| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546 | <sect1 id="ch03-mounting"><title>Mounting the new partition</title><?dbhtml filename="mounting.html" dir="chapter03"?><para>Now that we've created a file system, we want to be able to accessthe partition. For that, we need to mount it, and have to choose a mountpoint. In this book we assume that the file system is mounted under<filename>/mnt/lfs</filename>, but it doesn't matter what directoryyou choose.</para><para>Choose a mount point and assign it to the LFS environment variableby running:</para><para><screen><userinput>export LFS=/mnt/lfs</userinput></screen></para><para>Now create the mount point and mount the LFS file system by running:</para><para><screen><userinput>mkdir -p $LFSmount /dev/xxx $LFS</userinput></screen></para><para>Replace <filename>xxx</filename> with the designation of the LFSpartition.</para><para>If you have decided to use multiple partitions for LFS (say one for<filename>/</filename> and another for <filename>/usr</filename>), mountthem like this:</para><para><screen><userinput>mkdir -p $LFSmount /dev/xxx $LFSmkdir $LFS/usrmount /dev/yyy $LFS/usr</userinput></screen></para><para>Of course, replace <filename>xxx</filename> and <filename>yyy</filename>with the appropriate partition names.</para><para>You should also ensure that this new partition doesn't mount withpermissions which are too restrictive (such as the nosuid or nodev options).You can run the mount command with no parameters to see what options are in use.If you see nosuid or nodev on the LFS partition, you need to change your mountoptions.</para><para>Now that we've made ourselves a place to work in, we're ready to downloadthe packages.</para></sect1>
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