We'll assume you've read the Installation Guide, and you have a clean install of Slackware on your machine that you're happy with.
This beginner's guide is meant to put you firmly on the Slackware path. If you installed Slackware for the first time, you may be daunted by the sight of the blinking cursor at a console login. Let this page guide you through the initial configuration of a freshly installed Slackware system.
Before we continue, it is important to realize that the Slackware package manager does not perform any dependency checks. If you are new to Slackware, then performing a full installation (with the possible exception of the KDEI series) could prevent a lot of problems later on.
The official Slackware recommendation 1) is “If you have the disk space, we encourage you to do a full installation for best results”.
When Slackware starts for the first time after completing the installation and rebooting, you will notice that it boots to a console log in screen - not the graphical login screen you may expect from using other distributions. Do not let that discourage you. It is the first stage in a learning experience which will make you a lot more knowledgeable in Linux after as little as a few weeks.
The installation did not offer to create a user account. At this stage, there is only the “root
” account. You should remember the root password, which you set at the very end of the installation procedure. Login as “root” now - you will find yourself at a “#” console root-prompt.
So now what? The “root
” user is not the account which you are going to use as a matter of routine. Root is meant for system maintenance and configuration, software upgrades and the like.
The first thing to do is create a fresh user account for yourself, without the root privileges. After that, it is time to start considering the installation of “Proprietary Graphics Drivers” (if you own a Nvidia or Ati card), setting up a wireless network connection or starting a graphical desktop environment. There is a lot that you can do with Slackware! Let's start with the basics.
The first thing you will need to do is create your own non-root user account. There are two ways you can do this, both from the console. The recommended way is to use Slackware's own interactive adduser
script, thus:
# adduser
and follow the prompts. Read the user management page for more detail on the adduser
script. You can use the non-interactive standard Linux program useradd
too:
# useradd -m -g users -G wheel,floppy,audio,video,cdrom,plugdev,power,netdev,lp,scanner -s /bin/bash slacker
Once that’s done you can log in to your user account.
Log out of the root account (type logout
at the root prompt) and then login using the new account you just created. Now come the really interesting adventures!
Slackware's installer is English-only and it will also assume that English is the language in which you want to be addressed by the programs on your computer. If you are a non-English speaker and want your Slackware system to “talk” to you in your own language, you should check out our instruction article “Localization: Adapt Slackware to your own Language”
Now that you have Slackware running, you should consider spending a bit of time caring for your computer's good health. The software which was installed as part of the Slackware release you are running, may develop vulnerabilities over time. When those vulnerabilities are critical to the health of your computer, then Slackware will usually publish a patched version of the software package. These patched packages are made available online (in the /patches
directory of the release) and announced on the Slackware Security mailing list.
You have various options in order to keep your Slackware installation up-to-date. It's not advised to make the process of applying security updates fully automatic, but it is possible to do so using a cron job.
Your best option is to use slackpkg, which is a package manager on top of Slackware's own pkgtools. Before you can use slackpkg
you will need to define an online mirror from which it will download updates to your computer.
A list of available mirrors for your Slackware version can be found in this file:
/etc/slackpkg/mirrors
Open the file in a text editor such as nano
or vi
and uncomment a single mirror URL. Make sure that the URL mentions the release number for the version of Slackware you are running! Also, pick a mirror which is close to you or of which you know it is fast. When you have done that, you need to initialize slackpkg's database by running
# slackpkg update gpg # slackpkg update
Note that package management is done as the “root
” user!
You will need to update the slackpkg
database from time to time, when you learn about the availability of new patches for your distribution. After updating the database you can let it download and install the updates. Again, see the slackpkg page for guidelines about the use of this tool.
The slackpkg update
command will connect to a Slackware mirror and update the local package information database on your computer. This command does not actually install any package!
The usual routine for upgrading your Slackware to the latest patches is as follows:
# slackpkg update # slackpkg install-new # slackpkg upgrade-all # slackpkg clean-system
The “install-new”, “upgrade-all” and “clean-system” commands will always show you a list of candidate packages to act on before excecuting anything. This allows you to review the suggested package alterations and select/deselect anything you do not agree with.
The “clean-system” is technically only needed after you upgrade from one Slackware release to the next (say, from 14.1 to 14.2) and it is meant to remove any Slackware package which is not (or no longer) part of the core distribution.
slackpkg clean-system
command regards any 3rd package as a candidate for removal! Therefore, be smart with your blacklist (/etc/slackpkg/blacklist
)
The Slackware Essentials book has a chapter about keeping up to date. It would be good if you read it now if you have not done so already.
# wget http://www.slackware.com/~alien/tools/rsync_slackware_patches.sh -O /usr/local/bin/rsync_slackware_patches.sh # chmod +x /usr/local/bin/rsync_slackware_patches.sh
The script uses a couple of defaults which you may want to change to suit your environment - such as the location where the script will download the patches to.
Simply run the script once, and see what it reports:
# /usr/local/bin/rsync_slackware_patches.sh [rsync_slackware_patches.sh:] Syncing patches for slackware version '13.37'. [rsync_slackware_patches.sh:] Target directory /home/ftp/pub/Linux/Slackware/slackware-13.37/patches does not exist! [rsync_slackware_patches.sh:] Please create it first, and then re-run this script.
You notice that you will have to edit the script and define a local directory (and create that directory too!) for the script to use. When that is done, you should run the script once - for a first-time download of patches.
Then you can use cron to run the script once a day. For instance, schedule the script to run at 05:33 every day, and let it check for updates to the 64-bit version of Slackware-13.37. Open the crontab editor by typing
crontab -e
and then you add the following line to your cron table:
33 5 * * * /usr/local/bin/rsync_slackware_patches.sh -q -r 13.37 -a x86_64
This command will be executed silently (meaning you will not get emailed) if no new patches are found. However when the script finds updates it will download them and email you the script's output. You will get an email like this:
[rsync_slackware_patches.sh:] New patches have arrived for Slackware 13.37 (x86_64)! ....................................................................... 0a1,10 > Mon Sep 10 20:26:44 UTC 2012 > patches/packages/seamonkey-2.12.1-x86_64-1_slack13.37.txz: Upgraded. > This is a bugfix release. > patches/packages/seamonkey-solibs-2.12.1-x86_64-1_slack13.37.txz: Upgraded. > This is a bugfix release. > +--------------------------+ > Sun Sep 9 19:11:35 UTC 2012 > patches/packages/mozilla-thunderbird-15.0.1-x86_64-1_slack13.37.txz: Upgraded. > This is a bugfix release. > +--------------------------+
And then you know you have to update slackpkg and make it install the latest patches. This gives you control over your updates (you decide when you update) while being automatically warned about the availability of new patches (which will already have been downloaded for you).
If you installed the network packages, then at the end of the Slackware installation, you will have been asked a couple of simple questions, like:
All of these questions have resulted in the setup of a few network related configuration files.
/etc/rc.d/rc.inet1.conf
netconfig
tool will only configure your eth0
interface. If you have additional network interfaces, you can edit the file with a text editor such as nano
or vi
and add you configuration details. There is a man page for this: man rc.inet1.conf
/etc/resolv.conf
man resolv.conf
/etc/HOSTNAME
/etc/hosts
man hosts
If you want to read in more detail about how to configure your network, have a look at this online comprehensive guide to networking in Slackware.
To configure your wired network interface eth0
, run (as root)
# netconfig
The same script which was run during the installation process.
netconfig
only deals with the wired connection for eth0
.
On the assumption that you configured your wired connection with netconfig
, your network should be connected automatically without the need for any post-installation configuration.
If you didn’t enter your network configuration details during installation, just run netconfig
as root; then run
# /etc/rc.d/rc.inet1 eth0_start
and you should have a working network connection instantaneously.
Most common wireless hardware is supported by Linux these days. You can search online if your wireless hardware is supported by 3rd parties that have written Linux drivers. If you want to know if your computer recognizes your wireless card, simply run
# iwconfig
as root. If that tool reports “no wireless extensions” for all your network interfaces then the kernel does not have a driver for your wireless card and you'll have to find one online.
As with the wired network interfaces, your wireless card is traditionally configured in the file /etc/rc.d/rc.inet1.conf
. You can read a lot more about it in this wireless configuration guide. There is also the man page:
# man rc.inet1.conf
You will also need to take steps to include wireless security, whether WEP or WPA2. Unencrypted wireless connections are strongly discouraged. Note that WPA/WPA2 encryption is not configured just in /etc/rc.d/rc.inet1.conf
, you will also need to edit /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf
and add an encryption key there.
Wireless encryption issues, in particular for WPA, can be hard to troubleshoot. Some basic troubleshooting steps are detailed in the above networking guide, just in case you do not get your computer associated to the Access Point.
Slackware currently has some alternatives to configure and monitor your network connections. These install a daemon (aka a background service) which will allow you to switch between wired and wireless connections easily. That makes them perfectly suited for mobile users. They come with graphical configuration utilities and do not depend on the traditional Slackware configuration files - in fact, those files will cause conflicts if they contain network configuration.
# chmod +x /etc/rc.d/rc.wicd
You can then configure your network using the graphical tool wicd-client
or if you are running Slackware 14 you can use the KDE widget for wicd instead. For console lovers, there is also wicd-curses
which offers the same configuration capabilities as the X-based counterparts.
# chmod +x /etc/rc.d/rc.networkmanager
which will make NetworkManager start at boot. You will have to configure NetworkManager using an X-based graphical utility.
Slackware 14 includes a KDE widget for Networkmanager. If you are using another Desktop Environment like XFCE, you can install the Gnome network-manager-applet from SlackBuilds.org.
It's recommended that you switch to Slackware's generic kernel. This is easy to do but there are a few steps to follow.
# /usr/share/mkinitrd/mkinitrd_command_generator.sh
This command will not actually do anything. It is informational only, and will output something like this - depending on your kernel version, your hardware configuration, the root filesystem you chose when you installed Slackware and so on:
# # mkinitrd_command_generator.sh revision 1.45 # # This script will now make a recommendation about the command to use # in case you require an initrd image to boot a kernel that does not # have support for your storage or root filesystem built in # (such as the Slackware 'generic' kernels'). # A suitable 'mkinitrd' command will be: mkinitrd -c -k 3.2.29 -f ext4 -r /dev/sdb2 -m usb-storage:ehci-hcd:usbhid:ohci-hcd:mbcache:jbd2:ext4 -u -o /boot/initrd.gz
Run the script's suggested mkinitrd
commandline (as root) to generate the initrd.gz
image.
/etc/lilo.conf
by adding a section to your Slackware entry as follows: image = /boot/vmlinuz-generic-3.2.29 initrd = /boot/initrd.gz # add this line so that lilo sees initrd.gz root = /dev/sda1 label = Slackware read-only
Actually, the “mkinitrd_command_generator.sh
” script will show an example section which can be added to /etc/lilo.conf
if you pass it the name of the generic kernel as an argument, like this:
# /usr/share/mkinitrd/mkinitrd_command_generator.sh -l /boot/vmlinuz-generic-3.2.29
Note that it is recommended to add a new section instead of editing the existing kernel image section. Assign a unique label to your new section. After reboot, LILO will give you two options: to boot into your freshly added generic kernel, or to boot into the failsafe huge kernel (of which you are certain that it will work).
/etc/lilo.conf
you have to save the file and then run # lilo -v
to make your change permanent. Then, reboot.
mkinitrd
manual page (man mkinitrd
) for more information. initrd.gz
, then booting will fail with a kernel panic.
X.Org is the X-Window framework used in Slackware. The X server will usually auto-detect your graphics card and load applicable drivers. If auto-detect does not work (X crashes on startup), you will need to create a file /etc/X11/xorg.conf
and set the correct options for your graphics card and display resolution. You can use
# X -configure
to generate a basic xorg.conf
configuration file in your current directory. This file can then be customized and placed in the /etc/X11/
directory. For a detailed overview of X configuration, check the xorg.conf
manual page (man xorg.conf
).
Many people use computers with a modern graphics card powered by a Nvidia or Ati GPU (graphics processing unit). The vendors of these high-performance graphics card offer non-free (proprietary binary-only) drivers for their cards. These binary-only drivers will boost your computer's graphical and in particular OpenGL performance. If you own such a card you may want to read our Wiki article “Proprietary Graphics Drivers”.
To choose the Window Manager or Desktop Environment you wish to use, run the xwmconfig
utility:
$ xwmconfig
and select one of the available options. Note that you can run the xwmconfig
command as the root
user which will set a global default for all users. By running the same command as your ordinary user account, you override that global default and pick your own.
After making your choice you can simply run
$ startx
Your preferred Desktop Environment or Window Manager will then start up.
To start with a graphical login screen on boot instead of Slackware's default console login, change the default runlevel to 4. Edit the file /etc/inittab
and change the line that looks like
id:3:initdefault:
to
id:4:initdefault:
Note the difference from other Linux distributions; many of those use runlevel 5 for their graphical login. In Slackware, runlevel 5 is identical to runlevel 3 (console boot).
In the graphical runlevel, you will be greeted by one of the available display (login session) managers. Slackware will by default look for the availability of GDM (Gnome Display Manager), KDM (KDE Display Manager) and XDM (X Display Manager) - in that order. You can also install a third-party login manager like SliM but you will have to edit /etc/rc.d/rc.4
and add a call to your new session manager all the way at the top.
It may be of interest to new Linux users to explore the command line a bit more before installing a graphical desktop, just to learn some shell commands and applications available in non-graphical mode. Slackware excels in having an abundance of command line programs for a wide range of tasks.
For instance, web browsing can be done with lynx or links, which are console based web browsers. You can listen to music (even network audio streams) on the console using audio players like moc, mpg123, ogg123.
If you just installed the 64-bit version of Slackware (often called slackware64 or Slackware for x86_64) you will soon discover that it will refuse to run 32-bit programs like Wine. You may want to read our page on adding multilib capabilities in that case.
Even a Slackware user can benefit from good documentation (why else are you reading this?). Our suggestion is that you browse this Wiki for additional tips and HOWTOs. And don't forget to check out the root directory of the Slackware DVD or CD1! You'll find Slackware's own main documentation there. Every text file there is worth a read.
If you have been using Slackware for a while and want to upgrade to the next release once that becomes available, we have a nice HOWTO available here: Upgrading Slackware to a New Release
When tracking current, you should always read the latest ChangeLog.txt before upgrading the system, to see whether any additional steps are required to be performed before or after upgrading. For upgrades to a stable release, it is a good idea to read the UPGRADE.TXT
and CHANGES_AND_HINTS.TXT
files located on the CD/DVD or the official mirror.