Arcris: Spanish‑centred Arch Linux with the ArcrisGUI installer

Arcris: Spanish‑centred Arch Linux with the ArcrisGUI installer

Arcris: Spanish‑centred Arch Linux with the ArcrisGUI installer

Table of contents:-

What Arcris is and who it’s for

Technical profile and release model

Practical notes for testers and adopters

What Arcris is and who it’s for

Arcris is a live Linux distribution based on Arch Linux, developed with a focus on ease of installation for Spanish‑speaking users. It centres on ArcrisGUI, a graphical installer built with the GTK toolkit and libadwaita that aims to simplify the traditionally manual Arch install process. The project presents itself as a desktop/live medium with Xfce as the default desktop, packaged for x86_64 systems and intended for users who want an Arch base without the initial complexity of command‑line installation.

Arcris - Fastfetch (System Info)

Technical profile and release model

Arcris follows a rolling‑release model and uses pacman for package management. The distribution boots as a live image and offers a full installer to create a permanent system. Typical technical choices include systemd as init, support for common journalled file systems (Btrfs, ext4, XFS, JFS), and mainstream desktop tooling such as Firefox as the default browser. Recent published package snapshots show modern upstream versions (for example, a Linux kernel in the 6.x series and recent releases of Python and Firefox), reflecting the rolling nature and close tracking of upstream Arch packages. Downloadable ISO images are distributed via SourceForge; image sizes are in the multi‑gigabyte range consistent with a full desktop live image.

Practical notes for testers and adopters

  • Language and audience: The installer and documentation are primarily Spanish‑language, so non‑Spanish speakers should be prepared to consult translations or community help.

  • Installation: ArcrisGUI is intended to automate the usual Arch installation steps; it is useful for newcomers who want an Arch system without manual partitioning and package selection, while still retaining Arch’s package ecosystem afterwards.

  • Support and updates: As a small, active project, community support channels are limited compared with major distributions; expect to rely on the project’s issue tracker and general Arch resources for troubleshooting.

Use case: Best suited for users who want a user‑friendly path to an Arch base with a lightweight desktop, or for testers who prefer a Spanish‑centred installer experience.

Arcris - Boot Menu (Live)

Arcris - Installer (Timezone, Keyboard, Locale)

Arcris - Installer (Select Disk)

Arcris - Installer (Create user)

Arcris - Installer (Desktop environment)

Arcris - Installer (Select Your Desktop environment - Xfce)

Arcris - Installer (Window Manager)

Arcris - Installer (Select Your Window Manager)

Arcris -  Installer - System - Core Applications

Arcris -  Installer - System - Core Applications (Select/Save/Close)

Arcris - Installer - System - Utilities

Arcris - Installer - System - Utilities (Select/Save/Close)

Arcris - Installer - System - extra programs - Add your programs here

Arcris - Installer (Configuration Summary)

Arcris - Installer (Installing Arch Linux)

Arcris - Installer - Welcome to Arch Linux (Shut down/Reboot/Exit)

Arcris - Boot Menu (Installed)

Arcris - Xfce Session - Log in (Installed)

Arcris - GitHub (Firefox)

Arcris - Application Menu/ About Xfce (X11)

Arcris - Xfce Session Wayland - Log in (Installed)

Arcris - Application Menu/ About Xfce (Wayland)

In short, Arcris packages an Arch foundation into a live desktop with a graphical installer that lowers the barrier to entry while preserving Arch’s rolling, up‑to‑date model.

Concluding word
Arcris is a pragmatic bridge between Arch’s power and a newcomer‑friendly installer; it’s a sensible choice if you want an Arch system without the initial manual setup and you’re comfortable with Spanish documentation.

Disclaimer
All trade names and trademarks are acknowledged as the property of their respective owners. We aim for accuracy using official project sources but recommend verifying release files and checksums before installation. Use open‑source software responsibly and in accordance with applicable laws and licences.

References


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