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1<sect1 id="ch02-aboutlfs">
2<title>About $LFS</title>
3
4<para>
5Please read the following carefully: throughout this book
6the variable $LFS will be used frequently. $LFS must at all times be
7replaced by the directory where the partition that contains the LFS system
8is mounted. How to create and where to mount the partition will be
9explaind in full detail in chapter 4. In my case, the LFS
10partition is mounted on /mnt/lfs.
11</para>
12
13<para>
14For example when you are told to run a command like
15<userinput>./configure --prefix=$LFS</userinput> you will actually run
16<userinput>./configure --prefix=/mnt/lfs</userinput>
17</para>
18
19<para>
20It's important that this is done no matter where it is read; be it in
21commands entered in a shell, or in a file edited or created.
22</para>
23
24<para>
25Another possible solution is to set the environment variable LFS.
26This way $LFS can be entered literally instead of replacing it by
27/mnt/lfs. This is accomplished by running <userinput>export
28LFS=/mnt/lfs</userinput>.
29</para>
30
31<para>
32Now, if you read to run a command like <userinput>./configure
33--prefix=$LFS</userinput> you can type that literally. Your shell will
34replace $LFS with /mnt/lfs when it processes the command line (meaning
35when you hit enter).
36</para>
37
38<para>
39If you plan to use $LFS, do not forget to set the $LFS variable at all
40times. If the variable is not set and is used it in a command, $LFS will
41be ignored and whatever is left will be executed. A command like
42<userinput>echo "root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash" &gt;
43$LFS/etc/passwd</userinput> without the $LFS variable set will
44re-create your host system's /etc/passwd file. Simply put: it will
45destroy your current password database file.
46</para>
47
48<para>
49One way to make sure that $LFS is set at all times is adding it to
50the /root/.bash_profile and/or /root/.bashrc file(s) so that every time
51you login as user root, or you 'su' to user root, the $LFS variable is
52set.
53</para>
54
55</sect1>
56
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