|  | @@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
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				|  |  |  <sect1 id="ch06-proc">
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				|  |  | -<title>Mounting the proc file system</title>
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				|  |  | +<title>Mounting the proc and devpts file systems</title>
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				|  |  |  <?dbhtml filename="proc.html" dir="chapter06"?>
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				|  |  |  
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				|  |  | -<para>In order for certain programs to function properly, the proc file
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				|  |  | -system must be available within the chroot environment.
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				|  |  | +<para>In order for certain programs to function properly, the proc and devpts
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				|  |  | +file systems must be available within the chroot environment.
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				|  |  |  As a file system can be mounted as many times and in as many places
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				|  |  | -as you like, it's not a problem that the proc file system is already
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				|  |  | -mounted on your host system -- especially so because proc is a
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				|  |  | -virtual file system.</para>
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				|  |  | +as you like, it's not a problem that the these file systems are already
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				|  |  | +mounted on your host system -- especially so because they are virtual 
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				|  |  | +file systems.</para>
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				|  |  |  
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				|  |  |  <para>The proc file system is mounted under
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				|  |  |  <filename class="directory">/proc</filename> by running the
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				|  | @@ -15,6 +15,25 @@ following command:</para>
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				|  |  |  
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				|  |  |  <para><screen><userinput>mount proc /proc -t proc</userinput></screen></para>
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				|  |  |  
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				|  |  | +<para>The devpts file system is mounted to <filename class="directory">/dev/pts
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				|  |  | +</filename> by running:</para>
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				|  |  | +
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				|  |  | +<para><screen><userinput>mount devpts /dev/pts -t devpts</userinput></screen>
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				|  |  | +</para>
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				|  |  | +
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				|  |  | +<para>Should this command fail with an error to the effect of:</para>
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				|  |  | +
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				|  |  | +<blockquote><screen>filesystem devpts not supported by kernel</screen></blockquote>
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				|  |  | +
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				|  |  | +<para>It means that your host system does not support devpts.  You have two
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				|  |  | +options at this point. You can either not worry about it, in which case some
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				|  |  | +of the tests we will run later will fail, or you can use the following command 
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				|  |  | +from a terminal not in chroot to put your host's pts system into your new 
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				|  |  | +LFS's filesystem:</para>
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				|  |  | +
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				|  |  | +<para><screen><userinput>mount --bind /dev/pts $LFS/dev/pts</userinput></screen>
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				|  |  | +</para>
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				|  |  | +
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				|  |  |  <para>You might get warning messages from the mount command, such as
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				|  |  |  these:</para>
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				|  |  |  
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				|  | @@ -30,7 +49,7 @@ on your system configuration (such as the host system's Glibc version that was
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				|  |  |  used to compile the mount program with).</para>
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				|  |  |  
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				|  |  |  <para>Remember, if for any reason you stop working on your LFS, and
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				|  |  | -start again later, it's important to check that the proc filesystem is still
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				|  |  | +start again later, it's important to check that these filesystems are still
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				|  |  |  mounted inside the chroot enviornment. Otherwise, some programs might
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				|  |  |  end up compiled incorrectly.</para>
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				|  |  |  
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