Organization This book is divided into the following parts. Part I - Introduction This part contains information which is essential to the rest of the book. Part II - Post <acronym>LFS</acronym> Configuration and Extra Software Here we introduce basic configuration and security issues. We also discuss a range of editors, file systems and shells which aren't covered in the main LFS book. Part III - General Libraries and Utilities In this section we cover libraries which are often needed by the rest of the book as well as system utilities. Information on Programming (including recompiling GCC to support its full range of languages) concludes this part. Part IV - Connecting to a Network Here we cover how to connect to a network when you aren't using the simple static IP setup given in the main LFS book. Part V - Basic Networking Networking libraries and command-line networking tools make up the bulk of this part. Part VI - Server Networking Here we deal with setting up mail and other servers (such as SSH, CVS , etc.). Part VII - Content Serving In this part we deal with databases and web server software . Part VIII - X + Window Managers This part explains how to set up a basic XFree86 installation along with some generic X libraries and Window managers. Part IX - KDE For those who want to use the K Desktop Environment or some parts of it, this part covers it. Part X - GNOME GNOME is the main alternative to KDE in the Desktop Environment arena and we cover both GNOME-1.4 and GNOME-&gnome-version; here. Part XI - X Software Office programs and graphical web browsers are important to most people. They, along with some generic X software can be found in this part of the book. Part XII - Multimedia Here we cover setting multimedia libraries and drivers along with some audio, video and CD-writing programs. Part XIII - Printing, Scanning and Typesetting The PST part of the book covers things from Ghostscript, CUPS and DocBook to installing TeX. Appendices The Appendices cover information which doesn't belong in the main book; they are mainly there as a reference.