source: chapter05/chapter05.xml@ 538aa7a

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Last change on this file since 538aa7a was 538aa7a, checked in by Greg Schafer <greg@…>, 20 years ago

Chapter 6: - Setting up the environment: Reworked the Bash startup files to enforce a clean environment. Closes Bug 714.

git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@3115 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689

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1<chapter id="chapter05" xreflabel="Chapter 5">
2<title>Constructing a temporary system</title>
3<?dbhtml filename="chapter05.html" dir="chapter05"?>
4
5
6<sect1 id="ch05-introduction">
7<title>Introduction</title>
8<?dbhtml filename="introduction.html" dir="chapter05"?>
9
10<para>In this chapter we will compile and install a minimal
11Linux system. This system will contain just enough tools to be able
12to start constructing the final LFS system in the next chapter.</para>
13
14<para>The building of this minimal system is done in two steps: first we
15build a brand-new and host-independent toolchain (compiler, assembler,
16linker and libraries), and then use this to build all the other essential
17tools.</para>
18
19<para>The files compiled in this chapter will be installed under the
20<filename class="directory">$LFS/tools</filename> directory
21to keep them separate from the files installed in the next chapter.
22Since the packages compiled here are merely temporary, we don't want
23them to pollute the soon-to-be LFS system.</para>
24
25<para>The key to learning what makes a Linux system work is to know
26what each package is used for and why the user or the system needs it.
27For this purpose a short summary of the content of each package is given
28before the actual installation instructions. For a short description of
29each program in a package, please refer to the corresponding section in
30<xref linkend="appendixa"/>.</para>
31
32<para>The build instructions assume that you are using the bash shell. There
33is also a general expectation that you have already unpacked the sources for a
34package and have performed a <userinput>cd</userinput> into the unpacked source
35directory before issuing the build commands.</para>
36
37<para>Several of the packages are patched before compilation, but only when
38the patch is needed to circumvent a problem. Often the patch is needed in
39both this and the next chapter, but sometimes in only one of them. Therefore,
40don't worry when instructions for a downloaded patch seem to be missing.</para>
41
42<para>During the installation of most packages you will
43see all kinds of compiler warnings scroll by on your screen. These are
44normal and can be safely ignored. They are just what they say they are:
45warnings -- mostly about deprecated, but not invalid, use of the C or C++
46syntax. It's just that C standards have changed rather often and some
47packages still use the older standard, which is not really a problem.</para>
48
49<para><emphasis>Unless</emphasis> told not to, you should normally delete the
50source and build directories after installing each package -- for cleanness
51sake and to save space.</para>
52
53<para>Before continuing, make sure the LFS environment variable is set up
54properly by executing the following:</para>
55
56<screen><userinput>echo $LFS</userinput></screen>
57
58<para>Make sure the output shows the path to your LFS partition's mount
59point, which is <filename class="directory">/mnt/lfs</filename> if you
60followed our example.</para>
61
62</sect1>
63
64
65<sect1 id="ch05-toolchaintechnotes">
66<title>Toolchain technical notes</title>
67<?dbhtml filename="toolchaintechnotes.html" dir="chapter05"?>
68
69<para>This section attempts to explain some of the rationale and technical
70details behind the overall build method. It's not essential that you understand
71everything here immediately. Most of it will make sense once you have performed
72an actual build. Feel free to refer back here at any time.</para>
73
74<para>The overall goal of <xref linkend="chapter05"/> is to provide a sane,
75temporary environment that we can chroot into, and from which we can produce a
76clean, trouble-free build of the target LFS system in
77<xref linkend="chapter06"/>. Along the way, we attempt to divorce ourselves
78from the host system as much as possible, and in so doing build a
79self-contained and self-hosted toolchain. It should be noted that the
80build process has been designed in such a way so as to minimize the risks for
81new readers and provide maximum educational value at the same time. In other
82words, more advanced techniques could be used to build the system.</para>
83
84<important>
85<para>Before continuing, you really should be aware of the name of your working
86platform, often also referred to as the <emphasis>target triplet</emphasis>. For
87many folks the target triplet will be, for example:
88<emphasis>i686-pc-linux-gnu</emphasis>. A simple way to determine your target
89triplet is to run the <filename>config.guess</filename> script that comes with
90the source for many packages. Unpack the Binutils sources and run the script:
91<userinput>./config.guess</userinput> and note the output.</para>
92
93<para>You'll also need to be aware of the name of your platform's
94<emphasis>dynamic linker</emphasis>, often also referred to as the
95<emphasis>dynamic loader</emphasis>, not to be confused with the standard linker
96<emphasis>ld</emphasis> that is part of Binutils. The dynamic linker is provided
97by Glibc and has the job of finding and loading the shared libraries needed by a
98program, preparing the program to run and then running it. For most folks, the
99name of the dynamic linker will be <emphasis>ld-linux.so.2</emphasis>. On
100platforms that are less prevalent, the name might be
101<emphasis>ld.so.1</emphasis> and newer 64 bit platforms might even have
102something completely different. You should be able to determine the name
103of your platform's dynamic linker by looking in the
104<filename class="directory">/lib</filename> directory on your host system. A
105surefire way is to inspect a random binary from your host system by running:
106<userinput>'readelf -l &lt;name of binary&gt; | grep interpreter'</userinput>
107and noting the output. The authoritative reference covering all platforms is in
108the <filename>shlib-versions</filename> file in the root of the Glibc source
109tree.</para>
110</important>
111
112<para>Some key technical points of how the <xref linkend="chapter05"/> build
113method works:</para>
114
115<itemizedlist>
116<listitem><para>Similar in principle to cross compiling whereby tools installed
117into the same prefix work in cooperation and thus utilize a little GNU
118"magic".</para></listitem>
119
120<listitem><para>Careful manipulation of the standard linker's library search
121path to ensure programs are linked only against libraries we
122choose.</para></listitem>
123
124<listitem><para>Careful manipulation of <userinput>gcc</userinput>'s
125<emphasis>specs</emphasis> file to tell the compiler which target dynamic
126linker will be used.</para></listitem>
127</itemizedlist>
128
129<para>Binutils is installed first because both GCC and Glibc perform various
130feature tests on the assembler and linker during their respective runs of
131<userinput>./configure</userinput> to determine which software features to enable
132or disable. This is more important than one might first realize. An incorrectly
133configured GCC or Glibc can result in a subtly broken toolchain where the impact
134of such breakage might not show up until near the end of the build of a whole
135distribution. Thankfully, a test suite failure will usually alert us before too
136much time is wasted.</para>
137
138<para>Binutils installs its assembler and linker into two locations,
139<filename class="directory">/tools/bin</filename> and
140<filename class="directory">/tools/$TARGET_TRIPLET/bin</filename>. In reality,
141the tools in one location are hard linked to the other. An important facet of
142the linker is its library search order. Detailed information can be obtained
143from <userinput>ld</userinput> by passing it the <emphasis>--verbose</emphasis>
144flag. For example: <userinput>'ld --verbose | grep SEARCH'</userinput> will
145show you the current search paths and their order. You can see what files are
146actually linked by <userinput>ld</userinput> by compiling a dummy program and
147passing the <emphasis>--verbose</emphasis> switch. For example:
148<userinput>'gcc dummy.c -Wl,--verbose 2>&amp;1 | grep succeeded'</userinput>
149will show you all the files successfully opened during the link.</para>
150
151<para>The next package installed is GCC and during its run of
152<userinput>./configure</userinput> you'll see, for example:</para>
153
154<blockquote><screen>checking what assembler to use... /tools/i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/as
155checking what linker to use... /tools/i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld</screen></blockquote>
156
157<para>This is important for the reasons mentioned above. It also demonstrates
158that GCC's configure script does not search the $PATH directories to find which
159tools to use. However, during the actual operation of <userinput>gcc</userinput>
160itself, the same search paths are not necessarily used. You can find out which
161standard linker <userinput>gcc</userinput> will use by running:
162<userinput>'gcc -print-prog-name=ld'</userinput>.
163Detailed information can be obtained from <userinput>gcc</userinput> by passing
164it the <emphasis>-v</emphasis> flag while compiling a dummy program. For
165example: <userinput>'gcc -v dummy.c'</userinput> will show you detailed
166information about the preprocessor, compilation and assembly stages, including
167<userinput>gcc</userinput>'s include search paths and their order.</para>
168
169<para>The next package installed is Glibc. The most important considerations for
170building Glibc are the compiler, binary tools and kernel headers. The compiler
171is generally no problem as Glibc will always use the <userinput>gcc</userinput>
172found in a $PATH directory. The binary tools and kernel headers can be a little
173more troublesome. Therefore we take no risks and use the available configure
174switches to enforce the correct selections. After the run of
175<userinput>./configure</userinput> you can check the contents of the
176<filename>config.make</filename> file in the
177<filename class="directory">glibc-build</filename> directory for all the
178important details. You'll note some interesting items like the use of
179<userinput>CC="gcc -B/tools/bin/"</userinput> to control which binary tools are
180used, and also the use of the <emphasis>-nostdinc</emphasis> and
181<emphasis>-isystem</emphasis> flags to control the compiler's include search
182path. These items help to highlight an important aspect of the Glibc package:
183it is very self-sufficient in terms of its build machinery and generally does
184not rely on toolchain defaults.</para>
185
186<para>After the Glibc installation, we make some adjustments to ensure that
187searching and linking take place only within our <filename>/tools</filename>
188prefix. We install an adjusted <userinput>ld</userinput>, which has a hard-wired
189search path limited to <filename class="directory">/tools/lib</filename>. Then
190we amend <userinput>gcc</userinput>'s specs file to point to our new dynamic
191linker in <filename class="directory">/tools/lib</filename>. This last step is
192<emphasis>vital</emphasis> to the whole process. As mentioned above, a
193hard-wired path to a dynamic linker is embedded into every ELF shared
194executable. You can inspect this by running:
195<userinput>'readelf -l &lt;name of binary&gt; | grep interpreter'</userinput>.
196By amending <userinput>gcc</userinput>'s specs file, we are ensuring that every
197program compiled from here through the end of <xref linkend="chapter05"/> will
198use our new dynamic linker in
199<filename class="directory">/tools/lib</filename>.</para>
200
201<para>The need to use the new dynamic linker is also the reason why we apply the
202Specs patch for the second pass of GCC. Failure to do so will result in the GCC
203programs themselves having the name of the dynamic linker from the host system's
204<filename class="directory">/lib</filename> directory embedded into them, which
205would defeat our goal of getting away from the host.</para>
206
207<para>During the second pass of Binutils, we are able to utilize the
208<emphasis>--with-lib-path</emphasis> configure switch to control
209<userinput>ld</userinput>'s library search path. From this point onwards, the
210core toolchain is self-contained and self-hosted. The remainder of the
211<xref linkend="chapter05"/> packages all build against the new Glibc in
212<filename class="directory">/tools</filename> and all is well.</para>
213
214<para>Upon entering the chroot environment in <xref linkend="chapter06"/>, the
215first major package we install is Glibc, due to its self-sufficient nature that
216we mentioned above. Once this Glibc is installed into
217<filename class="directory">/usr</filename>, we perform a quick changeover of
218the toolchain defaults, then proceed for real in building the rest of the
219target <xref linkend="chapter06"/> LFS system.</para>
220
221<sect2>
222<title>Notes on static linking</title>
223
224<para>Most programs have to perform, beside their specific task, many rather
225common and sometimes trivial operations. These include allocating memory,
226searching directories, reading and writing files, string handling, pattern
227matching, arithmetic and many other tasks. Instead of obliging each program to
228reinvent the wheel, the GNU system provides all these basic functions in
229ready-made libraries. The major library on any Linux system is
230<emphasis>Glibc</emphasis>.</para>
231
232<para>There are two primary ways of linking the functions from a library to a
233program that uses them: statically or dynamically. When a program is linked
234statically, the code of the used functions is included in the executable,
235resulting in a rather bulky program. When a program is dynamically linked, what
236is included is a reference to the dynamic linker, the name of the library, and
237the name of the function, resulting in a much smaller executable. (A third way
238is to use the programming interface of the dynamic linker. See the
239<emphasis>dlopen</emphasis> man page for more information.)</para>
240
241<para>Dynamic linking is the default on Linux and has three major advantages
242over static linking. First, you need only one copy of the executable library
243code on your hard disk, instead of having many copies of the same code included
244into a whole bunch of programs -- thus saving disk space. Second, when several
245programs use the same library function at the same time, only one copy of the
246function's code is required in core -- thus saving memory space. Third, when a
247library function gets a bug fixed or is otherwise improved, you only need to
248recompile this one library, instead of having to recompile all the programs that
249make use of the improved function.</para>
250
251<para>If dynamic linking has several advantages, why then do we statically link
252the first two packages in this chapter? The reasons are threefold: historical,
253educational, and technical. Historical, because earlier versions of LFS
254statically linked every program in this chapter. Educational, because knowing
255the difference is useful. Technical, because we gain an element of independence
256from the host in doing so, meaning that those programs can be used
257independently of the host system. However, it's worth noting that an overall
258successful LFS build can still be achieved when the first two packages are
259built dynamically.</para>
260
261</sect2>
262
263</sect1>
264
265
266<sect1 id="ch05-creatingtoolsdir">
267<title>Creating the $LFS/tools directory</title>
268<?dbhtml filename="creatingtoolsdir.html" dir="chapter05"?>
269
270<para>All programs compiled in this chapter will be installed under <filename
271class="directory">$LFS/tools</filename> to keep them separate from the
272programs compiled in the next chapter. The programs compiled here are only
273temporary tools and won't be a part of the final LFS system and by keeping them
274in a separate directory, we can later easily throw them away.</para>
275
276<para>If later you wish to search through the binaries of your system to see
277what files they make use of or link against, then to make this searching easier
278you may want to choose a unique name. Instead of the simple "tools" you could
279use something like "tools-for-lfs". However, you'll need to be careful to
280adjust all references to "tools" throughout the book including those in any
281patches, the most notable being the GCC Specs Patch.</para>
282
283<para>Create the required directory by running the following:</para>
284
285<screen><userinput>mkdir $LFS/tools</userinput></screen>
286
287<para>The next step is to create a <filename>/tools</filename> symlink on
288your host system. It will point to the directory we just created on the LFS
289partition:</para>
290
291<screen><userinput>ln -s $LFS/tools /</userinput></screen>
292
293<para>This symlink enables us to compile our toolchain so that it always
294refers to <filename>/tools</filename>, meaning that the compiler, assembler
295and linker will work both in this chapter (when we are still using some tools
296from the host) <emphasis>and</emphasis> in the next (when we are chrooted to
297the LFS partition).</para>
298
299<note><para>Study the above command closely. It can be confusing at first
300glance. The <userinput>ln</userinput> command has several syntax variations,
301so be sure to check the ln man page before reporting what you may think is an
302error.</para></note>
303
304</sect1>
305
306
307<sect1 id="ch05-addinguser">
308<title>Adding the user lfs</title>
309<?dbhtml filename="addinguser.html" dir="chapter05"?>
310
311<para>When logged in as <emphasis>root</emphasis>, making a single mistake
312can damage or even wreck your system. Therefore we recommend that you
313build the packages in this chapter as an unprivileged user. You could
314of course use your own user name, but to make it easier to set up a clean
315work environment we'll create a new user <emphasis>lfs</emphasis> and
316use this one during the installation process. As <emphasis>root</emphasis>,
317issue the following commands to add the new user:</para>
318
319<screen><userinput>useradd -s /bin/bash -m lfs
320passwd lfs</userinput></screen>
321
322<para>Now grant this new user <emphasis>lfs</emphasis> full access to
323<filename class="directory">$LFS/tools</filename> by giving it ownership
324of the directory:</para>
325
326<screen><userinput>chown lfs $LFS/tools</userinput></screen>
327
328<para>If you made a separate working directory as suggested, give user
329<emphasis>lfs</emphasis> ownership of this directory too:</para>
330
331<screen><userinput>chown lfs $LFS/sources</userinput></screen>
332
333<para>Next, login as user <emphasis>lfs</emphasis>. This can be done via a
334virtual console, through a display manager, or with the following substitute
335user command:</para>
336
337<screen><userinput>su - lfs</userinput></screen>
338
339<para>The "<userinput>-</userinput>" instructs <userinput>su</userinput> to
340start a new, clean shell.</para>
341
342</sect1>
343
344
345<sect1 id="ch05-settingenviron">
346<title>Setting up the environment</title>
347<?dbhtml filename="settingenvironment.html" dir="chapter05"?>
348
349<para>We're going to set up a good working environment by creating two new
350startup files for the Bash shell. While logged in as user
351<emphasis>lfs</emphasis>, issue the following commands to create a new
352<filename>.bash_profile</filename>:</para>
353
354<screen><userinput>cat &gt; ~/.bash_profile &lt;&lt; "EOF"</userinput>
355exec env -i TERM=$TERM /bin/bash
356<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen>
357
358<para>The <userinput>exec env -i TERM=$TERM /bin/bash</userinput> command
359creates a new instance of Bash with a completely empty environment, except for
360the TERM variable. This is needed to ensure that no unwanted and potentially
361hazardous environment variables from the host system leak into our build
362environment. The technique used here is a little non-standard but it achieves
363the goal of enforcing a clean environment. By way of explanation, the initial
364shell is a <emphasis>login</emphasis> shell which reads the
365<filename>.bash_profile</filename>. The new shell instance is a
366<emphasis>non-login</emphasis> shell which reads the
367<filename>.bashrc</filename> (created next).</para>
368
369<para>Now create a new <filename>.bashrc</filename>:</para>
370
371<screen><userinput>cat &gt; ~/.bashrc &lt;&lt; "EOF"</userinput>
372set +h
373umask 022
374LFS=/mnt/lfs
375LC_ALL=POSIX
376PATH=/tools/bin:/bin:/usr/bin
377export LFS LC_ALL PATH
378<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen>
379
380<para>The <userinput>set +h</userinput> command turns off
381<userinput>bash</userinput>'s hash function. Normally hashing is a useful
382feature: <userinput>bash</userinput> uses a hash table to remember the
383full pathnames of executable files to avoid searching the PATH time and time
384again to find the same executable. However, we'd like the new tools to be
385used as soon as they are installed. By switching off the hash function, our
386"interactive" commands (<userinput>make</userinput>,
387<userinput>patch</userinput>, <userinput>sed</userinput>,
388<userinput>cp</userinput> and so forth) will always use
389the newest available version during the build process.</para>
390
391<para>Setting the user file-creation mask to 022 ensures that newly created
392files and directories are only writable for their owner, but readable and
393executable for anyone.</para>
394
395<para>The LFS variable should of course be set to the mount point you
396chose.</para>
397
398<para>The LC_ALL variable controls the localization of certain programs,
399making their messages follow the conventions of a specified country. If your
400host system uses a version of Glibc older than 2.2.4,
401having LC_ALL set to something other than "POSIX" or "C" during this chapter
402may cause trouble if you exit the chroot environment and wish to return later.
403By setting LC_ALL to "POSIX" (or "C", the two are equivalent) we ensure that
404everything will work as expected in the chroot environment.</para>
405
406<para>We prepend <filename>/tools/bin</filename> to the standard PATH so
407that, as we move along through this chapter, the tools we build will get used
408during the rest of the building process.</para>
409
410<para>Finally, source the just-created profile so that we're all set to begin
411building the temporary tools that will support us in later chapters.</para>
412
413<screen><userinput>source ~/.bash_profile</userinput></screen>
414
415</sect1>
416
417
418&c5-binutils-pass1;
419&c5-gcc-pass1;
420&c5-kernelheaders;
421&c5-glibc;
422
423
424<sect1 id="ch05-locking-glibc">
425<title>"Locking in" Glibc</title>
426<?dbhtml filename="lockingglibc.html" dir="chapter05"?>
427
428<para>Now that the temporary C libraries have been installed, we want all
429the tools compiled in the rest of this chapter to be linked against these
430libraries. To accomplish this, we need to adjust the linker and the compiler's
431specs file.</para>
432
433<para>First install the adjusted linker by running the following from within
434the <filename class="directory">binutils-build</filename> directory:</para>
435
436<screen><userinput>make -C ld install</userinput></screen>
437
438<para>The linker was adjusted a little while back, at the end of the first
439pass of Binutils. From this point onwards everything will link <emphasis>only
440</emphasis> against the libraries in <filename>/tools/lib</filename>.</para>
441
442<note><para>If you somehow missed the earlier warning to retain the Binutils
443source and build directories from the first pass or otherwise accidentally
444deleted them or just don't have access to them, don't worry, all is not lost.
445Just ignore the above command. The result is a small chance of subsequent
446programs linking against libraries on the host. This is not ideal, however,
447it's not a major problem. The situation is corrected when we install the
448second pass of Binutils later on.</para></note>
449
450<para>Now that the adjusted linker is installed, you have to remove the
451Binutils build and source directories.</para>
452
453<para>The next thing to do is to amend our GCC specs file so that it points
454to the new dynamic linker. A simple sed will accomplish this:</para>
455
456<!-- Ampersands are needed to allow cut and paste -->
457
458<screen><userinput>SPECFILE=/tools/lib/gcc-lib/*/*/specs &amp;&amp;
459sed -e 's@ /lib/ld-linux.so.2@ /tools/lib/ld-linux.so.2@g' \
460&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;$SPECFILE &gt; tempspecfile &amp;&amp;
461mv -f tempspecfile $SPECFILE &amp;&amp;
462unset SPECFILE</userinput></screen>
463
464<para>We recommend that you cut-and-paste the above rather than try and type it
465all in. Or you can edit the specs file by hand if you want to: just replace any
466occurrence of "/lib/ld-linux.so.2" with "/tools/lib/ld-linux.so.2".</para>
467
468<important><para>If you are working on a platform where the name of the dynamic
469linker is something other than <filename>ld-linux.so.2</filename>, you
470<emphasis>must</emphasis> substitute <filename>ld-linux.so.2</filename> with the
471name of your platform's dynamic linker in the above commands. Refer back to
472<xref linkend="ch05-toolchaintechnotes"/> if necessary.</para></important>
473
474<para>Lastly, there is a possibility that some include files from the host
475system have found their way into GCC's private include dir. This can happen
476because of GCC's "fixincludes" process which runs as part of the GCC build.
477We'll explain more about this further on in this chapter. For now, run the
478following commands to eliminate this possibility:</para>
479
480<screen><userinput>rm -f /tools/lib/gcc-lib/*/*/include/{pthread.h,bits/sigthread.h}</userinput></screen>
481
482<!-- HACK - Force some whitespace to appease tidy -->
483<literallayout></literallayout>
484
485<caution><para>It is imperative at this point to stop and ensure that the basic
486functions (compiling and linking) of the new toolchain are working as expected.
487For this we are going to perform a simple sanity check:</para>
488
489<screen><userinput>echo 'main(){}' &gt; dummy.c
490gcc dummy.c
491readelf -l a.out | grep ': /tools'</userinput></screen>
492
493<para>If everything is working correctly, there should be no errors, and the
494output of the last command will be:</para>
495
496<blockquote><screen>[Requesting program interpreter: /tools/lib/ld-linux.so.2]</screen></blockquote>
497
498<para>If you did not receive the output as shown above, or received no output at
499all, then something is seriously wrong. You will need to investigate and retrace
500your steps to find out where the problem is and correct it. There is no point in
501continuing until this is done. Most likely something went wrong with the specs
502file amendment above. Note especially that <filename>/tools/lib</filename>
503appears as the prefix of our dynamic linker. Of course, if you are working on a
504platform where the name of the dynamic linker is something other than
505<filename>ld-linux.so.2</filename>, then the output will be slightly
506different.</para>
507
508<para>Once you are satisfied that all is well, clean up the test files:</para>
509
510<screen><userinput>rm dummy.c a.out</userinput></screen>
511</caution>
512
513<!-- HACK - Force some whitespace to appease tidy -->
514<literallayout></literallayout>
515
516<para>This completes the installation of the self-contained toolchain, and it
517can now be used to build the rest of the temporary tools.</para>
518
519</sect1>
520
521
522&c5-tcl;
523&c5-expect;
524&c5-dejagnu;
525&c5-gcc-pass2;
526&c5-binutils-pass2;
527
528&c5-gawk;
529&c5-coreutils;
530&c5-bzip2;
531&c5-gzip;
532&c5-diffutils;
533&c5-findutils;
534&c5-make;
535&c5-grep;
536&c5-sed;
537&c5-gettext;
538&c5-ncurses;
539&c5-patch;
540&c5-tar;
541&c5-texinfo;
542&c5-bash;
543&c5-utillinux;
544&c5-perl;
545
546
547<sect1 id="ch05-stripping">
548<title>Stripping</title>
549<?dbhtml filename="stripping.html" dir="chapter05"?>
550
551<para>The steps in this section are optional. If your LFS partition is rather
552small, you will be glad to learn that you can throw away some unnecessary
553things. The executables and libraries you have built so far contain about 130 MB
554of unneeded debugging symbols. Remove those symbols like this:</para>
555
556<screen><userinput>strip --strip-unneeded /tools/{,s}bin/*
557strip --strip-debug /tools/lib/*</userinput></screen>
558
559<para>The first of the above commands will skip some twenty files, reporting
560that it doesn't recognize their file format. Most of them are scripts instead
561of binaries.</para>
562
563<para>Take care <emphasis>not</emphasis> to use
564<userinput>--strip-unneeded</userinput> on the libraries -- they would be
565destroyed and you would have to build Glibc all over again.</para>
566
567<para>To save another couple of megabytes, you can throw away all the
568documentation:</para>
569
570<screen><userinput>rm -rf /tools/{,share/}{doc,info,man}</userinput></screen>
571
572<para>You will now need to have at least 850 MB of free space on your LFS
573filesystem to be able to build and install Glibc in the next phase. If you can
574build and install Glibc, you can build and install the rest too.</para>
575
576</sect1>
577
578</chapter>
579
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