Linux From Scratch - Version SVN-20050417 1.4. Help
s/(see the Section 1.3, �Resources� section of this book)/(see the Section 1.3. �Resources� section of this book)/ 2.2. Creating a New Partition s/If you have an empty partition or enough unpartitioned space on one of your hard disks to make one, using this for your LFS installation is recommended. /The recommended approach to building an LFS system is to use an avavilable empty partition or, if you have enough unpartitioned space, to create one./ s/which will require additional space (2 or 3 GB). The LFS system itself will not take up this much space. A large portion of this required amount of space is to provide sufficient free temporary space. Compiling packages can require a lot of disk space which will be reclaimed after the package is installed./which will require additional space (2 or 3 GB). The LFS system itself will not take up this much room. A large portion of this requirement is to provide sufficient free temporary storage. Compiling packages can require a lot of disk space which will be reclaimed after the package is installed./ 'space' count (5) vs. 'space' count (2) s/partition as swap space. This space is used by the kernel to store seldom-used data to make room in memory for active processes./partition as swap space. This is used by the kernel to store seldom-used data and leave more memory available for active processes./ s/The swap partition for an LFS system can be the same as the one used by the host system, so another swap partition will not need to be created if your host system already has one setup./The swap partition for an LFS system can be the same as the host system's, in which case it is not necessary to create another one./ -- http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-dev FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/faq/ Unsubscribe: See the above information page
