| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546 | <sect2><title>Configuring Lilo</title><para>We're not going to create lilo's configuration file from scratch, but we'lluse the file from the normal Linux system. This file is different on everymachine and thus I can't create it here. Since a user would want to have thesame options regarding lilo as he has when he is using his normal Linuxsystem he would create the file exactly as it is on the normal system.</para><para>Copy the Lilo configuration file and kernel images that Lilo uses byrunning the following commands from a shell on the normal Linux system.Don't execute these commands from the chroot'ed shell.</para><blockquote><literallayout>	<userinput>cp /etc/lilo.conf $LFS/etc</userinput>	<userinput>cp /boot/<kernel images> $LFS/boot</userinput></literallayout></blockquote><para>Before a user can execute the second command he needs to know the names ofthe kernel images. He can't just copy all files from the /bootdirectory. The /etc/lilo.conf file contains the names of the kernelimages he is using. Open the file and look for lines like this:</para><blockquote><literallayout>	image=/boot/vmlinuz</literallayout></blockquote><para>Look for all <emphasis>image</emphasis> variables and their valuesrepresent the name and location of the image files. These files willusually be in /boot but they might be in other directories as well,depending on the distribution's conventions.</para></sect2>
 |