Yep, my first step in a fixing a problem is usually searching the ArchWiki to see what they have to say about how the misbehaving program should be configured and what not. I've fixed more problems in my Fedora machine based on the ArchWiki than based on advice from any of their support forums or IRC channels. Amusingly, I've only had to consult it a few times for my actual Arch box, because the thing's been running rock-solid for so long. I think the only time I needed to use it in recent memory for fixing something on that machine was looking up to see how chroot worked, because there was a bug in the recent kernel update that rendered my system unbootable. 5 minutes with a live CD, and the machie was up and running again on a downgraded kernel.
Aside from documentation though, I think the AUR is pretty awesome. Get all the fun perks of source compilations, and the benefits of a package manager if you use something like yaourt. Of course, there are still some goofball packages in the AUR that have been set up to override any custom CFLAGs you've got going on,
Aside from documentation though, I think the AUR is pretty awesome. Get all the fun perks of source compilations, and the benefits of a package manager if you use something like yaourt. Of course, there are still some goofball packages in the AUR that have been set up to override any custom CFLAGs you've got going on,

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