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- <sect2>
- <title>Command explanations</title>
- <para>
- <userinput>--enable-static-link:</userinput> This configure
- option causes Bash to be linked statically
- </para>
- <para>
- <userinput>--prefix=$LFS/usr:</userinput> This configure option installs
- all of Bash's files under the $LFS/usr directory, which becomes the /usr
- directory after the user chroot'ed into $LFS or when he rebooted
- the system into LFS.
- </para>
- <para>
- <userinput>--bindir=$LFS/bin:</userinput> This installs the executable
- files in $LFS/bin. We do this because we want bash to be in /bin, not in
- /usr/bin. One reason being: the /usr partition might be on a separate
- partition which has to be mounted at some point. Before that partition is
- mounted a user needs and will want to have bash available (it will be hard to
- execute the boot scripts without a shell for instance).
- </para>
- <para>
- <userinput>--with-curses:</userinput> This causes Bash to be linked
- against the curses library instead of the default termcap library which
- is becoming obsolete.
- </para>
- <para>
- <userinput>ln -s bash sh:</userinput> This command creates the sh
- symlink that points to bash. Most scripts run themselves via 'sh'
- (invoked by the #!/bin/sh as the first line in the scripts) which
- invokes a special bash mode. Bash will then behave (as closely as
- possible) as the original Bourne shell.
- </para>
- <para>
- The <userinput>&&</userinput>'s at the end of every line cause
- the next command to be executed only if the previous command exists
- with a return value of 0 indicating success. In case all of these
- commands are copy&pasted
- on the shell, is is important to be ensured that if
- ./configure fails, make isn't being executed and, likewise, if make fails,
- that make install isn't being executed, and so forth.
- </para>
- </sect2>
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