pacman

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The pacman package manager is one of the major distinguishing features of Arch Linux. It combines a simple binary package format with an easy-to-use build system. The goal of pacman is to make it possible to easily manage packages, whether they are from the official repositories or the user's own builds.

Pacman keeps the system up-to-date by synchronizing package lists with the master server. This server/client model also allows the user to download/install packages with a simple command, complete with all required dependencies.

Pacman is written in the C programming language and uses the bsdtar(1) tar format for packaging.

Tip: The pacman package contains tools such as makepkg and vercmp(8). Other useful tools such as pactree and checkupdates are found in pacman-contrib (formerly part of pacman). Run pacman -Ql pacman pacman-contrib | grep -E 'bin/.+' to see the full list.

Usage

What follows is just a small sample of the operations that pacman can perform. To read more examples, refer to pacman(8).

Tip: For those who have used other Linux distributions before, there is a helpful Pacman Rosetta article.

Installing packages

A package is an archive containing:

  • all of the (compiled) files of an application
  • metadata about the application, such as application name, version, dependencies, etc.
  • installation files and directives for pacman
  • (optionally) extra files to make your life easier, such as a start/stop script

Arch's package manager pacman can install, update, and remove those packages. Using packages instead of compiling and installing programs yourself has various benefits:

  • easily updatable: pacman will update existing packages as soon as updates are available
  • dependency checks: pacman handles dependencies for you, you only need to specify the program and pacman installs it together with every other program it needs
  • clean removal: pacman has a list of every file in a package; this way, no files are unintentionally left behind when you decide to remove a package.
Note:
  • Packages often have optional dependencies which are packages that provide additional functionality to the application but not strictly required for running it. When installing a package, pacman will list a package's optional dependencies, but they will not be found in pacman.log. Use the #Querying package databases command to view the optional dependencies of a package.
  • When installing a package which you require only as a (optional) dependency of some other package (i.e. not required by you explicitly), it is recommended to use the --asdeps option. For details, see the #Installation reason section.
Warning: When installing packages in Arch, avoid refreshing the package list without upgrading the system (for example, when a package is no longer found in the official repositories). In practice, do not run pacman -Sy package_name instead of pacman -Syu package_name, as this could lead to dependency issues. See System maintenance#Partial upgrades are unsupported and BBS#89328.

Installing specific packages

To install a single package or list of packages, including dependencies, issue the following command:

# pacman -S package_name1 package_name2 ...

To install a list of packages with regex (see this forum thread):

# pacman -S $(pacman -Ssq package_regex)

Sometimes there are multiple versions of a package in different repositories (e.g. extra and testing). To install the version from the extra repository in this example, the repository needs to be defined in front of the package name:

# pacman -S extra/package_name

To install a number of packages sharing similar patterns in their names one can use curly brace expansion. For example:

# pacman -S plasma-{desktop,mediacenter,nm}

This can be expanded to however many levels needed:

# pacman -S plasma-{workspace{,-wallpapers},pa}
Virtual packages

A virtual package is a special package which does not exist by itself, but is provided by one or more other packages. Virtual packages allow other packages to not name a specific package as a dependency, in case there are several candidates. Virtual packages cannot be installed by their name, instead they become installed in your system when you have installed a package providing the virtual package.

Installing package groups

Some packages belong to a group of packages that can all be installed simultaneously. For example, issuing the command:

# pacman -S gnome

will prompt you to select the packages from the gnome group that you wish to install.

Sometimes a package group will contain a large amount of packages, and there may be only a few that you do or do not want to install. Instead of having to enter all the numbers except the ones you do not want, it is sometimes more convenient to select or exclude packages or ranges of packages with the following syntax:

Enter a selection (default=all): 1-10 15

which will select packages 1 through 10 and 15 for installation, or:

Enter a selection (default=all): ^5-8 ^2

which will select all packages except 5 through 8 and 2 for installation.

To see what packages belong to the gnome group, run:

# pacman -Sg gnome

Also visit https://archlinux.org/groups/ to see what package groups are available.

Note: If a package in the list is already installed on the system, it will be reinstalled even if it is already up-to-date. This behavior can be overridden with the --needed option.

Removing packages

To remove a single package, leaving all of its dependencies installed:

# pacman -R package_name

To remove a package and its dependencies which are not required by any other installed package:

# pacman -Rs package_name
Warning: When removing a group, such as gnome, this ignores the install reason of the packages in the group, because it acts as though each package in the group is listed separately. Install reason of dependencies is still respected.

The above may sometimes refuse to run when removing a group which contains otherwise needed packages. In this case try:

# pacman -Rsu package_name

To remove a package, its dependencies and all the packages that depend on the target package:

Warning: This operation is recursive, and must be used with care since it can remove many potentially needed packages.
# pacman -Rsc package_name

To remove a package, which is required by another package, without removing the dependent package:

Warning: The following operation can break a system and should be avoided. See System maintenance#Avoid certain pacman commands.
# pacman -Rdd package_name

Pacman saves important configuration files when removing certain applications and names them with the extension: .pacsave. To prevent the creation of these backup files use the -n option:

# pacman -Rn package_name
Note: Pacman will not remove configurations that the application itself creates (for example "dotfiles" in the home folder).

Upgrading packages

Warning:

Pacman can update all packages on the system with just one command. This could take quite a while depending on how up-to-date the system is. The following command synchronizes the repository databases and updates the system's packages, excluding "local" packages that are not in the configured repositories:

# pacman -Syu

Querying package databases

Pacman queries the local package database with the -Q flag, the sync database with the -S flag and the files database with the -F flag. See pacman -Q --help, pacman -S --help and pacman -F --help for the respective suboptions of each flag.

Pacman can search for packages in the database, searching both in packages' names and descriptions:

$ pacman -Ss string1 string2 ...

Sometimes, -s's builtin ERE (Extended Regular Expressions) can cause a lot of unwanted results, so it has to be limited to match the package name only; not the description nor any other field:

$ pacman -Ss '^vim-'

To search for already installed packages:

$ pacman -Qs string1 string2 ...

To search for package file names in remote packages:

$ pacman -F string1 string2 ...

To display extensive information about a given package:

$ pacman -Si package_name

For locally installed packages:

$ pacman -Qi package_name

Passing two -i flags will also display the list of backup files and their modification states:

$ pacman -Qii package_name

To retrieve a list of the files installed by a package:

$ pacman -Ql package_name

To retrieve a list of the files installed by a remote package:

$ pacman -Fl package_name

To verify the presence of the files installed by a package:

$ pacman -Qk package_name

Passing the k flag twice will perform a more thorough check.

To query the database to know which package a file in the file system belongs to:

$ pacman -Qo /path/to/file_name

To query the database to know which remote package a file belongs to:

$ pacman -F /path/to/file_name

To list all packages no longer required as dependencies (orphans):

$ pacman -Qdt
Tip: Add the above command to a pacman post-transaction hook to be notified if a transaction orphaned a package. This can be useful for being notified when a package has been dropped from a repository, since any dropped package will also be orphaned on a local installation (unless it was explicitly installed). To avoid any "failed to execute command" errors when no orphans are found, use the following command for Exec in your hook: /usr/bin/bash -c "/usr/bin/pacman -Qtd || /usr/bin/echo '=> None found.'"

To list all packages explicitly installed and not required as dependencies:

$ pacman -Qet

See Pacman/Tips and tricks for more examples.

Pactree

Note: pactree(8) is not part of the pacman package anymore. Instead it can be found in pacman-contrib.

To view the dependency tree of a package:

$ pactree package_name

To view the dependant tree of a package, pass the reverse flag -r to pactree, or use whoneeds from pkgtoolsAUR.

Database structure

The pacman databases are normally located at /var/lib/pacman/sync. For each repository specified in /etc/pacman.conf there will be a corresponding database file located there. Database files are gzipped tar archives containing one directory for each package, for example for the which package:

$ tree which-2.21-5
which-2.21-5
|-- desc

The desc file contains meta data such as the package description, dependencies, file size and MD5 hash.

Cleaning the package cache

Pacman stores its downloaded packages in /var/cache/pacman/pkg/ and does not remove the old or uninstalled versions automatically. This has some advantages:

  1. It allows to downgrade a package without the need to retrieve the previous version through other means, such as the Arch Linux Archive.
  2. A package that has been uninstalled can easily be reinstalled directly from the cache folder, not requiring a new download from the repository.

However, it is necessary to deliberately clean up the cache periodically to prevent the folder to grow indefinitely in size.

The paccache(8) script, provided within the pacman-contrib package, deletes all cached versions of installed and uninstalled packages, except for the most recent three, by default:

# paccache -r

Enable and start paccache.timer to discard unused packages weekly.

Tip: You can create a hook to run this automatically after every pacman transaction, see examples and pacman-cleanup-hookAUR.

You can also define how many recent versions you want to keep. To retain only one past version use:

# paccache -rk1

Add the -u/--uninstalled switch to limit the action of paccache to uninstalled packages. For example to remove all cached versions of uninstalled packages, use the following:

# paccache -ruk0

See paccache -h for more options.

Pacman also has some built-in options to clean the cache and the leftover database files from repositories which are no longer listed in the configuration file /etc/pacman.conf. However pacman does not offer the possibility to keep a number of past versions and is therefore more aggressive than paccache default options.

To remove all the cached packages that are not currently installed, and the unused sync database, execute:

# pacman -Sc

To remove all files from the cache, use the clean switch twice, this is the most aggressive approach and will leave nothing in the cache folder:

# pacman -Scc
Warning: One should avoid deleting from the cache all past versions of installed packages and all uninstalled packages unless one desperately needs to free some disk space. This will prevent downgrading or reinstalling packages without downloading them again.

pkgcachecleanAUR and pacleanerAUR are two further alternatives to clean the cache.

Additional commands

Download a package without installing it:

# pacman -Sw package_name

Install a 'local' package that is not from a remote repository (e.g. the package is from the AUR):

# pacman -U /path/to/package/package_name-version.pkg.tar.zst

To keep a copy of the local package in pacman's cache, use:

# pacman -U file:///path/to/package/package_name-version.pkg.tar.zst

Install a 'remote' package (not from a repository stated in pacman's configuration files):

# pacman -U http://www.example.com/repo/example.pkg.tar.zst

To inhibit the -S, -U and -R actions, -p can be used.

Pacman always lists packages to be installed or removed and asks for permission before it takes action.

Installation reason

The pacman database organizes installed packages into two groups, according to installation reason:

  • explicitly-installed: packages that were literally passed to a generic pacman -S or -U command;
  • dependencies: packages that, despite never (in general) having been passed to a pacman installation command, were implicitly installed because they were required by packages explicitly installed.

When installing a package, it is possible to force its installation reason to dependency with:

# pacman -S --asdeps package_name

The command is normally used because explicitly-installed packages may offer optional packages, usually for non-essential features for which the user has discretion.

Tip: Installing optional dependencies with --asdeps will ensure that, if you remove orphans, pacman will also remove optional packages set this way.

When reinstalling a package, though, the current installation reason is preserved by default.

The list of explicitly-installed packages can be shown with pacman -Qe, while the complementary list of dependencies can be shown with pacman -Qd.

To change the installation reason of an already installed package, execute:

# pacman -D --asdeps package_name

Use --asexplicit to do the opposite operation.

Note: Using --asdeps and --asexplicit options when upgrading, such as with pacman -Syu package_name --asdeps, is discouraged. This would change the installation reason of not only the package being installed, but also the packages being upgraded.

Search for a package that contains a specific file

Merge-arrows-2.pngThis article or section is a candidate for merging with pacman/Tips and tricks.Merge-arrows-2.png

Notes: Looking at #Querying package databases this section duplicates but expands what is already covered there. Either this should be moved inside the previous section or merged as a pacman tip in the dedicated article, which is already linked (Discuss in Talk:Pacman)

Sync the files database:

# pacman -Fy

Search for a package containing a file, e.g.:

$ pacman -F pacman
core/pacman 5.2.1-1 (base base-devel) [installed]
    usr/bin/pacman
    usr/share/bash-completion/completions/pacman
extra/xscreensaver 5.43-1
    usr/lib/xscreensaver/pacman
Tip: You can set a cron job or a systemd timer to sync the files database regularly.

For advanced functionality install pkgfile, which uses a separate database with all files and their associated packages.

What happens during package install/upgrade/removal

When successful, the workflow of a transaction follows five high-level steps plus pre/post transaction hooks:

  1. Initialize the transaction if there is not a database lock
  2. Choose which packages will be added or removed in the transaction
  3. Prepare the transaction, based on flags, by performing sanity checks on the sync databases, packages, and their dependencies
  4. Commit the transaction:
    1. When applicable, download packages (_alpm_sync_load)
    2. If pre-existing pacman PreTransaction hooks apply, they are executed.
    3. Packages are removed that are to-be-replaced, conflicting, or explicitly targeted to be removed
    4. If there packages to add, then each package is committed
      1. If the package has an install script, its pre_install function is executed (or pre_upgrade or pre_remove in the case of an upgraded or removed package).
      2. Pacman deletes all the files from a pre-existing version of the package (in the case of an upgraded or removed package). However, files that were marked as configuration files in the package are kept (see /Pacnew and Pacsave).
      3. Pacman untars the package and dumps its files into the file system (in the case of an installed or upgraded package). Files that would overwrite kept, and manually modified, configuration files (see previous step), are stored with a new name (.pacnew).
      4. If the package has an install script, its post_install function is executed (or post_upgrade or post_remove in the case of an upgraded or removed package).
    5. If pacman PostTransaction hooks that exist at the end of the transaction apply, they are executed.
  5. Release the transaction and transaction resource (i.e. database lock)

Configuration

Pacman's settings are located in /etc/pacman.conf: this is the place where the user configures the program to work in the desired manner. In-depth information about the configuration file can be found in pacman.conf(5).

General options

General options are in the [options] section. Read pacman.conf(5) or look in the default pacman.conf for information on what can be done here.

Comparing versions before updating

To see old and new versions of available packages, uncomment the "VerbosePkgLists" line in /etc/pacman.conf. The output of pacman -Syu will be like this:

Package (6)             Old Version  New Version  Net Change  Download Size

extra/libmariadbclient  10.1.9-4     10.1.10-1      0.03 MiB       4.35 MiB
extra/libpng            1.6.19-1     1.6.20-1       0.00 MiB       0.23 MiB
extra/mariadb           10.1.9-4     10.1.10-1      0.26 MiB      13.80 MiB

Enabling parallel downloads

Pacman 6.0 introduced the option to download packages in parallel. ParallelDownloads under [options] needs to be set to a positive integer in /etc/pacman.conf to use this feature (e.g., 5). Packages will otherwise be downloaded sequentially if this option is unset.

Skip package from being upgraded

Warning: Be careful in skipping packages, since partial upgrades are unsupported.

To have a specific package skipped when upgrading the system, add this line in the [options] section:

IgnorePkg=linux

For multiple packages use a space-separated list, or use additional IgnorePkg lines. Also, glob patterns can be used. If you want to skip packages just once, you can also use the --ignore option on the command-line - this time with a comma-separated list.

It will still be possible to upgrade the ignored packages using pacman -S: in this case pacman will remind you that the packages have been included in an IgnorePkg statement.

Skip package group from being upgraded

Warning: Be careful in skipping package groups, since partial upgrades are unsupported.

As with packages, skipping a whole package group is also possible:

IgnoreGroup=gnome

Skip file from being upgraded

All files listed with a NoUpgrade directive will never be touched during a package install/upgrade, and the new files will be installed with a .pacnew extension.

NoUpgrade=path/to/file

Multiple files can be specified like this:

NoUpgrade=path/to/file1 path/to/file2
Note: The path refers to files in the package archive. Therefore, do not include the leading slash.

Skip files from being installed to system

To always skip installation of specific directories list them under NoExtract. For example, to avoid installation of systemd units use this:

NoExtract=usr/lib/systemd/system/*

Later rules override previous ones, and you can negate a rule by prepending !.

Tip: Pacman issues warning messages about missing locales when updating a package for which locales have been cleared by localepurge or bleachbit. Commenting the CheckSpace option in pacman.conf suppresses such warnings, but consider that the space-checking functionality will be disabled for all packages.

Maintain several configuration files

If you have several configuration files (e.g. main configuration and configuration with testing repository enabled) and would have to share options between configurations you may use Include option declared in the configuration files, e.g.:

Include = /path/to/common/settings

where /path/to/common/settings file contains the same options for both configurations.

Hooks

Pacman can run pre- and post-transaction hooks from the /usr/share/libalpm/hooks/ directory; more directories can be specified with the HookDir option in pacman.conf, which defaults to /etc/pacman.d/hooks. Hook file names must be suffixed with .hook. Pacman hooks are not interactive.

Pacman hooks are used, for example, in combination with systemd-sysusers and systemd-tmpfiles to automatically create system users and files during the installation of packages. For example, tomcat8 specifies that it wants a system user called tomcat8 and certain directories owned by this user. The pacman hooks systemd-sysusers.hook and systemd-tmpfiles.hook invoke systemd-sysusers and systemd-tmpfiles when pacman determines that tomcat8 contains files specifying users and tmp files.

For more information on alpm hooks, see alpm-hooks(5).

Repositories and mirrors

Besides the special [options] section, each other [section] in pacman.conf defines a package repository to be used. A repository is a logical collection of packages, which are physically stored on one or more servers: for this reason each server is called a mirror for the repository.

Repositories are distinguished between official and unofficial. The order of repositories in the configuration file matters; repositories listed first will take precedence over those listed later in the file when packages in two repositories have identical names, regardless of version number. In order to use a repository after adding it, you will need to upgrade the whole system first.

Each repository section allows defining the list of its mirrors directly or in a dedicated external file through the Include directive; for example, the mirrors for the official repositories are included from /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist. See the Mirrors article for mirror configuration.

Package security

Pacman supports package signatures, which add an extra layer of security to the packages. The default configuration, SigLevel = Required DatabaseOptional, enables signature verification for all the packages on a global level. This can be overridden by per-repository SigLevel lines. For more details on package signing and signature verification, take a look at pacman-key.

Troubleshooting

"Failed to commit transaction (conflicting files)" error

If you see the following error: [1]

error: could not prepare transaction
error: failed to commit transaction (conflicting files)
package: /path/to/file exists in filesystem
Errors occurred, no packages were upgraded.

This is happening because pacman has detected a file conflict, and by design, will not overwrite files for you. This is by design, not a flaw.

The problem is usually trivial to solve. A safe way is to first check if another package owns the file (pacman -Qo /path/to/file). If the file is owned by another package, file a bug report. If the file is not owned by another package, rename the file which 'exists in filesystem' and re-issue the update command. If all goes well, the file may then be removed.

If you had installed a program manually without using pacman, for example through make install, you have to remove/uninstall this program with all of its files. See also Pacman tips#Identify files not owned by any package.

Every installed package provides a /var/lib/pacman/local/package-version/files file that contains metadata about this package. If this file gets corrupted, is empty or goes missing, it results in file exists in filesystem errors when trying to update the package. Such an error usually concerns only one package. Instead of manually renaming and later removing all the files that belong to the package in question, you may explicitly run pacman -S --overwrite glob package to force pacman to overwrite files that match glob.

Warning: Generally avoid using the --overwrite switch. See System maintenance#Avoid certain pacman commands.

"Failed to commit transaction (invalid or corrupted package)" error

Look for .part files (partially downloaded packages) in /var/cache/pacman/pkg/ and remove them (often caused by usage of a custom XferCommand in pacman.conf).

# find /var/cache/pacman/pkg/ -iname "*.part" -delete

"Failed to init transaction (unable to lock database)" error

When pacman is about to alter the package database, for example installing a package, it creates a lock file at /var/lib/pacman/db.lck. This prevents another instance of pacman from trying to alter the package database at the same time.

If pacman is interrupted while changing the database, this stale lock file can remain. If you are certain that no instances of pacman are running then delete the lock file:

# rm /var/lib/pacman/db.lck
Tip: You can run fuser /var/lib/pacman/db.lck as root to verify if there is any process still using it.

Packages cannot be retrieved on installation

This error manifests as Not found in sync db, Target not found or Failed retrieving file.

Firstly, ensure the package actually exists. If certain the package exists, your package list may be out-of-date. Try running pacman -Syu to force a refresh of all package lists and upgrade. Also make sure the selected mirrors are up-to-date and repositories are correctly configured.

It could also be that the repository containing the package is not enabled on your system, e.g. the package could be in the multilib repository, but multilib is not enabled in your pacman.conf.

See also FAQ#Why is there only a single version of each shared library in the official repositories?.

Pacman crashes during an upgrade

In the case that pacman crashes with a "database write" error while removing packages, and reinstalling or upgrading packages fails thereafter, do the following:

  1. Boot using the Arch installation media. Preferably use a recent media so that the pacman version matches/is newer than the system.
  2. Mount the system's root filesystem, e.g., mount /dev/sdaX /mnt as root, and check the mount has sufficient space with df -h
  3. Mount the proc, sys and dev filesystems as well: mount -t proc proc /mnt/proc; mount --rbind /sys /mnt/sys; mount --rbind /dev /mnt/dev
  4. If the system uses default database and directory locations, you can now update the system's pacman database and upgrade it via pacman --sysroot /mnt -Syu as root.
  5. After the upgrade, one way to double-check for not upgraded but still broken packages: find /mnt/usr/lib -size 0
  6. Followed by a re-install of any still broken package via pacman --sysroot /mnt -S package.

Manually reinstalling pacman

Using pacman-static

pacman-staticAUR is a statically compiled version of pacman, so it will be able to run even when the libraries on the system are not working. This can also come in handy when a partial upgrade was performed and pacman can not run anymore.

The pinned comment and the PKGBUILD provides a way to directly download the binary, which can be used to reinstall pacman or to upgrade the entire system in case of partial upgrades.

Using an external pacman

If even pacman-static does not work, it is possible to recover using an external pacman. One of the easiest methods to do so is by using the archiso and simply using --sysroot or --root to specify the mount point. See Chroot#Using chroot on how to mount the necessary filesystems required by --sysroot.

By manually extracting

Warning: It is extremely easy to break your system even worse using this approach. Use this only as a last resort if the method from #Pacman crashes during an upgrade is not an option.

Even if pacman is terribly broken, you can fix it manually by downloading the latest packages and extracting them to the correct locations. The rough steps to perform are:

  1. Determine the pacman dependencies to install
  2. Download each package from a mirror of your choice
  3. Extract each package to root
  4. Reinstall these packages with pacman -S --overwrite to update the package database accordingly
  5. Do a full system upgrade

If you have a healthy Arch system on hand, you can see the full list of dependencies with:

$ pacman -Q $(pactree -u pacman)

But you may only need to update a few of them depending on your issue. An example of extracting a package is

# tar -xvpwf package.tar.zst -C / --exclude .PKGINFO --exclude .INSTALL --exclude .MTREE --exclude .BUILDINFO

Note the use of the w flag for interactive mode. Running non-interactively is very risky since you might end up overwriting an important file. Also take care to extract packages in the correct order (i.e. dependencies first). This forum post contains an example of this process where only a couple pacman dependencies are broken.

"Unable to find root device" error after rebooting

Most likely the initramfs became corrupted during a kernel update (improper use of pacman's --overwrite option can be a cause). There are two options; first, try the Fallback entry.

Tip: In case you removed the Fallback entry, you can always press the Tab key when the boot loader menu shows up (for Syslinux) or e (for GRUB or systemd-boot), rename it initramfs-linux-fallback.img and press Enter or b (depending on your boot loader) to boot with the new parameters.

Once the system starts, run this command (for the stock linux kernel) either from the console or from a terminal to rebuild the initramfs image:

# mkinitcpio -p linux

If that does not work, from a current Arch release (CD/DVD or USB stick), mount your root and boot partitions. Then chroot using arch-chroot:

# arch-chroot /mnt
# pacman -Syu mkinitcpio systemd linux
Note:
  • If you do not have a current release or if you only have some other "live" Linux distribution laying around, you can chroot using the old fashioned way. Obviously, there will be more typing than simply running the arch-chroot script.
  • If pacman fails with Could not resolve host, please check your internet connection.
  • If you cannot enter the arch-chroot or chroot environment but need to re-install packages you can use the command pacman --sysroot /mnt -Syu foo bar to use pacman on your root partition.

Reinstalling the kernel (the linux package) will automatically re-generate the initramfs image with mkinitcpio -p linux. There is no need to do this separately.

Afterwards, it is recommended that you run exit, umount /mnt/{boot,} and reboot.

"Warning: current locale is invalid; using default "C" locale" error

As the error message says, your locale is not correctly configured. See Locale.

Pacman does not honor proxy settings

Make sure that the relevant environment variables ($http_proxy, $ftp_proxy etc.) are set up. If you use pacman with sudo, you need to configure sudo to pass these environment variables to pacman. Also, ensure the configuration of dirmngr has honor-http-proxy in /etc/pacman.d/gnupg/dirmngr.conf to honor the proxy when refreshing the keys.

How do I reinstall all packages, retaining information on whether something was explicitly installed or as a dependency?

To reinstall all the native packages: pacman -Qnq | pacman -S - or pacman -S $(pacman -Qnq) (the -S option preserves the installation reason by default).

You will then need to reinstall all the foreign packages, which can be listed with pacman -Qmq.

"Cannot open shared object file" error

It looks like previous pacman transaction removed or corrupted shared libraries needed for pacman itself.

To recover from this situation you need to unpack required libraries to your filesystem manually. First find what package contains the missed library and then locate it in the pacman cache (/var/cache/pacman/pkg/). Unpack required shared library to the filesystem. This will allow to run pacman.

Now you need to reinstall the broken package. Note that you need to use --overwrite flag as you just unpacked system files and pacman does not know about it. Pacman will correctly replace our shared library file with one from package.

That's it. Update the rest of the system.

Freeze of package downloads

Some issues have been reported regarding network problems that prevent pacman from updating/synchronizing repositories. [2] [3] When installing Arch Linux natively, these issues have been resolved by replacing the default pacman file downloader with an alternative (see Improve pacman performance for more details). When installing Arch Linux as a guest OS in VirtualBox, this issue has also been addressed by using Host interface instead of NAT in the machine properties.

Failed retrieving file 'core.db' from mirror

If you receive this error message with correct mirrors, try setting a different name server.

error: 'local-package.pkg.tar': permission denied

If you want to install a package on an sshfs mount using pacman -U and receive this error, move the package to a local directory and try to install again.

error: could not determine cachedir mount point /var/cache/pacman/pkg

Upon executing, e.g., pacman -Syu inside a chroot environment an error is encountered:

error: could not determine cachedir mount point /var/cache/pacman/pkg
error: failed to commit transaction (not enough free disk space)

This is frequently caused by the chroot directory not being a mountpoint when the chroot is entered. See the note at Install Arch Linux from existing Linux#Downloading basic tools for a solution, and arch-chroot(8) for an explanation and an example of using bind mounting to make the chroot directory a mountpoint.

See also