Comprises 3 components: A daemon server process called plymouthd The daemon is responsible for the graphical display, animation and logging. A client application called plymouth The client sends commands to the daemon A library libply. Supports themes. This plugin allows the graphical splash experience to be scripted using Plymouths own scripting language hence the name.
Note that " shutdown -h now or " halt " cannot be used since Upstart is not running in this scenario. Running Plymouth "post-boot" You can experiment with Plymouth after your system has booted. This is because Plymouth simulates a dual-monitor setup. Ideally, the goal is to get rid of all flicker during startup.
In either text or graphics mode, the boot messages are completely occluded. Also, the user can see the messages at any time during boot up by hitting the escape key. Plymouth isn't really designed to be built from source by end users. For it to work correctly, it needs integration with the distribution. Because it starts so early, it needs to be packed into the distribution's initial ram disk, and the distribution needs to poke plymouth to tell it how boot is progressing. The first one, plymouthd, does all the heavy lifting.
It logs the session and shows the splash screen. It supports things like plymouth show-splash, or plymouth ask-for-password, which trigger the associated action in plymouthd. Welcome to Arch. Have you enabled KMS? Have you regenerated the initramfs image? I actually missed the "upgrade inframis after mkinitcpio changes" in the wiki. However after upgrade using the command "mkinitcpio -P" nothing changed. I dont know how to format code text on the forum, i would apreciate if you could tell me how to do that so my next post will be easier to read.
At early stage of installation i installed nvidiaxx-dkms package from aur witch i'm sure it's correct and it's also functioning since i observed a very big difference in the DE behavior on the nvidia arch wiki page it says to add modules on the mkinitcpio initrams, wicth i didn't do since it says to do it only if i was experiencing problems. I want to try to add nvidia modules but the wiki only talks about kernel parameters, so i'm not sure wicth modules i should add.
If the answer is yes and i do that, should i remove the GRUB kernel parameter to avoid redoundacy? If I used the zen kernel with plymouth-git everything worked. Good luck!
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