| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031 | <sect1 id="ch06-changingowner"><title>Changing ownership</title><?dbhtml filename="changingowner.html" dir="chapter06"?><para>Right now the <filename class="directory">/stage1</filename> directoryis owned by the user <emphasis>lfs</emphasis>, a user that exists only on yourhost system. Although you will probably want to delete the<filename class="directory">/stage1</filename> directory once you havefinished your LFS system, you may want to keep it around, for example tobuild more LFS systems. But if you keep the<filename class="directory">/stage1</filename> directory as it is, you end upwith files owned by a user ID without a corresponding account. This isdangerous because a user account created later on could get this same user IDand would suddenly own the <filename class="directory">/stage1</filename>directory and all the files therein, thus exposing these files to possiblemalicious manipulation.</para><para>To avoid this issue, you could add the <emphasis>lfs</emphasis> user toyour new LFS system later on when creating the <filename>/etc/passwd</filename>file, taking care to assign it the same user and group IDs as on your hostsystem. Alternatively, you can (and the book assumes you do) assign thecontents of the <filename class="directory">/stage1</filename> directory touser <emphasis>root</emphasis> by running the following command:</para><para><screen><userinput>chown -R 0:0 /stage1</userinput></screen></para><para>The command uses "0:0" instead of "root:root", because chown is unableto resolve the name "root" until glibc has been installed.</para></sect1>
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