install.xml 3.2 KB

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  1. <sect1 id="ch02-install">
  2. <title>How to install the software</title>
  3. <para>Before you can actually start doing something with a package, you need
  4. to unpack it first. Often the package files are tar'ed and
  5. gzip'ed or bzip2'ed. I'm not going to write down every time how to
  6. unpack an archive. I will explain how to do that once, in this
  7. section.</para>
  8. <para>To start with, change to the $LFS/usr/src directory by running:</para>
  9. <para><screen><userinput>cd $LFS/usr/src</userinput></screen></para>
  10. <para>If a file is tar'ed and gzip'ed, it is unpacked by
  11. running either one of the following two commands, depending on the
  12. filename:</para>
  13. <para><screen><userinput>tar xvzf filename.tar.gz</userinput>
  14. <userinput>tar xvzf filename.tgz</userinput></screen></para>
  15. <para>If a file is tar'ed and bzip2'ed, it is unpacked by
  16. running:</para>
  17. <para><screen><userinput>bzcat filename.tar.bz2 | tar xv</userinput></screen></para>
  18. <para>Some tar programs (most of them nowadays but not all of them) are
  19. slightly modified to be able to use bzip2 files directly using either
  20. the I or the y tar parameter, which works the same as the z tar parameter
  21. to handle gzip archives. The above construction works no matter how
  22. your host system decided to patch bzip2.</para>
  23. <para>If a file is just tar'ed, it is unpacked by running:</para>
  24. <para><screen><userinput>tar xvf filename.tar</userinput></screen></para>
  25. <para>When an archive is unpacked, a new directory will be created under the
  26. current directory (and this book assumes that the archives are unpacked
  27. under the $LFS/usr/src directory). Please enter that new directory
  28. before continuing with the installation instructions. Again, every time
  29. this book is going to install a package, it's up to you to unpack the source
  30. archive and cd into the newly created directory.</para>
  31. <para>From time to time you will be dealing with single files such as patch
  32. files. These files are generally gzip'ed or bzip2'ed. Before such files
  33. can be used they need to be uncompressed first.</para>
  34. <para>If a file is gzip'ed, it is unpacked by running:</para>
  35. <para><screen><userinput>gunzip filename.gz</userinput></screen></para>
  36. <para>If a file is bzip2'ed, it is unpacked by running:</para>
  37. <para><screen><userinput>bunzip2 filename.bz2</userinput></screen></para>
  38. <para>After a package has been installed, two things can be done with it:
  39. either the directory that contains the sources can be deleted,
  40. or it can be kept. If it is kept, that's fine with me, but if the
  41. same package is needed again in a later chapter, the directory
  42. needs to be deleted first before using it again. If this is not done,
  43. you might end up in trouble because old settings will be used (settings
  44. that apply to the host system but which don't always apply to
  45. the LFS system). Doing a simple make clean or make distclean does not
  46. always guarantee a totally clean source tree.</para>
  47. <para>So, save yourself a lot of hassle and just remove the source directory
  48. immediately after you have installed it.</para>
  49. <para>There is one exception; the kernel source tree. Keep it around as you
  50. will need it later in this book when building a kernel. Nothing will use
  51. the kernel tree so it won't be in your way.</para>
  52. </sect1>