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- <sect1 id="ch-system-proc">
- <title>Mounting the proc and devpts file systems</title>
- <?dbhtml filename="proc.html" dir="chapter06"?>
- <para>In order for certain programs to function properly, the
- <emphasis>proc</emphasis> and <emphasis>devpts</emphasis> file systems must be
- available within the chroot environment. A file system can be mounted as many
- times and in as many places as you like, thus it's not a problem that these
- file systems are already mounted on your host system -- especially so because
- they are virtual file systems.</para>
- <para>The <emphasis>proc</emphasis> file system is the process information
- pseudo-filesystem that the kernel uses to provide status information about the
- status of the system.</para>
- <para>The proc file system is mounted on
- <filename class="directory">/proc</filename> by running the following
- command:</para>
- <screen><userinput>mount proc /proc -t proc</userinput></screen>
- <para>You might get warning messages from the mount command, such as
- these:</para>
- <blockquote><screen>warning: can't open /etc/fstab: No such file or directory
- not enough memory</screen></blockquote>
- <para>Ignore these, they're just due to the fact that the system
- isn't installed completely yet and some files are missing. The mount itself
- will be successful and that's all we care about at this point.</para>
- <para>The <emphasis>devpts</emphasis> file system was mentioned earlier and is
- now the most common way for pseudo terminals (PTYs) to be implemented.</para>
- <para>The devpts file system is mounted on
- <filename class="directory">/dev/pts</filename> by running:</para>
- <screen><userinput>mount devpts /dev/pts -t devpts</userinput></screen>
- <para>Should this command fail with an error to the effect of:</para>
- <blockquote><screen>filesystem devpts not supported by kernel</screen></blockquote>
- <para>The most likely cause is that your host system's kernel was compiled
- without support for the devpts file system. You can check which file systems
- your kernel supports by peeking into its internals with a command such as
- <userinput>cat /proc/filesystems</userinput>. If a file system type named
- <emphasis>devfs</emphasis> is listed there, then we'll be able to work around
- the problem by mounting the host's devfs file system on top of the new
- <filename>/dev</filename> structure which we'll create later on in the section
- on <xref linkend="ch-system-MAKEDEV"/>. If devfs was not listed, do not worry
- because there is yet a third way to get PTYs working inside the chroot
- environment. We'll cover this shortly in the aforementioned
- <xref linkend="ch-system-MAKEDEV"/> section.</para>
- <para>Remember, if for any reason you stop working on your LFS, and start again
- later, it's important to check that these filesystems are still mounted inside
- the chroot environment, otherwise problems are likely to occur.</para>
- </sect1>
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