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11. INTRODUCTION::
2
3 The scripts in this directory implement an automation of the building
4 of a GNU/LInux system, as described in the Linux From Scratch book series.
5 The name of the project is jhalfs: in that name, "alfs" stands for
6 "automated linux from scratch", and the initials "jh" have been kept since
7 the original "jhalfs-0.2" code developed by Jeremy Huntwork.
8
9 The list of supported books can be found at
10 http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/alfs/wiki/SupportedBooks.
11
12 The documentation is split among various README.* files. Here is a list
13 of what is in which:
14 - README (this file): instructions to use the LFS book. This should be
15 enough if you just want to build a base system as per the LFS book. It is
16 also a required reading for all the other projects.
17 - README.CLFS: supplementary instructions to use the CLFS book series.
18 - README.BLFS: instructions to install an automated build infrastructure
19 for the BLFS book. There are two ways to do so: (i) install the
20 tools at the end of an LFS build (CLFS is not supported in that case), or
21 (ii) install the tools on an already running system. Both methods are
22 described in that file.
23 - README.CUSTOM: instructions to run custom commands either during the xLFS
24 build, at the end of a xLFS build. Note that you will not find
25 instructions on how to write those commands, but some examples are
26 available.
27 - README.PACKAGE_MANAGEMENT: instructions to use package management during
28 the build (only for LFS, patches welcome for CLFS...)
29 - README.HLFS: very short file explaining why you cannot use HLFS with the
30 present tool version.
31
32 Other sources of information are the context help in the menu interface,
33 and the xLFS books themselves.
34
352. PREREQUISITES::
36
37 As said elsewhere, it is strongly advised that you first build manually
38 a complete system before attempting to automate the build.
39
40 Of course the "Host System Requirements" should be fulfilled. The needed
41 supplementary packages are detailed at the bottom of the page:
42 https://www.linuxfromscratch.org/alfs/download.html. In short, you need
43 wget, sudo, libxml2, libxslt, docbook-4.5-xml, and docbook-xsl-nons.
44
453. INSTALLATION::
46
47 No installation is required. You may want to move the files in this
48 directory to a convenient location, and then follow the instructions below.
49
504. CONFIGURATION::
51
52 4.1. CONFIGURATION OF THE TOOLS:
53 There is no configuration of the tools themselves. The various
54 parameters for the build are set through a menu driven interface. See
55 the section RUNNING below for details.
56
57 4.2. PRELIMINARY TASKS:
58 This tool has no support at all for creating a partition and a mount
59 point for the built system. You should follow the book up to the section
60 "Mounting the new partition". Note that the default name for the
61 partition mount point is "/mnt/build_dir", instead of /mnt/{c,}lfs.
62 You can change that default to anything you'd like in the menu, so you
63 may name it /mnt/lfs, or whatever you like. We'll use the name
64 /mnt/build_dir in the sequel.
65
66 The tool can download the needed packages for you, or you may download
67 them yourself. The tool may optionally use a package archive directory
68 where the downloaded packages are stored. That directory name may be made
69 available to the tool in two ways: (i) export the SRC_ARCHIVE variable,
70 for example SRC_ARCHIVE=/usr/src, (ii) enter the name at the "Package
71 Archive Directory" menu prompt. Note that the user should have write
72 permission to that directory. If a needed package is found in that
73 directory, it is copied to /mnt/build_dir/sources, if not, it is
74 downloaded to that directory and copied to /mnt/build_dir/sources,
75 except if found in /mnt/build_dir/sources, in which case, it is just
76 copied to $SRC_ARCHIVE. If you want the tool to download packages and you
77 do not want to archive them, just unset SRC_ARCHIVE, and keep the
78 default entry for "Package Archive Directory". If you choose to download
79 the packages by yourself, you should download (or copy) them to
80 /mnt/build_dir/sources directly.
81
82 If you want to build the kernel as part of the automated build, select
83 "Build the kernel" in the menu. Then, a configuration file must be
84 provided. In order to do so, it is recommended to download the kernel
85 tarball, unpack it, run <make menuconfig> (or any other *config),
86 configure the kernel as per
87 the book, and save the resulting .config file to a location where it can
88 be retrieved later on (a convenient location and name is
89 $SRC_ARCHIVE/config-<arch>-<kernel version>-<config details>).
90
91 Another file you may provide is the fstab file. To use it, select
92 "Use a custom fstab file" in the menu interface, and enter the name of
93 the file where asked. As for the kernel configuration, this file has to
94 be prepared before running the menu. A convenient location and name is
95 $SRC_ARCHIVE/fstablfs.
96
97 At a more advanced level, you may want to supply custom commands
98 to be run at the end of (C)LFS build. Scripts containing those commands
99 are located in the ./custom/config directory. Examples are given in
100 ./custom/examples. A template is provided as ./custom/template. See
101 README.CUSTOM for more details.
102
1035. RUNNING::
104
105 IMPORTANT::
106 You must be logged as a normal user with sudo privileges to run
107 the Makefile. Furthermore, you are supposed to have enough privilege
108 to become any user. If you are not bothered about security issues,
109 the entry for the user "jhalfs_user" in /etc/sudoers could be
110 jhalfs_user ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
111
112 The command <make> will launch a menu based configuration program. The
113 underlying menu code was borrowed from BusyBox and slightly modified for
114 our use.
115
116 Help on parameter function is available from the on-line help. Please
117 make use of that feature: it may contain additional information not
118 duplicated in this file.
119
120 You should first choose which book and flavour you want to build. Note
121 that when you choose the BLFS book, the tool will just install the BLFS
122 tool to your system. You'll have to run that installed tool to build
123 packages in BLFS. See README.BLFS to know how. If you choose any other
124 book, you'll have to configure the settings and the build parameters
125 from the menu. Note that you may choose to install the blfs tools onto
126 the newly built system. It is not the same thing as choosing
127 the BLFS book in the menu, which will install the blfs tools on the
128 currently running system.
129
130 The "General Settings" menu is where the "Build Directory" name is to be
131 entered. Other entries in that menu select what the tool should do. The
132 "Run the Makefile" entry selects whether the tool will start the build
133 automatically after generating the needed files. The "Rebuild files" selects
134 whether to clean the build directory before doing anything else. To protect
135 against removing important files, this can only be done in an empty directory,
136 or a directory previously populated by the tool.
137
138 The "Build Settings" menu is where various options for the build can be
139 selected. Two options, "Use a custom fstab file" and "Build the kernel",
140 have been described above. "Do not use/display progress_bar", if set, will
141 prevent a progress bar to be displayed during the build. That may be useful
142 on slow machine. The other options should be self explanatory, using either
143 the online help or book reading.
144
145 The "Advanced Features" menu is for various maintenance tasks, like
146 testing the build instructions or reporting build statistics. One useful
147 option is "Optimization and parallelisation". It is not recommended to use
148 it for setting compiler optimization flags, although it is possible, but
149 if you select it, you'll be able to select the number of parallel `make'
150 jobs, which allows much faster builds on modern multicore CPUs.
151
152 Once you have set the parameters and saved the configuration, the script
153 is launched. Its aim is to extract instructions from the selected book
154 to generate scripts, and to generate a Makefile, which allows running
155 the scripts in the right order. The script verifies first that the host
156 can run itself and build the xLFS system, then validates the configuration
157 and lists the parameters. At this point, you may choose to quit or to
158 continue with the listed parameters. The script will then proceed to
159 generate the Makefile and the build scripts, optionally download
160 packages, and eventually verify the host prerequisite. If you have
161 selected "Run the makefile", the command <make> is launched in the
162 adequate directory, and the build begins. If not, you'll have to run
163 "make" manually, for example: "make -C /mnt/build_dir/jhalfs", if you
164 have used the default parameters (see the layout under $BUILDDIR in the
165 Q&A below).
166
167 NOTE::
168 If you run the jhalfs script directly the only function you can select
169 is to display the version number by running <./jhalfs -v>
170
1716. LAYOUT::
172
173 /BLFS (see README.BLFS)
174
175 /CLFS/master.sh
176 /clfs.xsl
177
178 /CLFS2/master.sh
179 /clfs2.xsl
180
181 /CLFS3/master.sh
182 /clfs3.xsl
183
184 /HLFS/master.sh
185 /hlfs.xsl
186
187 /LFS/master.sh
188 /lfs.xsl
189
190 /common/common_functions
191 /makefile_functions
192 /packages.xsl
193 /urls.xsl
194 /create-sbu_du-report.sh
195 /progress_bar.sh
196 /blfs-tool-deps/9xx-*
197 /libs/func_*
198
199 /custom/template
200 /config/
201 /examples/*
202 /examples_CLFS-E/*
203
204 /extras/do_copy_files
205 /do_ica_prep
206 /do_ica_work
207
208 /optimize/opt_config
209 /opt_override
210 /optimize_functions
211 /opt_config.d/noOpt
212 /noSymbols
213 /O3pipe
214 /O3pipe_march
215 /defOpt_fPIC
216
217 /menu/*
218
219 README
220 README.BLFS
221 README.CLFS
222 README.HLFS
223 README.CUSTOM
224 TODO
225 LICENSE
226
227 Config.in
228 Makefile
229 jhalfs
230 blfs-tool
231
2327. FAQ::
233 Q. "It doesn't work"
234 A. There are several reasons why it may be so. One possibility is the
235 following: jhalfs was designed to work against the development versions
236 of the LFS series of books. Consequently changes in a book sometimes
237 break older versions of jhalfs. Before you start pulling out your hair,
238 download the latest version of jhalfs to see if that solves your
239 problem. Note that it may be the other way around. If you want to build
240 an old version of the book, you may have to downgrade your jhalfs
241 version.
242
243 Q. "How do I specify the build location?"
244 A. The original LFS document worked against the well known location
245 /mnt/lfs. This script automates the build of all of the LFS series of
246 books and uses a generic location $BUILDDIR with a default value of
247 /mnt/build_dir. You may change this value to suit your needs.
248
249 The layout below $BUILDDIR is as follows.
250 $BUILDDIR/
251 jhalfs (Makefile, cmd scripts, logs, etc..)
252 sources (where packages reside)
253 tools (temporary bootstrap system)
254 cross-tools (temporary CLFS only)
255 ...
256 FHS dir structure
257 ...
258 blfs_root (files to use blfs-tool if selected to install it)
259
260 Q. "What is the function of the SRC_ARCHIVE variable?"
261 A. When jhalfs runs and packages download was selected, it creates a local
262 copy of the necessary packages in $BUILDDIR/sources by downloading the
263 files. If the variable SRC_ARCHIVE is defined the software will first
264 look in this location for the file and, if found, will copy it to
265 $BUILDDIR/sources.
266 If the files are not found in SRC_ARCHIVE _and_ you have write priv to
267 the directory any downloaded files will be mirrored there.
268
269 Q. "How do I set the SRC_ARCHIVE location?"
270 A. The best way to set the value of SRC_ARCHIVE is
271
272 export SRC_ARCHIVE=/wherever/you/store/downloaded/packages
273
274 or you can set the full path in the proper menu entry.
275
276 Q. "Why have 2 copies of the files?"
277 A. The package files must be visible during the chroot phase and this is a
278 simple and reliable method of doing so. This method also handles the
279 CLFS boot build method where the final build may be done on a separate
280 machine.
281
282 Q. "What is the function of "User account" and "Group account" menu
283 settings?"
284 A. If you are running jhalfs from a low or non-privileged account you may
285 not have the priv to create/delete the user needed to build temporary
286 tools.
287 These settings allow you to use your own user and group name to do those
288 build steps.
289
290 These variables are adjustable also when invoking make:
291
292 cd $BUILDDIR; make LUSER=myaccount LGROUP=mygroup
293
294 The only changes to your account will be the creation of a NEW .bashrc
295 after saving your original to .bashrc.XXX
296
297 Q. "When I try to build CLFS the Makefile fails at mid-point"
298 A. There could be numerous reasons for the failure but the most likely
299 reason is you are doing a cross-build using the 'chroot' method and the
300 target is not compatible with the host. If you choose to build using
301 the chroot method a test is performed at the end of the temptools
302 phase. If the test succeeds the build continues inside a chroot jail.
303 However if the test fails, it means the host and target are not
304 compatible an you should use the 'boot' method to create your target
305 code.
306 As an extreme example: You can build a sparc target on a x86 platform but
307 only the temptools phase. You must select the 'boot' method and not the
308 'chroot.' You must transfer the toolchain to a sparc platform, reboot the
309 sparc box and continue the build.
310 Of all the LFS series of books Cross-LFS requires the greatest
311 understanding of host/target hardware combination. Please read the book
312 carefully and don't skip the easy parts (there are none...)
313
314 Q. "How could I stop the build at a predefined chosen point?"
315 A. Launch the Makefile manually passing the last numbered target to be build
316 as the break point. For example:
317
318 make BREAKPOINT=84-bash
319
320 The build can be stopped also at the end of a top-level build phase by
321 calling directly the appropriate mk_* target. For example:
322
323 make mk_LUSER
324
325 See the Makefile to know the proper target names for that book build.
326
327Authors:
328 George Boudreau
329 Manuel Canales Esparcia
330 Pierre Labastie
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