| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344 | <sect1 id="ch02-aboutlfs"><title>About $LFS</title><?dbhtml filename="aboutlfs.html" dir="chapter02"?><para>Please read the following carefully: throughout this book the variable $LFS will be used frequently. $LFS must at all times bereplaced with the directory where the partition that contains the LFS system is mounted. How to create and where to mount the partition will beexplained in full detail in chapter 4. For example, let's assume that the LFS partition is mounted on /mnt/lfs.</para><para>For example when you are told to run a command like<userinput>./configure --prefix=$LFS</userinput> you actually have toexecute <userinput>./configure --prefix=/mnt/lfs</userinput></para><para>It's important that this is done no matter where it is read; be it incommands entered in a shell, or in a file edited or created.</para><para>A possible solution is to set the environment variable LFS.This way $LFS can be entered literally instead of replacing it with /mnt/lfs. This is accomplished by running: </para><para><screen><userinput>export LFS=/mnt/lfs</userinput></screen></para><para>Now, if you are told to run a command like <userinput>./configure--prefix=$LFS</userinput> you can type that literally. Your shell willreplace $LFS with /mnt/lfs when it processes the command line (meaningwhen you hit enter after having typed the command).</para><para>If you plan to use $LFS, do not forget to set the $LFS variable at all times. If the variable is not set and is used in a command, $LFS will be ignored and whatever is left will be executed. A command like<userinput>echo "root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash" > $LFS/etc/passwd</userinput> without the $LFS variable set willre-create your host system's /etc/passwd file. Simply put: it willdestroy your current password database file.</para><para>One way to make sure that $LFS is set at all times is adding it tothe /root/.bash_profile and /root/.bashrc files so that every timeyou login as user root, or you 'su' to user root, the $LFS variable isset.</para></sect1>
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