On Sun, Apr 28, 2019 at 5:06 PM Ken Moffat <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> 1. In manjaro, use lsmod and lspci to try to identify what is
> actually used [snip excellent advice]



> 2. If you don't have a wired ethernet port, you need to build the
> modules for whichever wifi chipset you are using, [snip more excellent
> advice]
>


> Oh, and if the machine's CPU is not the same as, or a superset of,
> the machine on which you built LFS, you may need to rebuild gmp if
> you didn't use the configfsf scripts.  And although I'm a fan of
> using '-march=native' in my CFLAGS, that is fairly catastrophic for
> trying to build for a different micro-architecture :)
>

This might be part of my problem. My initial LFS build was constructed on a
Core i7. The machine I want to continue LFS'ing on is only a Core i5. I
don't know enough about processor architecture or the intricacies of the
Linux kernel to know how much that may matter.

Regardless, this (older, i5) machine has a fresh Manjaro install and I'm
starting LFS over, using the development branch this time around. I know
the risks and hazards and further complications that may entail, but
breaking and fixing things is my definition of "fun". The remaining
important question is: when I get this version booting and running, do I
get to be Counted a second time? :-)
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