There might be some savings to be had with some sort of local package cache over 10GiB Ethernet.
Omitting grub and using systemd-boot might also take a few seconds off.
It’s fast, but you are only installing
base
,linux
andgrub
.base-devel
should also be there, since it’s assumed to be installed by any PKGBUILD you’d want to build with makepkg.But yes. It does what it said it would do: Install a basic, minimal Arch system in just over a minute.
I disagree, making your own packages is nice, but it’s not like it’s needed. I know multiple people who don’t touch the AUR or custom pkgbuilds at all
I know. It’s not marked in the wiki as essential and you can have a functional system without it.
no networkmanager?
networkmanager is for chumps, long live dhcpcd
disqualified!
This would be interesting if it was Gentoo.
I don’t quite understand the point of these speedruns since there’s usually not a defined end target and there are so many variables which are not under the user/installer’s control, like disk, processing speed
Isn’t the purpose getting views on youtube?
pretty misguided way to do so then lol
Doesn’t really matter as long as people watch, I guess. Or maybe it’s purposefully that way to draw engagement
Time for systemd-speedrun to standardise this
Good lord. Dead it, run from it, systemd still arrives
It’s defined right there in the title. First keypress to login prompt.
Yeah it really needs to be a target decided by someone else and not announced ahead of time.
It takes a while but I’m surprised the WR would be nearly 72 minutes.
deleted by creator
No, no and… yes.
I intentionally misunderstood for (not very) comedic effect
It’s the way it’s written, it’s typically hour:minutes.seconds
No, it isn’t. A decimal is always a decimal.
That’s not ISO-8601 / RFC 3339.
I thought that was honestly the joke.
There’s only like 10 minutes of actually typing commands.
Without watching this, the premise sounds very stupid.