I completely missed that detail…
@manuel Could this be the realtek driver, or was it removed from this one. I forgot.
I completely missed that detail…
@manuel Could this be the realtek driver, or was it removed from this one. I forgot.
@Ahsan said it is an Intel LAN card.
I’d first check the ISO and the USB burning.
https://discovery.endeavouros.com/installation/create-install-media-usb-key/2021/03/
And then check the usual: disable Secure Boot and related etc.
I actually followed all those steps but no luck
@Ahsan Try to remove the r8168 driver in the terminal (sudo pacman -R r8168) You don’t need that driver and sometimes it confuses the system to make a proper internet connection.
Bad luck…terminal still stuck so could not perform that task
Is that on the same ISO or a newly downloaded one?
newly downloaded one with the checks performed on it…i think i will just go with manjaro for now. i wanted to use endeavour to get a clean build like arch…thanks for the help though…the community for this distro seems very helpful
I had the same problem like a month ago. Everyone told me its a bad download. Its not. Tried 5 different usb sticks all same. There is a problem with endeavour iso for some system but no one knows the answer. They keep asking for terminal output which is funny because it is also not working lol.
That may be true, but you do have to understand that this distro (and a lot of other distros out there) is made by enthusiasts and feedback is golden. Nevertheless, we don’t have the resources to test the system on every single working hardware in the world. We, and the community, do what we can do and this may come with an unsatisfactory outcome in some cases. At least we are trying to help everyone out to get the system working and nobody is getting paid for it.
I do understand your point of, but would that be the case for consumer linux distros, since majority of linux users who aren’t enterprise users are using linux distros that are only supported by communities. But then again you guys are new compared distros that have been around for far more years. But then that’s the time and involvement of several greats. However you guys are on the right track and hopefully one you will be a success based on business strategies
There are only a handful of commercial distros out there, Ubuntu, RHEL, CENTOS, Opensuse and Manjaro, to name a few.
As for the rest, which we are one of, their systems only improve through user feedback. Those are the distros you call consumer distros, I rather call it an endless project of dedicated love.
Is there a drivers listing for Manjaro somewhere? It’s gotta be something very specific and rare we don’t have on the installation iso. There can’t be that much of a difference when we compare it to ours. It could narrow down why Manjaro would work, but not EOS?
This community is nice enough to ask and trying to help. Sometimes things don’t work on some hardware because of some needed proprietary drivers, other times its because users don’t know how to partition a drive or switch off fast boot.
I saw your post in your thread, without any info some users expect their problems to be solved magically.
From what I see, mostly users willing to learn about their system stay, others go to manjaro or whatever. Freedom of choice.
C’est la vie
If you can, I highly recommend using popsicle or imagewriter to create your live usb, it never failed me. Some swear on dd, but I sometimes messed up my usb sticks, probably due to my own fault…
Hopefully you can fix the internet issue and find the driver that works for your card.
@Ahsan @abrasmelin
It would be very easy to try another linux distro that boots on your hardware and has internet to run
inxi -Faz --no-host
Of course you may have to install inxi on that distro first if not installed. Then we can look at the hardware which is the starting point.
I have this issue, here is my output on Kubuntu:
The Wifi should work on the Broadcom BCM4360 chip on EndeavourOS live ISO
Device-1: Intel I211 Gigabit Network vendor: ASUSTeK driver: igb v: kernel port: e000 bus-ID: 04:00.0
chip-ID: 8086:1539 class-ID: 0200
IF: enp4s0 state: down mac: <filter>
Device-2: Broadcom BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter driver: wl v: kernel modules: bcma port: e000
bus-ID: 06:00.0 chip-ID: 14e4:43a0 class-ID: 0280
IF: wlp6s0 state: up mac: <filter>
The WiFi not working is the least of the issues, pretty much no apps work and installing is literally impossible, using Ethernet also doesn’t work.
EDIT: sorry if this came off as rude, didn’t mean it that way.
I’m just pointing out that the WiFi should work as the chip that it has is supported on EndeavourOS. I don’t exactly know what your issue is exactly with the ISO. It could be a bad download or a bad creation of the ISO. It could also be that you have one of those ROG series motherboards plus a RTX 2070 that could be causing issues on booting on the live ISO. When you boot on the Live ISO are you selecting the non free entry? or the default entry? The default entry loads with the open source nouveau drivers. The non free loads with the nvidia drivers. Have you tried both methods?
I have tried both, as someone else has said in another thread about this issue, the hash is valid, I have tried different drives and different methods, not to mention this issue has happened to a few people. There is pretty much no statistic possibility that this is an issue with the download or the writing of the image.