Didier Kryn <k...@in2p3.fr> writes: > Le 28/04/2016 21:23, Rainer Weikusat a écrit : >> as manually running debootstrap in >> two steps on the same system doesn't do anything the single-step >> debootstrap wouldn't also do > > But it's not the same system.
It is the same system: Same CPU, same other hardware etc. --foreign Do the initial unpack phase of bootstrapping only, for example if the target architecture does not match the host architecture. The idea behind that is that the files making up the new filesystem tree are downloaded but none of the downloaded code is executed (as it won't run if it was compiled for a different kind of CPU). The downloaded files can then be transported to the target system and the second stage can then be started (on the right CPU). But that's not an issue here as a system which has the wheezy i686 C library installed will be capable of running i386 code (except in very unlikely circumstances). After the files were downloaded (and unpacked), the configure stage of installing the packages has to run chrooted to the top-level directory of the system installation supposed to be created so that it sees the downloaded libraries instead of the ones installed on the host system. For the given case, this would enable the downloaded /bin/bash to run as it would be combined with the downloaded C library (which defines GLIBC_2.15) instead of the wheezy C library (which doesn't as it's based on glib 2.13). debootstrap is a script which uses a variable named WHAT_TO_DO to specify the steps which should be executed by an invocation. The default is WHAT_TO_DO="finddebs dldebs first_stage second_stage" using --foreign changes this to --foreign) if [ "$PRINT_DEBS" != "true" ]; then WHAT_TO_DO="finddebs dldebs first_stage" fi shift and --second-stage to --second-stage) WHAT_TO_DO="second_stage" SECOND_STAGE_ONLY=true shift ;; _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list Dng@lists.dyne.org https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng