source: chapter06/chroot.xml@ 148bb04

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Last change on this file since 148bb04 was 148bb04, checked in by Alex Gronenwoud <alex@…>, 21 years ago

Renaming /stage1 to /tools.

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1<sect1 id="ch06-chroot">
2<title>Entering the chroot environment</title>
3<?dbhtml filename="chroot.html" dir="chapter06"?>
4
5<para>It is time to enter the chroot environment in order to begin installing
6the packages we need. Before you can chroot, however, you need to become
7<emphasis>root</emphasis>, since only <emphasis>root</emphasis>
8can execute the <userinput>chroot</userinput> command.</para>
9
10<para>Become <emphasis>root</emphasis> and run the following command
11to enter the chroot environment:</para>
12
13<para><screen><userinput>chroot $LFS /tools/bin/env -i \
14&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;HOME=/root TERM=$TERM PS1='\u:\w\$ ' \
15&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/tools/bin \
16&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;/tools/bin/bash --login</userinput></screen>
17</para>
18
19<para><screen><userinput>set +h</userinput></screen></para>
20
21<para>The <userinput>-i</userinput> option given to the
22<userinput>env</userinput> command will clear all variables of the chroot
23environment. After that, only the HOME, TERM, PS1 and PATH variables are
24set again. The TERM=$TERM construct will set the TERM variable inside chroot
25to the same value as outside chroot; this variable is needed for programs
26like vim and less to operate properly. If you need other variables present,
27such as CFLAGS or CXXFLAGS, this is a good place to set them again.</para>
28
29<para>From this point on there's no need to use the LFS variable anymore,
30because everything you do will be restricted to the LFS file system -- since
31what the shell thinks is <filename class="directory">/</filename> is actually
32the value of <filename class="directory">$LFS</filename>, which was passed to
33the chroot command.</para>
34
35<para>You have to make sure all the commands in the rest of this chapter and
36in the following chapters are run from within the chroot environment.
37If you ever leave this environment for any reason (rebooting for example),
38you must remember to again enter chroot and mount proc (discussed later)
39before continuing with the installations.</para>
40
41<para>Note that the bash prompt will say "I have no name!" This is
42normal, as the Glibc package hasn't been installed yet.</para>
43
44</sect1>
45
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