introduction.xml 1.8 KB

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  1. <sect1 id="ch05-introduction">
  2. <title>Introduction</title>
  3. <para>In the following chapters we will install all the software that belongs
  4. to a basic Linux system. After you're done with this and the next chapter,
  5. you'll have a fully working Linux system. The remaining chapters deal
  6. with creating the boot scripts, making the LFS system bootable and
  7. setting up basic networking.</para>
  8. <para>The software in this chapter will be linked statically. These programs
  9. will be reinstalled in the next chapter and linked dynamically. The
  10. reason for the static version first is that there is a chance that our
  11. normal Linux system and the LFS system aren't using the same C
  12. Library versions. If the programs in the first part are linked against
  13. an older C library version, those programs might not work well on the
  14. LFS system.</para>
  15. <para>The key to learn what makes Linux tick is to know exactly what packages
  16. are used for and why a user or the system needs them. Descriptions
  17. of the package content are provided after the Installation subsection of each
  18. package and in Appendix A as well.</para>
  19. <para>During the installation of various packages, you will more than likely see
  20. all kinds of compiler warnings scrolling by on the screen. These are
  21. normal and can be safely ignored. They are just that, warnings (mostly
  22. about improper use of the C or C++ syntax, but not illegal use. It's just
  23. that, often, C standards changed and packages still use the old standard
  24. which is not a problem).</para>
  25. <para>Before we start, make sure the LFS environment variable is setup
  26. properly if you decided to make use of it. Run the following:</para>
  27. <para><screen><userinput>echo $LFS</userinput></screen></para>
  28. <para>Check to make sure the output contains the correct directory to the LFS
  29. partition's mount point (/mnt/lfs for example).</para>
  30. </sect1>