source: chapter06/chapter06.xml@ bfa54edc

10.0 10.0-rc1 10.1 10.1-rc1 11.0 11.0-rc1 11.0-rc2 11.0-rc3 11.1 11.1-rc1 11.2 11.2-rc1 11.3 11.3-rc1 12.0 12.0-rc1 12.1 12.1-rc1 6.0 6.1 6.1.1 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.5-systemd 7.6 7.6-systemd 7.7 7.7-systemd 7.8 7.8-systemd 7.9 7.9-systemd 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 9.0 9.1 arm bdubbs/gcc13 ml-11.0 multilib renodr/libudev-from-systemd s6-init trunk v5_1 v5_1_1 xry111/arm64 xry111/arm64-12.0 xry111/clfs-ng xry111/lfs-next xry111/loongarch xry111/loongarch-12.0 xry111/loongarch-12.1 xry111/mips64el xry111/pip3 xry111/rust-wip-20221008 xry111/update-glibc
Last change on this file since bfa54edc was bfa54edc, checked in by Alex Gronenwoud <alex@…>, 20 years ago

Cleaning up after the big move.

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1<chapter id="chapter06" xreflabel="Chapter 6">
2<title>Installing basic system software</title>
3<?dbhtml filename="chapter06.html" dir="chapter06"?>
4
5
6<sect1 id="ch06-introduction">
7<title>Introduction</title>
8<?dbhtml filename="introduction.html" dir="chapter06"?>
9
10<para>In this chapter we enter the building site, and start
11constructing our LFS system in earnest. That is, we chroot into
12our temporary mini Linux system, create some auxiliary things,
13and then start installing all the packages, one by one.</para>
14
15<para>The installation of all this software is pretty straightforward,
16and you will probably think it would be much shorter to give here
17the generic installation instructions and explain in full only the
18installation of those packages that require an alternate method.
19Although we agree with that, we nevertheless choose to give the
20full instructions for each and every package, simply to minimize
21the possibilities for mistakes.</para>
22
23<para>The key to learning what makes a Linux system work is to know
24what each package is used for and why the user (or the system) needs it.
25For this purpose for every installed package a summary of its content is
26given followed by concise descriptions of each program and library it
27installed.</para>
28
29<para>If you plan to use compiler optimizations in this chapter, take a look at
30the optimization hint at <ulink url="&hints-root;optimization.txt"/>. Compiler
31optimizations can make a program run slightly faster, but they may also cause
32compilation difficulties and even problems when running the program. If a
33package refuses to compile when using optimization, try to compile it without
34optimization and see if the problem goes away. Even if the package does compile
35when using optimization, there is the risk it may have been compiled incorrectly
36due to complex interactions between the code and build tools. In short, the
37small potential gains achieved in using compiler optimization are generally
38outweighed by the risk. First time builders of LFS are encouraged to build
39without custom optimizations. Your system will still be very fast and very
40stable at the same time.</para>
41
42<para>The order in which packages are installed in this chapter has
43to be strictly followed, to ensure that no program gets a path referring
44to <filename class="directory">/tools</filename> hard-wired into it.
45For the same reason, <emphasis>do not </emphasis> compile packages
46in parallel. Compiling in parallel may save you some time (especially on
47dual-CPU machines), but it could result in a program containing a
48hard-wired path to <filename class="directory">/tools</filename>,
49which will cause the program to stop working when that directory
50is removed.</para>
51
52<para>Before the installation instructions each installation page gives some
53information about the package: a concise description of what it contains, how
54long it will approximately take to build it, how much disk space it needs
55during this building process, the official download location of the package
56(in case you just want to update a few of them), and which other packages it
57needs in order to be built successfully. After the installation instructions
58follows a list of programs and libraries that the package installs, together
59with a series of short descriptions of these.</para>
60
61</sect1>
62
63
64<sect1 id="ch06-chroot">
65<title>Entering the chroot environment</title>
66<?dbhtml filename="chroot.html" dir="chapter06"?>
67
68<para>It is time to enter the chroot environment in order to begin installing
69the packages we need. Before you can chroot, however, you need to become
70<emphasis>root</emphasis>, since only <emphasis>root</emphasis>
71can execute the <userinput>chroot</userinput> command.</para>
72
73<para>Just like earlier, ensure the LFS environment variable is set up properly
74by running <userinput>echo $LFS</userinput> and ensuring it shows the path to
75your LFS partition's mount point, which is
76<filename class="directory">/mnt/lfs</filename> if you followed our
77example.</para>
78
79<para>Become <emphasis>root</emphasis> and run the following command
80to enter the chroot environment:</para>
81
82<screen><userinput>chroot $LFS /tools/bin/env -i \
83&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;HOME=/root TERM=$TERM PS1='\u:\w\$ ' \
84&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/tools/bin \
85&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;/tools/bin/bash --login +h</userinput></screen>
86
87<para>The <userinput>-i</userinput> option given to the
88<userinput>env</userinput> command will clear all variables of the chroot
89environment. After that, only the HOME, TERM, PS1 and PATH variables are
90set again. The TERM=$TERM construct will set the TERM variable inside chroot
91to the same value as outside chroot; this variable is needed for programs
92like <userinput>vim</userinput> and <userinput>less</userinput> to operate
93properly. If you need other variables present, such as CFLAGS or CXXFLAGS,
94this is a good place to set them again.</para>
95
96<para>From this point on there's no need to use the LFS variable anymore,
97because everything you do will be restricted to the LFS file system -- since
98what the shell thinks is <filename class="directory">/</filename> is actually
99the value of <filename class="directory">$LFS</filename>, which was passed to
100the chroot command.</para>
101
102<para>Notice that <filename class="directory">/tools/bin</filename> comes
103last in the PATH. This means that a temporary tool will not be used any more
104as soon as its final version is installed. Well, at least when the shell
105doesn't remember the locations of executed binaries -- for this reason hashing
106is switched off by passing the <userinput>+h</userinput> option to
107<userinput>bash</userinput>.</para>
108
109<para>You have to make sure all the commands in the rest of this chapter and
110in the following chapters are run from within the chroot environment.
111If you ever leave this environment for any reason (rebooting for example),
112you must remember to again enter chroot and mount the proc and devpts
113filesystems (discussed later) before continuing with the installations.</para>
114
115<para>Note that the bash prompt will say "I have no name!" This is
116normal, as the <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> file has not been
117created yet.</para>
118
119</sect1>
120
121
122<sect1 id="ch06-changingowner">
123<title>Changing ownership</title>
124<?dbhtml filename="changingowner.html" dir="chapter06"?>
125
126<para>Right now the <filename class="directory">/tools</filename> directory
127is owned by the user <emphasis>lfs</emphasis>, a user that exists only on your
128host system. Although you will probably want to delete the
129<filename class="directory">/tools</filename> directory once you have
130finished your LFS system, you may want to keep it around, for example to
131build more LFS systems. But if you keep the
132<filename class="directory">/tools</filename> directory as it is, you end up
133with files owned by a user ID without a corresponding account. This is
134dangerous because a user account created later on could get this same user ID
135and would suddenly own the <filename class="directory">/tools</filename>
136directory and all the files therein, thus exposing these files to possible
137malicious manipulation.</para>
138
139<para>To avoid this issue, you could add the <emphasis>lfs</emphasis> user to
140your new LFS system later on when creating the <filename>/etc/passwd</filename>
141file, taking care to assign it the same user and group IDs as on your host
142system. Alternatively, you can (and the book assumes you do) assign the
143contents of the <filename class="directory">/tools</filename> directory to
144user <emphasis>root</emphasis> by running the following command:</para>
145
146<screen><userinput>chown -R 0:0 /tools</userinput></screen>
147
148<para>The command uses "0:0" instead of "root:root", because
149<userinput>chown</userinput> is unable to resolve the name "root" until the
150password file has been created.</para>
151
152</sect1>
153
154
155<sect1 id="ch06-creatingdirs">
156<title>Creating directories</title>
157<?dbhtml filename="creatingdirs.html" dir="chapter06"?>
158
159<para>Let's now create some structure in our LFS file system. Let's create
160a directory tree. Issuing the following commands will create a more or less
161standard tree:</para>
162
163<screen><userinput>mkdir -p /{bin,boot,dev/{pts,shm},etc/opt,home,lib,mnt,proc}
164mkdir -p /{root,sbin,tmp,usr/local,var,opt}
165for dirname in /usr /usr/local
166&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;do
167&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;mkdir $dirname/{bin,etc,include,lib,sbin,share,src}
168&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ln -s share/{man,doc,info} $dirname
169&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;mkdir $dirname/share/{doc,info,locale,man}
170&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;mkdir $dirname/share/{misc,terminfo,zoneinfo}
171&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;mkdir $dirname/share/man/man{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8}
172done
173mkdir /var/{lock,log,mail,run,spool}
174mkdir -p /var/{tmp,opt,cache,lib/misc,local}
175mkdir /opt/{bin,doc,include,info}
176mkdir -p /opt/{lib,man/man{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8}}</userinput></screen>
177
178<para>Directories are, by default, created with permission mode 755, but this
179isn't desirable for all directories. We will make two changes: one to the home
180directory of <emphasis>root</emphasis>, and another to the directories for
181temporary files.</para>
182
183<screen><userinput>chmod 0750 /root
184chmod 1777 /tmp /var/tmp</userinput></screen>
185
186<para>The first mode change ensures that not just anybody can enter the
187<filename class="directory">/root</filename> directory -- the same
188as a normal user would do with his or her home directory.
189The second mode change makes sure that any user can write to the
190<filename class="directory">/tmp</filename> and
191<filename class="directory">/var/tmp</filename> directories, but
192cannot remove other users' files from them. The latter is prohibited
193by the so-called "sticky bit" -- the highest bit in the 1777 bit mask.</para>
194
195<sect2>
196<title>FHS compliance note</title>
197
198<para>We have based our directory tree on the FHS standard (available at
199<ulink url="http://www.pathname.com/fhs/"/>). Besides the above created
200tree this standard stipulates the existence of
201<filename class="directory">/usr/local/games</filename> and
202<filename class="directory">/usr/share/games</filename>, but we don't
203much like these for a base system. However, feel free to make your system
204FHS-compliant. As to the structure of the
205<filename class="directory">/usr/local/share</filename> subdirectory, the FHS
206isn't precise, so we created here the directories that we think are needed.</para>
207
208</sect2>
209
210</sect1>
211
212
213&c6-mountproc;
214
215
216<sect1 id="ch06-createfiles">
217<title>Creating essential symlinks</title>
218<?dbhtml filename="createfiles.html" dir="chapter06"?>
219
220<para>Some programs hard-wire paths to programs which don't exist yet. In
221order to satisfy these programs, we create a number of symbolic links which
222will be replaced by real files throughout the course of this chapter when
223we're installing all the software.</para>
224
225<screen><userinput>ln -s /tools/bin/{bash,cat,pwd,stty} /bin
226ln -s /tools/bin/perl /usr/bin
227ln -s /tools/lib/libgcc_s.so.1 /usr/lib
228ln -s bash /bin/sh</userinput></screen>
229
230</sect1>
231
232
233<sect1 id="ch06-pwdgroup">
234<title>Creating the passwd, group and log files</title>
235<?dbhtml filename="pwdgroup.html" dir="chapter06"?>
236
237<para>In order for <emphasis>root</emphasis> to be able to login and for the
238name "root" to be recognized, there need to be relevant entries in the
239<filename>/etc/passwd</filename> and <filename>/etc/group</filename> files.</para>
240
241<para>Create the <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> file by running the following
242command:</para>
243
244<screen><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/passwd &lt;&lt; "EOF"</userinput>
245root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash
246<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen>
247
248<para>The actual password for <emphasis>root</emphasis> (the "x" here is just a
249placeholder) will be set later.</para>
250
251<para>Create the <filename>/etc/group</filename> file by running the following
252command:</para>
253
254<screen><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/group &lt;&lt; "EOF"</userinput>
255root:x:0:
256bin:x:1:
257sys:x:2:
258kmem:x:3:
259tty:x:4:
260tape:x:5:
261daemon:x:6:
262floppy:x:7:
263disk:x:8:
264lp:x:9:
265dialout:x:10:
266audio:x:11:
267<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen>
268
269<para>The created groups aren't part of any standard -- they are the groups
270that the MAKEDEV script in the next section uses. Besides the group "root", the
271LSB (<ulink url="http://www.linuxbase.org"/>) recommends only a group "bin",
272with a GID of 1, be present. All other group names and GIDs can be chosen
273freely by the user, as well-written packages don't depend on GID numbers but
274use the group's name.</para>
275
276<para>Lastly, we re-login to the chroot environment. User name and group name
277resolution will start working immediately after the
278<filename>/etc/passwd</filename> and <filename>/etc/group</filename> files are
279created, because we installed a full Glibc in Chapter 5. This will get rid of
280the <quote>I have no name!</quote> prompt.</para>
281
282<screen><userinput>exec /tools/bin/bash --login +h</userinput></screen>
283
284<para>Note the use of the <userinput>+h</userinput> directive. This tells
285<userinput>bash</userinput> not to use its internal path hashing. Without this
286directive, <userinput>bash</userinput> would remember the paths to binaries it
287has executed. Since we want to use our newly compiled binaries as soon as
288they are installed, we turn off this function for the duration of this
289chapter.</para>
290
291<para>The <userinput>login</userinput>, <userinput>agetty</userinput> and
292<userinput>init</userinput> programs (and some others) use a number of log
293files to record information such as who was logged into the system and when.
294These programs, however, won't write to the log files if they don't already
295exist. Initialize the log files and give them their proper permissions:</para>
296
297<screen><userinput>touch /var/run/utmp /var/log/{btmp,lastlog,wtmp}
298chmod 644 /var/run/utmp /var/log/{btmp,lastlog,wtmp}</userinput></screen>
299
300<para>The <filename>/var/run/utmp</filename> file records the users that are
301currently logged in. The <filename>/var/log/wtmp</filename> file records all
302logins and logouts. The <filename>/var/log/lastlog</filename> file records for
303each user when he or she last logged in. The <filename>/var/log/btmp</filename>
304file records the bad login attempts.</para>
305
306</sect1>
307
308
309&c6-makedev;
310&c6-kernel;
311&c6-manpages;
312&c6-glibc;
313
314
315<sect1 id="ch06-adjustingtoolchain">
316<title>Re-adjusting the toolchain</title>
317<?dbhtml filename="adjustingtoolchain.html" dir="chapter06"?>
318
319<para>Now that the new C libraries have been installed, it's time to re-adjust
320our toolchain. We'll adjust it so that it will link any newly compiled program
321against the new C libraries. Basically, this is the reverse of what we did
322in the "locking in" stage in the beginning of the previous chapter.</para>
323
324<para>The first thing to do is to adjust the linker. For this we retained the
325source and build directories from the second pass over Binutils. Install the
326adjusted linker by running the following from within the
327<filename class="directory">binutils-build</filename> directory:</para>
328
329<screen><userinput>make -C ld INSTALL=/tools/bin/install install</userinput></screen>
330
331<note><para>If you somehow missed the earlier warning to retain the Binutils
332source and build directories from the second pass in Chapter 5 or otherwise
333accidentally deleted them or just don't have access to them, don't worry, all is
334not lost. Just ignore the above command. The result will be that the next
335package, Binutils, will link against the Glibc libraries in
336<filename class="directory">/tools</filename> rather than
337<filename class="directory">/usr</filename>. This is not ideal, however, our
338testing has shown that the resulting Binutils program binaries should be
339identical.</para></note>
340
341<para>From now on every compiled program will link <emphasis>only</emphasis>
342against the libraries in <filename>/usr/lib</filename> and
343<filename>/lib</filename>. The extra
344<userinput>INSTALL=/tools/bin/install</userinput> is needed because the Makefile
345created during the second pass still contains the reference to
346<filename>/usr/bin/install</filename>, which we obviously haven't installed yet.
347Some host distributions contain a <filename class="symlink">ginstall</filename>
348symbolic link which takes precedence in the Makefile and thus can cause a
349problem here. The above command takes care of this also.</para>
350
351<para>You can now remove the Binutils source and build directories.</para>
352
353<para>The next thing to do is to amend our GCC specs file so that it points
354to the new dynamic linker. Just like earlier on, we use a sed to accomplish
355this:</para>
356
357<!-- Ampersands are needed to allow cut and paste -->
358
359<screen><userinput>SPECFILE=/tools/lib/gcc-lib/*/*/specs &amp;&amp;
360sed -e 's@ /tools/lib/ld-linux.so.2@ /lib/ld-linux.so.2@g' \
361&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;$SPECFILE &gt; newspecfile &amp;&amp;
362mv -f newspecfile $SPECFILE &amp;&amp;
363unset SPECFILE</userinput></screen>
364
365<para>Again, cutting and pasting the above is recommended. And just like
366before, it is a good idea to check the specs file to ensure the intended
367changes were actually made.</para>
368
369<important><para>If you are working on a platform where the name of the dynamic
370linker is something other than <filename>ld-linux.so.2</filename>, you
371<emphasis>must</emphasis> substitute <filename>ld-linux.so.2</filename> with the
372name of your platform's dynamic linker in the above commands. Refer back to
373<xref linkend="ch05-toolchaintechnotes"/> if necessary.</para></important>
374
375<!-- HACK - Force some whitespace to appease tidy -->
376<literallayout></literallayout>
377
378<caution><para>It is imperative at this point to stop and ensure that the
379basic functions (compiling and linking) of the adjusted toolchain are working
380as expected. For this we are going to perform a simple sanity check:</para>
381
382<screen><userinput>echo 'main(){}' &gt; dummy.c
383gcc dummy.c
384readelf -l a.out | grep ': /lib'</userinput></screen>
385
386<para>If everything is working correctly, there should be no errors, and the
387output of the last command will be:</para>
388
389<blockquote><screen>[Requesting program interpreter: /lib/ld-linux.so.2]</screen></blockquote>
390
391<para>If you did not receive the output as shown above, or received no output at
392all, then something is seriously wrong. You will need to investigate and retrace
393your steps to find out where the problem is and correct it. There is no point in
394continuing until this is done. Most likely something went wrong with the specs
395file amendment above. Note especially that <filename>/lib</filename> now appears
396as the prefix of our dynamic linker. Of course, if you are working on a platform
397where the name of the dynamic linker is something other than
398<filename>ld-linux.so.2</filename>, then the output will be slightly
399different.</para>
400
401<para>Once you are satisfied that all is well, clean up the test files:</para>
402
403<screen><userinput>rm dummy.c a.out</userinput></screen>
404</caution>
405
406<!-- HACK - Force some whitespace to appease tidy -->
407<literallayout></literallayout>
408
409</sect1>
410
411
412&c6-binutils;
413&c6-gcc;
414
415&c6-coreutils;
416&c6-zlib;
417&c6-lfs-utils;
418&c6-findutils;
419&c6-gawk;
420&c6-ncurses;
421&c6-vim;
422&c6-m4;
423&c6-bison;
424&c6-less;
425&c6-groff;
426&c6-sed;
427&c6-flex;
428&c6-gettext;
429&c6-nettools;
430&c6-inetutils;
431&c6-perl;
432&c6-texinfo;
433&c6-autoconf;
434&c6-automake;
435&c6-bash;
436&c6-file;
437&c6-libtool;
438&c6-bzip2;
439&c6-diffutils;
440&c6-ed;
441&c6-kbd;
442&c6-e2fsprogs;
443&c6-grep;
444&c6-grub;
445&c6-gzip;
446&c6-man;
447&c6-make;
448&c6-modutils;
449&c6-patch;
450&c6-procinfo;
451&c6-procps;
452&c6-psmisc;
453&c6-shadowpwd;
454&c6-sysklogd;
455&c6-sysvinit;
456&c6-tar;
457&c6-utillinux;
458&c6-gcc-2953;
459
460
461<sect1 id="ch06-revisedchroot">
462<title>Revised chroot command</title>
463<?dbhtml filename="revisedchroot.html" dir="chapter06"?>
464
465<para>From now on when you exit the chroot environment and wish to re-enter
466it, you should run the following modified chroot command:</para>
467
468<screen><userinput>chroot $LFS /usr/bin/env -i \
469&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;HOME=/root TERM=$TERM PS1='\u:\w\$ ' \
470&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin \
471&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;/bin/bash --login</userinput></screen>
472
473<para>The reason being there is no longer any need to use programs from the
474<filename class="directory">/tools</filename> directory. However, we don't
475want to remove the <filename class="directory">/tools</filename> directory
476just yet. There is still some use for it towards the end of the book.</para>
477
478</sect1>
479
480
481&c6-bootscripts;
482&c6-aboutdebug;
483
484</chapter>
485
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