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							- <sect2>
 
- <title>Command explanations</title>
 
- <para>
 
- <userinput>yes "" | make config:</userinput> This runs make config and
 
- answers with the default answer to every question the config script asks 
 
- the user (it does this by simply doing the equivalent of hitting the
 
- Enter key, thus accepting the default Y and N answers to the questions). 
 
- We're not configuring the real kernel here, we just need to have some sort 
 
- of configure file created so that we can run make dep next that will 
 
- create a few files in $LFS/usr/src/linux/include/linux, like version.h, 
 
- among others, that we will need to compile Glibc and other packages later 
 
- in chroot.
 
- </para>
 
- <para>
 
- <userinput>make dep:</userinput> make dep checks dependencies and sets
 
- up the dependencies file. We don't really care about the dependency
 
- checks, but what we do care about is that make dep creates those
 
- aforementioned files in $LFS/usr/src/linux/include/linux we will be
 
- needing later on.
 
- </para>
 
- <para>
 
- <userinput>ln -s ../src/linux/include/linux</userinput> and
 
- <userinput>ln -s ../src/linux/include/asm:</userinput> These
 
- commands create the linux and asm symlinks in the $LFS/usr/include
 
- directory that point to the proper directories in the Linux source tree.
 
- Packages that need kernel headers include them with lines like #include
 
- <linux/errno.h>. These paths are relative to the /usr/include
 
- directory so the /usr/include/linux link points to the directory
 
- containing the Linux kernel header files. The same goes for the asm
 
- symlink.
 
- </para>
 
- </sect2>
 
 
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