I know there is ALFS and JALFS or whatever and I might refer and or use
those but for me, I personally
like the book layout, so I'm making scripts for each CHUNK along the
way.
HAPPY NEW YEAR FOLKS!
--Jason P Sage
Have you read the Hint More Control and Package Management using Package
On 6/01/2012 2:59 PM, David Gay wrote:
Since I get a command not found type error, I assume not, but I have
to ask:
1) is the at command installed in any of the LFS packages?
2) Or, is there some other command that provides the same functionality?
(start some job/batch file at a given time)
LFS 7.0 - Win7 - Oracle Virtual Box - Slackware 13.87
Everything is building fine - then Expect Goes awry
I read in the book and used the line of script that quiets many errors
due to environment issues that we can't control (according to book) so I
expected the error prone stuff to be ignored
On 6/01/2012 9:40 PM, jasonps...@jegas.com wrote:
On 6/01/2012 2:59 PM, David Gay wrote:
Since I get a command not found type error, I assume not, but I have
to ask:
1) is the at command installed in any of the LFS packages?
2) Or, is there some other command that provides the same
jasonps...@jegas.com wrote:
LFS 7.0 - Win7 - Oracle Virtual Box - Slackware 13.87
Everything is building fine - then Expect Goes awry
Is that 'away' or 'awry' as in 'askew'? I don't really understand your
issue. The packages expect, check, and dejaGNU are only built in
Chapter 5 (tools)
William Immendorf will.immendorf at gmail.com writes:
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 1:27 AM, Casey Daniels - lfs lfs at cd.kcfam.net
wrote:
/media/lfs/sources/file-5.04/src/.libs/lt-file: error while loading shared
libraries: libz.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or
directory
Robert Renfro wrote:
William Immendorf will.immendorf at gmail.com writes:
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 1:27 AM, Casey Daniels - lfs lfs at cd.kcfam.net
wrote:
/media/lfs/sources/file-5.04/src/.libs/lt-file: error while loading shared
libraries: libz.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such
Bruce Dubbs bruce.dubbs at gmail.com writes:
File can use zlib, but what you should have from ./configure in Chapter
5 is:
checking zlib.h usability... no
checking zlib.h presence... no
checking for zlib.h... no
...
checking for gzopen in -lz... no
It looks like you didn't set up
Robert Renfro wrote:
Bruce Dubbs bruce.dubbs at gmail.com writes:
File can use zlib, but what you should have from ./configure in Chapter
5 is:
checking zlib.h usability... no
checking zlib.h presence... no
checking for zlib.h... no
...
checking for gzopen in -lz... no
It looks like