| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"  "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [  <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent">  %general-entities;]><sect1 id="pre-architecture">  <?dbhtml filename="architecture.html"?>  <title>LFS Target Architectures</title><para>The primary target architectures of LFS are the AMD/Intel x86 (32-bit)and x86_64 (64-bit) CPUs.  On the other hand, the instructions in this book arealso known to work, with some modifications, with the Power PC and ARM CPUs. Tobuild a system that utilizes one of these CPUs, the main prerequisite, inaddition to those on the next page, is an existing Linux system such as anearlier LFS installation, Ubuntu, Red Hat/Fedora, SuSE, or other distributionthat targets the architecture that you have. Also note that a 32-bitdistribution can be installed and used as a host system on a 64-bit AMD/Intelcomputer.</para><para>For building LFS, the gain of building on a 64-bit systemcompared to a 32-bit system is minimal.For example, in a test build of LFS-9.1 on a Core i7-4790 CPU based system,using 4 cores, the following statistics were measured:</para><screen><computeroutput>Architecture Build Time     Build Size32-bit       239.9 minutes  3.6 GB64-bit       233.2 minutes  4.4 GB</computeroutput></screen><para>As you can see, on the same hardware, the 64-bit build is only 3% fasterand is 22% larger than the 32-bit build. If you plan to use LFS as a LAMPserver, or a firewall, a 32-bit CPU may be largely sufficient. On the otherhand, several packages in BLFS now need more than 4GB of RAM to be builtand/or to run, so that if you plan to use LFS as a desktop, the LFS authorsrecommend building on a 64-bit system.</para><para>The default 64-bit build that results from LFS is considered a<quote>pure</quote> 64-bit system. That is, it supports 64-bit executablesonly. Building a <quote>multi-lib</quote> system requires compiling manyapplications twice, once for a 32-bit system and once for a 64-bit system.This is not directly supported in LFS because it would interfere with theeducational objective of providing the instructions needed for astraightforward base Linux system. Some LFS/BLFS editors maintain a forkof LFS for multilib, which is accessible at <ulinkurl="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/~thomas/multilib/index.html"/>. But itis an advanced topic.</para></sect1>
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