Am Montag, den 15.10.2018, 04:15 +0000 schrieb Hans Malissa:
> Hi all,
> 
> I'm planning to install LFS (8.3-systemd) on a cheap laptop that uses 
> built-in eMMC memory (64GB) instead of an internal hard drive. As far as I 
> understand, eMMC is cheap flash memory, similar to what's used in SD cards 
> and USB drives. I've been trying to figure out what needs to be done 
> differently in this situation given the peculiarities of flash memory, in 
> particular the limited number of write cycles that leads to wear & tear on 
> the drive:
> I've read that flash memory is not a good choice for a swap partition due to 
> its slow read/write access times, and due to the limited number of write 
> cycles. The system has 4GB of RAM, so I'm considering to skip the swap 
> partition altogether. If unavoidable, I could use an external USB hard drive 
> as a swap drive during compilation, but I don't think that would be necessary.
> For the root file system, it seems that journalling (ext3, ext4) should be 
> avoided on flash memory. Is ext2 a good choice here? What about the 'discard' 
> mount option? Should the drive be mounted with the 'noatime'? Does anybody 
> have experience with this?
> I've read about the 'flash-friendly file system' (F2FS), which seems to be 
> tailored to such application. It appears as if it's supported by the kernel, 
> and there are user-space utilities (f2fs-tools). These are not included in 
> LFS or BLFS, but I'm guessing that I could compile those anyway. Is that a 
> suitable option for the LFS root file system? Has anyone tried doing 
> something like this?
> Is it advantageous to construct LFS on a partition on an external USB hard 
> drive, and move them to the eMMC drive once it's complete? If yes, are there 
> any pitfalls here?
> That's all I can think of. Am I missing something? I guess it will take some 
> experimentation to figure this out. If anyone has experiences with this, then 
> I'd be interested to hear about it.
> 
Leaving swap out at all is ok if the workload of the machine does not
required one.

Yes, you can build LFS somewhere else, tar it up and extract it on
other boxes. Don't forget to install the bootloader and some other
configurations on the target machine.

The only pitfall could be processor architecture. If you build on a
modern Xeon and the target runs on a VIA C3, it is likly that it will
not work. I do 

ARCH=$(uname -m)
case $ARCH in
    x86_64)
        CFLAGS="-march=x86-64 -mtune=generic -O2"
        CXXFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
        ;;
    i686)
        CFLAGS="-march=i686 -mtune=generic -O2"
        CXXFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
        ;;
esac
export CFLAGS CXXFLAGS

before building each package and had no issues so far (but differences
in processor architecture are not that big here).

--
Thomas


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