%general-entities; ]> Mounting the New Partition Now that a file system has been created, the partition needs to be made accessible. In order to do this, the partition needs to be mounted at a chosen mount point. For the purposes of this book, it is assumed that the file system is mounted under /mnt/lfs, but the directory choice is up to you. Choose a mount point and assign it to the LFS environment variable by running: export LFS=/mnt/lfs Next, create the mount point and mount the LFS file system by running: mkdir -pv $LFS mount -v -t ext3 /dev/<xxx> $LFS Replace <xxx> with the designation of the LFS partition. If using multiple partitions for LFS (e.g., one for / and another for /usr), mount them using: mkdir -pv $LFS mount -v -t ext3 /dev/<xxx> $LFS mkdir -v $LFS/usr mount -v -t ext3 /dev/<yyy> $LFS/usr Replace <xxx> and <yyy> with the appropriate partition names. Ensure that this new partition is not mounted with permissions that are too restrictive (such as the , , or options). Run the mount command without any parameters to see what options are set for the mounted LFS partition. If , , and/or are set, the partition will need to be remounted. If you are using a swap partition, ensure that it is enabled using the swapon command: /sbin/swapon -v /dev/<zzz> Replace <zzz> with the name of the swap partition. Now that there is an established place to work, it is time to download the packages.