My system was already properly configured, but after last update, everything is en_US. -- Tomás Schertel ---------------------------------------------- Linux Registered User #304838 Arch Linux User http://www.archlinux.org/ ---------------------------------------------- On Fri, Aug 31, 2012 at 6:48 AM, Thanos Zygouris < athanasios.zygouris@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri 31 Aug 11:39, Kazó Csaba wrote: > > 2012/8/31 Thanos Zygouris <athanasios.zygouris@xxxxxxxxx> > > > > > After upgrading systemd (189-3) and filesystem (2012.8-1) my locale > > > isn't en_US.UTF-8 anymore. Instead, it defaults to C. > > > > > > # cat /etc/locale.conf: > > > LOCALE=en_US.UTF-8 > > > LC_COLLATE=C > > > > > > # locale > > > LANG=C > > > LC_CTYPE="C" > > > LC_NUMERIC="C" > > > LC_TIME="C" > > > LC_COLLATE=C > > > LC_MONETARY="C" > > > LC_MESSAGES="C" > > > LC_PAPER="C" > > > LC_NAME="C" > > > LC_ADDRESS="C" > > > LC_TELEPHONE="C" > > > LC_MEASUREMENT="C" > > > LC_IDENTIFICATION="C" > > > LC_ALL= > > > > > > I tried to run /etc/profile.d/locale.sh manually, but nothing changed. > > > If i manually export LANG="en_US.UTF-8", it works, but i suspect it's > > > not the "correct" way. > > > > > > So, is there a bug, or i am just missing something? > > > > > > > > > Hello, > > > > > > LANG is the variable you should set in locale.conf. See > > https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Locale#Setting_system-wide_locale > > > > > > Csaba > > Thanks, it's working now. I gave the wiki a quick look, but this > information skipped my attention. Sorry for the noise and thanks again. >