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- <sect1 id="pre-whoread">
- <title>Who would want to read this book</title>
- <?dbhtml filename="whoread.html" dir="preface"?>
- <para>There are many reasons why somebody would want to read this book. The
- principle reason being to install an LFS system. A question many people raise
- is "Why go through all the hassle of manually building a Linux system
- from scratch when you can just download and install an existing one?". That
- is a good question.</para>
- <para>One important reason for LFS' existence is to help people
- learn how a Linux system works from the inside out. Building an LFS system
- helps demonstrate what makes Linux tick, and how things work together and
- depend on each other. And perhaps most importantly, how to customize it to
- your own tastes and needs.</para>
- <para>A key benefit of LFS is that you have more control of your system
- without relying on someone else's Linux implementation. With LFS, you are
- in the driver's seat and dictate every aspect of your system, such as the
- directory layout and boot script setup. You also dictate where, why and how
- programs are installed.</para>
- <para>Another benefit of LFS is the ability to create a very compact Linux
- system. When installing a regular distribution, you end up with several
- programs which you are likely to never use. They're just sitting there wasting
- (precious) disk space. It isn't difficult to build an LFS system less than
- 100 MB. Does that still sound like a lot? A few of us have been working on
- creating a very small embedded LFS system. We successfully built a system
- that was just enough to run the Apache web server with approximately 8MB
- of disk space used. Further stripping could bring that down to 5 MB or
- less. Try that with a regular distribution.</para>
- <para>We could compare distributed Linux to a hamburger you buy at a
- fast-food restaurant - you have no idea what you are eating. LFS, on the
- other hand, doesn't give you a hamburger, but the recipe to make a hamburger.
- This allows you to review it, to omit unwanted ingredients, and to
- add your own ingredients which enhance the flavor of your burger. When you
- are satisfied with the recipe, you go on to preparing it. You make it just
- the way you like it: broil it, bake it, deep-fry it, barbecue it, or eat it
- tar-tar (raw).</para>
- <para>Another analogy that we can use is that of comparing LFS with a
- finished house. LFS will give you the skeletal plan of a house, but it's up
- to you to build it. You have the freedom to adjust your plans as you
- go.</para>
- <para>Another advantage of a custom built Linux system is security.
- By compiling the entire system from source code, you are empowered to audit
- everything and apply all the security patches you feel are needed. You don't
- have to wait for somebody else to compile binary packages that fix a security
- hole. Unless you examine the patch and build it yourself you have no
- guarantee that the new package was built correctly and actually fixes the
- problem (adequately). You never truly know whether a security hole is fixed
- or not unless you do it yourself.</para>
- </sect1>
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