Michael Tsang wrote:
> On Monday 17 August 2009 15:15:39 Russell Stockhammer wrote:
>
>> You can't "boot" into a sub-directory of a file system but you could do the
>> following
>>
>>
>>
>> 1) Configure grub to boot the kernel in the /mnt/lfs directory with the
>> current root file system a
On Monday 17 August 2009 15:15:39 Russell Stockhammer wrote:
> You can't "boot" into a sub-directory of a file system but you could do the
> following
>
>
>
> 1) Configure grub to boot the kernel in the /mnt/lfs directory with the
> current root file system as a the root directory
>
> 2) Boot g
> > So I think we're covered.
>
> yes.
>
> but maybe to copy this note to chapter 5.6 and 8.3 would be a help for
> people with limited brain capacity like me (grin).
>
>
I agree here... I also missed it. But hey dont be too hard on yourself, you
are not alone!
People tend to read very quickly and
Bruce Dubbs schrieb:
>
> In the All Packages section is a note:
>
> "The Linux kernel is updated relatively often, many times due to discoveries
> of
> security vulnerabilities. The latest available 2.6.30.x kernel version should
> be
> used, unless the errata page says otherwise."
oops. i
Tobias Gasser wrote:
> as the sendpage-problem seems to be a serious vulnerability in the
> kernel, i propose to add a paragraph in the errata-section and in the
> kernel chapters (5.6.1 / 8.3). in my opinion even an update to lfs 6.5.1
> (or 6.6 is subnumbering is not acceptable) would be ok.
>
>
as the sendpage-problem seems to be a serious vulnerability in the
kernel, i propose to add a paragraph in the errata-section and in the
kernel chapters (5.6.1 / 8.3). in my opinion even an update to lfs 6.5.1
(or 6.6 is subnumbering is not acceptable) would be ok.
i had no issues here building a
cool, thanks for the info.
I'll have a look and see if I can do this.
Robert A. Lerche wrote:
> There's an LFS hint describing how to boot LFS without requiring a
> separate partition (i.e., in the same file system as another operating
> system).
>
> The trick is a special "pre-init" program that
There's an LFS hint describing how to boot LFS without requiring a
separate partition (i.e., in the same file system as another operating
system).
The trick is a special "pre-init" program that does a chroot early in
the boot process (automatically, rather than manually as Russell
Stockhammer sugg
Nice, so it is possible
to do this. I'll give this a try.
Russell Stockhammer wrote:
> You can't "boot" into a sub-directory of a file system but you could
> do the following
>
> 1) Configure grub to boot the kernel in the /mnt/lfs directory with
> the current root file system as a the root
as Nicolas said you should read the errors outputs...
I guess this line says it all:
/usr/bin/install: writing `../../host-i686-pc-linux-gnu/gcc/libgcc.a': *No
space left on device*
check that you have enough space and then try again.
--
[Temet Nosce]
+++
The ideas-about-reality a
Amir Khezrian a écrit :
> Hi
Hello,
> first of all, thank you for your helps. I did all according to the book
> but, during the compilation of "gcc" i encountered with some errors.
> these are the last lines that are shown during the compilation of gcc :
Did you read them ?
> /usr/bin/install
Hi
first of all, thank you for your helps. I did all according to the book but,
during the compilation of "gcc" i encountered with some errors.
these are the last lines that are shown during the compilation of gcc :
# Now that we have built all the objects, we need to copy
# them back to the GC
You can't "boot" into a sub-directory of a file system but you could do the
following
1) Configure grub to boot the kernel in the /mnt/lfs directory with the current
root file system as a the root directory
2) Boot grub and pass the command "init=/mnt/lfs/bin/sh" this will run the LFS
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