Bruce Dubbs wrote:
Justin P. Mattock wrote:
I like that idea, so you would have let's say 3 or 4 100mb
test runs setup for multi booting.
I like to use 10GB for the systems. 100MB is way too small. USe the 100MB
partition for /boot as you have below.
so a simple scheme
You can't boot into a sub-directory of a file system but you could do the
following
1) Configure grub to boot the kernel in the /mnt/lfs directory with the current
root file system as a the root directory
2) Boot grub and pass the command init=/mnt/lfs/bin/sh this will run the LFS
Hi
first of all, thank you for your helps. I did all according to the book but,
during the compilation of gcc i encountered with some errors.
these are the last lines that are shown during the compilation of gcc :
# Now that we have built all the objects, we need to copy
# them back to the GCC
Amir Khezrian a écrit :
Hi
Hello,
first of all, thank you for your helps. I did all according to the book
but, during the compilation of gcc i encountered with some errors.
these are the last lines that are shown during the compilation of gcc :
Did you read them ?
/usr/bin/install:
as Nicolas said you should read the errors outputs...
I guess this line says it all:
/usr/bin/install: writing `../../host-i686-pc-linux-gnu/gcc/libgcc.a': *No
space left on device*
check that you have enough space and then try again.
--
[Temet Nosce]
+++
The ideas-about-reality
Nice, so it is possible
to do this. I'll give this a try.
Russell Stockhammer wrote:
You can't boot into a sub-directory of a file system but you could
do the following
1) Configure grub to boot the kernel in the /mnt/lfs directory with
the current root file system as a the root
There's an LFS hint describing how to boot LFS without requiring a
separate partition (i.e., in the same file system as another operating
system).
The trick is a special pre-init program that does a chroot early in
the boot process (automatically, rather than manually as Russell
Stockhammer
cool, thanks for the info.
I'll have a look and see if I can do this.
Robert A. Lerche wrote:
There's an LFS hint describing how to boot LFS without requiring a
separate partition (i.e., in the same file system as another operating
system).
The trick is a special pre-init program that does
as the sendpage-problem seems to be a serious vulnerability in the
kernel, i propose to add a paragraph in the errata-section and in the
kernel chapters (5.6.1 / 8.3). in my opinion even an update to lfs 6.5.1
(or 6.6 is subnumbering is not acceptable) would be ok.
i had no issues here building a
Tobias Gasser wrote:
as the sendpage-problem seems to be a serious vulnerability in the
kernel, i propose to add a paragraph in the errata-section and in the
kernel chapters (5.6.1 / 8.3). in my opinion even an update to lfs 6.5.1
(or 6.6 is subnumbering is not acceptable) would be ok.
i
Bruce Dubbs schrieb:
In the All Packages section is a note:
The Linux kernel is updated relatively often, many times due to discoveries
of
security vulnerabilities. The latest available 2.6.30.x kernel version should
be
used, unless the errata page says otherwise.
oops. i read the
So I think we're covered.
yes.
but maybe to copy this note to chapter 5.6 and 8.3 would be a help for
people with limited brain capacity like me (grin).
I agree here... I also missed it. But hey dont be too hard on yourself, you
are not alone!
People tend to read very quickly and
On Monday 17 August 2009 15:15:39 Russell Stockhammer wrote:
You can't boot into a sub-directory of a file system but you could do the
following
1) Configure grub to boot the kernel in the /mnt/lfs directory with the
current root file system as a the root directory
2) Boot grub and
Michael Tsang wrote:
On Monday 17 August 2009 15:15:39 Russell Stockhammer wrote:
You can't boot into a sub-directory of a file system but you could do the
following
1) Configure grub to boot the kernel in the /mnt/lfs directory with the
current root file system as a the root
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