Start the
NetworkManager.service
at boot by adding the requisitesystemctl enable
command tocustomize_airootfs.sh
as explained in Archiso#Configure the live medium - Ensure that the requisite
nmcli dev wifi connect
command is executed automatically on booting. The boot image is by default set up to auto login to root at boot. When root (or any other user logs in), the scripts in/etc/profile.d
are executed. So all that we need to do is to create an executable script in/etc/profile.d
with the requisitenmcli dev wifi connect
command. In the script below, the password is enclosed in an arcane set of quotes; this quoting is necessary only if the password is actually a passphrase (with embedded spaces).
- Install NetworkManager as well as the Wireless drivers and firmware which in my case is linux-firmware. As explained in Archiso#Installing packages, installation of additional packages is accomplished by adding these packages to the lists of packages in
- Start the
sshd.service
at boot by adding the requisitesystemctl enable
command tocustomize_airootfs.sh
as explained in Archiso#Configure the live medium - Finally, the customized build script must run the original build script (
./build.sh
) to create the boot image.
- It copies the public key into root's
/root/archlive/my-build.sh
# source values of SSID PASSWORD PUBLIC_KEY source my-build-config.sh # copy PUBLIC_KEY to authorized_keys mkdir -p airootfs/etc/skel/.ssh cp $PUBLIC_KEY airootfs/etc/skel/.ssh/authorized_keys chmod 700 airootfs/etc/skel/.ssh chmod 600 airootfs/etc/skel/.ssh/authorized_keys # install networkmanager echo networkmanager >> packages.x86_64 # install linux-firmware (required for the Intel NUC) echo linux-firmware >> packages.x86_64 # enable sshd and NetworkManager echo systemctl enable sshd.service NetworkManager.service \ >> airootfs/root/customize_airootfs.sh # connect to WiFi network at login mkdir -p airootfs/etc/profile.d echo nmcli dev wifi connect "$SSID" password '"'"$PASSWORD"'"' \ >> airootfs/etc/profile.d/connect-wifi.sh chmod +x airootfs/etc/profile.d/connect-wifi.sh # run the original build script ./build.sh
Make the script executable and run it
cd /root/archlive chmod +x my-build.sh ./my-build.sh
The modified boot image is now ready (in the /root/archlive/out/
folder) and can be copied to an installation medium (USB drive) using dd
:
dd bs=4M if=out/archlinux_xxxxxx of=/dev/sdxx status=progress oflag=sync