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author | Matthew Burgess <matthew@linuxfromscratch.org> | 2004-05-03 10:59:46 +0000 |
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committer | Matthew Burgess <matthew@linuxfromscratch.org> | 2004-05-03 10:59:46 +0000 |
commit | 673b0d84ba9591e07c0bdf0ee49d92eba10f502c (patch) | |
tree | 129e27a1450727b440da4378e0117a468eb9c25e /chapter04/settingenviron.xml | |
parent | 287ea55da70ceb1f0990554b7db921d525fef816 (diff) |
* Merged newxml into HEAD
git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@3435 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689
Diffstat (limited to 'chapter04/settingenviron.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | chapter04/settingenviron.xml | 80 |
1 files changed, 80 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/chapter04/settingenviron.xml b/chapter04/settingenviron.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..79bc3225b --- /dev/null +++ b/chapter04/settingenviron.xml @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> +<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.3//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.3/docbookx.dtd" [ + <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent"> + %general-entities; +]> +<sect1 id="ch-tools-settingenviron"> +<title>Setting up the environment</title> +<?dbhtml filename="settingenvironment.html"?> + +<para>We're going to set up a good working environment by creating two new +startup files for the <command>bash</command> shell. While logged in as +user <emphasis>lfs</emphasis>, issue the following command to create a new +<filename>.bash_profile</filename>:</para> + +<screen><userinput>cat > ~/.bash_profile << "EOF"</userinput> +exec env -i HOME=$HOME TERM=$TERM PS1='\u:\w\$ ' /bin/bash +<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen> + +<para>Normally, when you log on as user <emphasis>lfs</emphasis>, +the initial shell is a <emphasis>login</emphasis> shell which reads the +<filename>/etc/profile</filename> of your host (probably containing some +settings of environment variables) and then <filename>.bash_profile</filename>. +The <command>exec env -i ... /bin/bash</command> command in the latter file +replaces the running shell with a new one with a completely empty environment, +except for the HOME, TERM and PS1 variables. This ensures that no unwanted and +potentially hazardous environment variables from the host system leak into our +build environment. The technique used here is a little strange, but it achieves +the goal of enforcing a clean environment.</para> + +<para>The new instance of the shell is a <emphasis>non-login</emphasis> shell, +which doesn't read the <filename>/etc/profile</filename> or +<filename>.bash_profile</filename> files, but reads the +<filename>.bashrc</filename> file instead. Create this latter file now:</para> + +<screen><userinput>cat > ~/.bashrc << "EOF"</userinput> +set +h +umask 022 +LFS=/mnt/lfs +LC_ALL=POSIX +PATH=/tools/bin:/bin:/usr/bin +export LFS LC_ALL PATH +<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen> + +<para>The <command>set +h</command> command turns off +<command>bash</command>'s hash function. Normally hashing is a useful +feature: <command>bash</command> uses a hash table to remember the +full pathnames of executable files to avoid searching the PATH time and time +again to find the same executable. However, we'd like the new tools to be +used as soon as they are installed. By switching off the hash function, our +<quote>interactive</quote> commands (<command>make</command>, +<command>patch</command>, <command>sed</command>, +<command>cp</command> and so forth) will always use +the newest available version during the build process.</para> + +<para>Setting the user file-creation mask to 022 ensures that newly created +files and directories are only writable for their owner, but readable and +executable for anyone.</para> + +<para>The LFS variable should of course be set to the mount point you +chose.</para> + +<para>The LC_ALL variable controls the localization of certain programs, +making their messages follow the conventions of a specified country. If your +host system uses a version of Glibc older than 2.2.4, +having LC_ALL set to something other than <quote>POSIX</quote> or +<quote>C</quote> during this chapter may cause trouble if you exit the chroot +environment and wish to return later. By setting LC_ALL to <quote>POSIX</quote> +(or <quote>C</quote>, the two are equivalent) we ensure that +everything will work as expected in the chroot environment.</para> + +<para>We prepend <filename>/tools/bin</filename> to the standard PATH so +that, as we move along through this chapter, the tools we build will get used +during the rest of the building process.</para> + +<para>Finally, to have our environment fully prepared for building the +temporary tools, source the just-created profile:</para> + +<screen><userinput>source ~/.bash_profile</userinput></screen> + +</sect1> |