diff options
32 files changed, 1227 insertions, 428 deletions
diff --git a/chapter01/changelog.xml b/chapter01/changelog.xml index 78d24adea..3d33049a1 100644 --- a/chapter01/changelog.xml +++ b/chapter01/changelog.xml @@ -32,6 +32,7 @@ First a summary, then a detailed log.</para> <listitem><para>Bison &bison-version;</para></listitem> <!-- <listitem><para>Bzip2 &bzip2-version;</para></listitem> --> <listitem><para>Coreutils &coreutils-version;</para></listitem> +<!-- <listitem><para>DB &db-version;</para></listitem> --> <!-- <listitem><para>DejaGNU &dejagnu-version;</para></listitem> --> <!-- <listitem><para>Diffutils &diffutils-version;</para></listitem> --> <listitem><para>E2fsprogs &e2fsprogs-version;</para></listitem> @@ -44,7 +45,7 @@ First a summary, then a detailed log.</para> <listitem><para>Gettext &gettext-version;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>Glibc &glibc-version;</para></listitem> <!-- <listitem><para>Grep &grep-version;</para></listitem> --> -<listitem><para>Groff &groff-version;</para></listitem> +<!-- <listitem><para>Groff &groff-version;</para></listitem> --> <listitem><para>GRUB &grub-version;</para></listitem> <!-- <listitem><para>Gzip &gzip-version;</para></listitem> --> <!-- <listitem><para>Hotplug &hotplug-version;</para></listitem> --> @@ -59,7 +60,7 @@ First a summary, then a detailed log.</para> <listitem><para>Linux-Libc-Headers &linux-libc-headers-version;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>M4 &m4-version;</para></listitem> <!-- <listitem><para>Make &make-version;</para></listitem> --> -<listitem><para>Man &man-version;</para></listitem> +<!-- <listitem><para>Man-DB &man-db-version;</para></listitem> --> <listitem><para>Man-pages &man-pages-version;</para></listitem> <!-- <listitem><para>Mktemp &mktemp-version;</para></listitem> --> <!-- <listitem><para>Module-Init-Tools &module-init-tools-version;</para></listitem> --> @@ -83,14 +84,22 @@ First a summary, then a detailed log.</para> </itemizedlist> </listitem> +<listitem><para>Downgraded to:</para> +<itemizedlist> +<listitem><para>Groff &groff-version;-&groff-patchlevel;</para></listitem> +</itemizedlist> +</listitem> + <listitem><para>Added:</para> <itemizedlist> <listitem><para>&bzip2-bzgrep-patch;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>&bzip2-docs-patch;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>&gawk-segfault-patch;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>&gcc-specs-patch;</para></listitem> +<listitem><para>DB-&db-version;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>&inetutils-gcc4_fixes-patch;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>&kbd-gcc4_fixes-patch;</para></listitem> +<listitem><para>MAN-DB-&man-db-version;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>&mktemp-tempfile-patch;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>&perl-libc-patch;</para></listitem> <listitem><para>&shadow-configure-patch;</para></listitem> @@ -107,6 +116,7 @@ First a summary, then a detailed log.</para> <listitem><para>glibc-2.3.4-fix_test-1.patch</para></listitem> <listitem><para>inetutils-1.4.2-kernel_headers-1.patch</para></listitem> <listitem><para>iproute2-2.6.11-050330-remove_db-1.patch</para></listitem> +<listitem><para>Man-1.6b</para></listitem> <listitem><para>mktemp-1.5-add_tempfile-2.patch</para></listitem> <listitem><para>perl-5.8.6-libc-1.patch</para></listitem> <listitem><para>vim-6.3-security_fix-1.patch</para></listitem> @@ -114,6 +124,10 @@ First a summary, then a detailed log.</para> </itemizedlist> </listitem> +<listitem><para>January 5, 2006 [jhuntwork]: Initial addition of UTF-8 +support. Thanks to Alexander Patrakov.</para> +</listitem> + <listitem><para>January 3, 2006 [matt]: Clarify the description of mktemp's --with-libc configure parameter (fixes bug 1667).</para></listitem> diff --git a/chapter03/packages.xml b/chapter03/packages.xml index 5acbc5ade..52e8b75c5 100644 --- a/chapter03/packages.xml +++ b/chapter03/packages.xml @@ -68,6 +68,13 @@ </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>DB (&db-version;) - 7,925 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="http://dev.sleepycat.com/"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>DejaGNU (&dejagnu-version;) - 852 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&gnu;dejagnu/"/></para> @@ -158,13 +165,26 @@ url="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/download.html#ftp"/>.</para></note> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> -<term>Groff (&groff-version;) - 2,096 KB:</term> +<term>Groff (&groff-version;) - 2,260 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&gnu;groff/"/></para> </listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Groff Debian Patch - 129 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/g/groff/&groff-debian-patch;"/></para> +<note><para>Groff Debian Patch (&groff-version;-&groff-patchlevel;) +may no longer be available at the +listed location. The site administrators of the master download +location occasionally remove older versions when new ones are +released. There is no alternative download location yet.</para></note> +<!-- Actually there's snapshot.debian.net, but they have hardware problems --> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>GRUB (&grub-version;) - 772 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&alpha-gnu;grub/"/></para> @@ -224,7 +244,7 @@ url="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/download.html#ftp"/>.</para></note> <varlistentry> <term>LFS-Bootscripts (&lfs-bootscripts-version;) - 32 KB:</term> <listitem> -<para><ulink url="http://downloads.linuxfromscratch.org/"/></para> +<para><ulink url="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/~dj/bootscripts/"/></para> </listitem> </varlistentry> @@ -264,9 +284,9 @@ url="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/download.html#ftp"/>.</para></note> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> -<term>Man (&man-version;) - 205 KB:</term> +<term>Man-DB (&man-db-version;) - 816 KB:</term> <listitem> -<para><ulink url="http://primates.ximian.com/~flucifredi/man/"/></para> +<para><ulink url="http://savannah.nongnu.org/download/man-db/"/></para> </listitem> </varlistentry> @@ -298,6 +318,19 @@ url="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/download.html#ftp"/>.</para></note> </listitem> </varlistentry> +<!-- +<varlistentry> +<term>Ncurses Rollup Patch (&ncurses-date;) - 328 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="ftp://invisible-island.net/ncurses/&ncurses-version;/"/></para> +<note><para>Ncurses Rollup Patch (&ncurses-date;) may no longer be available at the +listed location. The site administrators of the master download +location occasionally remove older versions when new ones are +released. There is no alternative download location yet.</para></note> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> +--> + <varlistentry> <term>Patch (&patch-version;) - 156 KB:</term> <listitem> diff --git a/chapter03/patches.xml b/chapter03/patches.xml index 85a728d11..239a4c58e 100644 --- a/chapter03/patches.xml +++ b/chapter03/patches.xml @@ -30,6 +30,13 @@ needed to build an LFS system:</para> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Coreutils Internationalization Fixes Patch - 110 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="&alexpatches;&coreutils-i18n-patch;"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>Coreutils Suppress Uptime, Kill, Su Patch - 15 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&patches-root;&coreutils-suppress-patch;"/></para> @@ -44,6 +51,13 @@ needed to build an LFS system:</para> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Diffutils Internationalization Fixes Patch - 18 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="&alexpatches;&diffutils-i18n-patch;"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>Expect Spawn Patch - 7 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&patches-root;&expect-spawn-patch;"/></para> @@ -72,12 +86,26 @@ needed to build an LFS system:</para> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Grep RedHat Fixes Patch - 56 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="&alexpatches;&grep-fixes-patch;"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>Gzip Security Patch - 2 KB:</term><listitem> <para><ulink url="&patches-root;&gzip-security_fix-patch;"/></para> </listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Kbd Backspace/Delete Fix Patch - 1 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="&alexpatches;&kbd-backspace-patch;"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>Kbd GCC-4.x Fix Patch - 1 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&patches-root;&kbd-gcc4_fixes-patch;"/></para> @@ -99,6 +127,13 @@ needed to build an LFS system:</para> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Linux kernel UTF-8 Composing Patch - 3 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="&alexpatches;&linux-utf8-patch;"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>Mktemp Tempfile Patch - 4 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&patches-root;&mktemp-tempfile-patch;"/></para> @@ -106,6 +141,13 @@ needed to build an LFS system:</para> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Ncurses Fixes Patch - 9 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="&alexpatches;&ncurses-fixes-patch;"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>Perl Libc Patch - 1 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&patches-root;&perl-libc-patch;"/></para> @@ -113,6 +155,13 @@ needed to build an LFS system:</para> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Sysklogd 8-Bit Cleanness Patch - 1 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="&lfs-root;patches/downloads/sysklogd/&sysklogd-8bit-patch;"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> <term>Shadow Configure Script Patch - 1KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&patches-root;&shadow-configure-patch;"/></para> @@ -141,6 +190,14 @@ needed to build an LFS system:</para> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> +<term>Texinfo Multibyte Fixes Patch - 1 KB:</term> +<listitem> +<para><ulink url="&alexpatches;&texinfo-multibyte-patch;"/></para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + + +<varlistentry> <term>Texinfo Tempfile Fix Patch - 2 KB:</term> <listitem> <para><ulink url="&patches-root;&texinfo-tempfile_fix-patch;"/></para> diff --git a/chapter05/gawk.xml b/chapter05/gawk.xml index c70d6d1cd..cca7101fc 100644 --- a/chapter05/gawk.xml +++ b/chapter05/gawk.xml @@ -31,11 +31,14 @@ <screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/tools</userinput></screen> -<para>The configure script doesn't detect some functionality correctly. The -following commands correct this problem:</para> - -<screen><userinput>echo "#define HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET 1" >> config.h -echo "#define HAVE_LC_MESSAGES 1" >> config.h</userinput></screen> +<para>Due to a bug in the <command>configure</command> script, Gawk fails +to detect certain aspects of locale support in Glibc. This +bug leads to, e.g., Gettext testsuite failures. Work around this issue +by appending the missing macro definitions to <filename>config.h</filename>:</para> +<screen><userinput>cat >>config.h <<"EOF" +<literal>#define HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET 1 +#define HAVE_LC_MESSAGES 1</literal> +EOF</userinput></screen> <para>Compile the package:</para> diff --git a/chapter05/glibc.xml b/chapter05/glibc.xml index 51d44ad24..cf6a2ee34 100644 --- a/chapter05/glibc.xml +++ b/chapter05/glibc.xml @@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ kernel has and can optimize itself accordingly.</para></listitem> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>--without-selinux</parameter></term> <listitem><para>When building from hosts that include SELinux functionality -(e.g. Fedora Core 3), Glibc will build with support for SELinux. As the LFS +(e.g., Fedora Core 3), Glibc will build with support for SELinux. As the LFS tools environment does not contain support for SELinux, a Glibc compiled with such support will fail to operate correctly.</para></listitem> </varlistentry> @@ -158,38 +158,9 @@ programs works by locale.</para> <note><para>If the test suites are not being run in this chapter (as per the recommendation), there is no need to install the locales now. The appropriate locales will be installed in the next -chapter.</para></note> - -<para>To install the Glibc locales anyway, use the following -command:</para> - -<screen role="nodump"><userinput>make localedata/install-locales</userinput></screen> - -<para>To save time, an alternative to running the -previous command (which generates and installs every locale Glibc is -aware of) is to install only those locales that are wanted and needed. -This can be achieved by using the <command>localedef</command> -command. Information on this command is located in the -<filename>INSTALL</filename> file in the Glibc source. However, there -are a number of locales that are essential in order for the tests of -future packages to pass, in particular, the -<emphasis>libstdc++</emphasis> tests from GCC. The following -instructions, instead of the <parameter>install-locales</parameter> -target used above, will install the minimum set of locales necessary -for the tests to run successfully:</para> - -<screen><userinput>mkdir -pv /tools/lib/locale -localedef -i de_DE -f ISO-8859-1 de_DE -localedef -i de_DE@euro -f ISO-8859-15 de_DE@euro -localedef -i en_HK -f ISO-8859-1 en_HK -localedef -i en_PH -f ISO-8859-1 en_PH -localedef -i en_US -f ISO-8859-1 en_US -localedef -i es_MX -f ISO-8859-1 es_MX -localedef -i fa_IR -f UTF-8 fa_IR -localedef -i fr_FR -f ISO-8859-1 fr_FR -localedef -i fr_FR@euro -f ISO-8859-15 fr_FR@euro -localedef -i it_IT -f ISO-8859-1 it_IT -localedef -i ja_JP -f EUC-JP ja_JP</userinput></screen> +chapter. To install the Glibc locales anyway, use instructions from +<xref linkend="ch-system-glibc" role="."/> +</para></note> </sect2> diff --git a/chapter06/chapter06.xml b/chapter06/chapter06.xml index 82d457cbb..1fb002d0c 100644 --- a/chapter06/chapter06.xml +++ b/chapter06/chapter06.xml @@ -34,6 +34,7 @@ <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="m4.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="bison.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="less.xml"/> +<xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="db.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="groff.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="sed.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="flex.xml"/> @@ -55,7 +56,7 @@ <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="grub.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="gzip.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="hotplug.xml"/> -<xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="man.xml"/> +<xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="man-db.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="make.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="module-init-tools.xml"/> <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude" href="patch.xml"/> diff --git a/chapter06/coreutils.xml b/chapter06/coreutils.xml index 8b06c567b..051869109 100644 --- a/chapter06/coreutils.xml +++ b/chapter06/coreutils.xml @@ -41,6 +41,26 @@ other packages later:</para> <screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&coreutils-suppress-patch;</userinput></screen> +<para>POSIX requires that programs from Coreutils recognize character +boundaries correctly even in multibyte locales. The following patch +fixes this non-compliance and other internationalization-related bugs:</para> + +<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&coreutils-i18n-patch;</userinput></screen> + +<para>In order for the tests added by this patch to pass, the permissions for +the test file have to be changed:</para> + +<screen><userinput>chmod +x tests/sort/sort-mb-tests</userinput></screen> + +<note><para>In the past, many bugs were found in this patch. When reporting +new bugs to Coreutils maintainers, please check first if they are reproducible +without this patch.</para></note> + +<para>It has been found that translated messages sometimes overflow a buffer +in the <command>who -Hu</command> command. Increase the buffer size:</para> + +<screen><userinput>sed -i 's/_LEN 6/_LEN 20/' src/who.c</userinput></screen> + <para>Now prepare Coreutils for compilation:</para> <screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr</userinput></screen> diff --git a/chapter06/db.xml b/chapter06/db.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ae49f34c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/chapter06/db.xml @@ -0,0 +1,218 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> +<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd" [ + <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent"> + %general-entities; +]> +<sect1 id="ch-system-db" role="wrap"> +<title>DB-&db-version;</title> +<?dbhtml filename="db.html"?> + +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db"><primary sortas="a-DB">Berkeley DB</primary></indexterm> + +<sect2 role="package"><title/> +<para>The DB package contains programs and utilities used by many other +applications for database related functions.</para> + +<segmentedlist> +<segtitle>&buildtime;</segtitle> +<segtitle>&diskspace;</segtitle> +<seglistitem><seg>1.0 SBU</seg><seg>74 MB</seg></seglistitem> +</segmentedlist> + +<segmentedlist> +<segtitle>&dependencies;</segtitle> +<seglistitem><seg>Bash, Binutils, Coreutils, +Diffutils, GCC, Glibc, Make and Sed.</seg></seglistitem> +</segmentedlist> +</sect2> + +<sect2 role="installation"> +<title>Installation of DB</title> + +<para>Prepare DB for compilation:</para> + +<screen><userinput>cd build_unix && +../dist/configure --prefix=/usr --enable-compat185 --enable-cxx</userinput></screen> + +<para>The meaning of the configure options:</para> + +<variablelist> +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>--enable-compat185</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>This option enables building DB 1.85 compatibility API.</para></listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>--enable-cxx</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>This option enables building C++ API libraries.</para></listitem> +</varlistentry> +</variablelist> + +<para>Compile the package:</para> + +<screen><userinput>make LIBSO_LIBS="-lpthread" LIBXSO_LIBS="-lpthread"</userinput></screen> + +<para>The meaning of the make option:</para> + +<variablelist> +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>LIBSO_LIBS="-lpthread" LIBXSO_LIBS="-lpthread"</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>These variables work around a bug in the <command>configure</command> +script that causes the DB libraries not to link against NPTL libraries</para></listitem> +</varlistentry> +</variablelist> + +<para>It is not possible to test the package meaningfully, because that +would involve building TCL bindings. TCL bindings cannot be built properly +now because TCL is linked against Glibc in <filename class="directory">/tools</filename>, +not against Glibc in <filename class="directory">/usr</filename>.</para> + +<para>Install the package:</para> + +<screen><userinput>make docdir=/usr/share/doc/db-&db-version; install</userinput></screen> + +<para>The meaning of the make option:</para> + +<variablelist> +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>docdir=...</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>This variable specifies the correct place for the documentation.</para></listitem> +</varlistentry> +</variablelist> + +<para>Fix the permissions on the installed documentation files:</para> + +<screen><userinput>chown root:root /usr/bin/db_* \ + /usr/lib/libdb* /usr/include/db* && +chown -R root:root /usr/share/doc/db-&db-version;</userinput></screen> + +</sect2> + + +<sect2 id="contents-db" role="content"><title>Contents of DB</title> +<segmentedlist> +<segtitle>Installed programs</segtitle> +<seglistitem><seg>db_archive, db_checkpoint, db_deadlock, db_dump, +db_hotbackup, db_load, db_printlog, db_recover, db_stat, db_upgrade and +db_verify +</seg></seglistitem> +</segmentedlist> + +<segmentedlist> +<segtitle>Installed libraries</segtitle> +<seglistitem><seg>libdb.[so,a] and libdb_cxx.[so,a]</seg></seglistitem> +</segmentedlist> + +<variablelist><bridgehead renderas="sect3">Short Descriptions</bridgehead> +<?dbfo list-presentation="list"?> +<?dbhtml list-presentation="table"?> + +<varlistentry id="db_archive"> +<term><command>db_archive</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Prints the pathnames of log files that are no longer in use</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_archive"><primary sortas="b-db_archive">db_archive</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_checkpoint"> +<term><command>db_checkpoint</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>A daemon used to monitor and checkpoint database logs</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_checkpoint"><primary sortas="b-db_checkpoint">db_checkpoint</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_deadlock"> +<term><command>db_deadlock</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>A daemon used to abort lock requests when deadlocks are detected</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_deadlock"><primary sortas="b-db_deadlock">db_deadlock</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_dump"> +<term><command>db_dump</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Converts database files to a plain-text file format readable by <command>db_load</command></para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_dump"><primary sortas="b-db_dump">db_dump</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_hotbackup"> +<term><command>db_hotbackup</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Creates <quote>hot backup</quote> or <quote>hot failover</quote> snapshots of Berkeley DB databases</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_hotbackup"><primary sortas="b-db_hotbackup">db_hotbackup</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_load"> +<term><command>db_load</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Is used to create database files from plain-text files</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_load"><primary sortas="b-db_load">db_load</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_printlog"> +<term><command>db_printlog</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Converts database log files to human readable text</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_printlog"><primary sortas="b-db_printlog">db_printlog</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_recover"> +<term><command>db_recover</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Is used to restore a database to a consistent state after a failure</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_recover"><primary sortas="b-db_recover">db_recover</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_stat"> +<term><command>db_stat</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Displays statistics for Berkeley databases</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_stat"><primary sortas="b-db_stat">db_stat</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_upgrade"> +<term><command>db_upgrade</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Is used to upgrade database files to a newer version of Berkeley DB</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_upgrade"><primary sortas="b-db_upgrade">db_upgrade</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="db_verify"> +<term><command>db_verify</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Is used to run consistency checks on database files</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db db_verify"><primary sortas="b-db_verify">db_verify</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + + +<varlistentry id="libdb"> +<term><filename class="libraryfile">libdb.[so,a]</filename></term> +<listitem> +<para>Contains functions to manipulate database files from C programs</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db libdb"><primary sortas="c-libdb">libdb</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="libdb_cxx"> +<term><filename class="libraryfile">libdb_cxx.[so,a]</filename></term> +<listitem> +<para>Contains functions to manipulate database files from C++ programs</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-db libdb_cxx"><primary sortas="c-libdb_cxx">libdb_cxx</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> +</variablelist> + +</sect2> + +</sect1> diff --git a/chapter06/diffutils.xml b/chapter06/diffutils.xml index ade0ece11..5234bd6c7 100644 --- a/chapter06/diffutils.xml +++ b/chapter06/diffutils.xml @@ -29,6 +29,12 @@ Gettext, Glibc, Grep, Make, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of Diffutils</title> +<para>POSIX requires the <command>diff</command> command to treat whitespace +characters according to the current locale. The following patch fixes the +non-compliance issue:</para> + +<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&diffutils-i18n-patch;</userinput></screen> + <para>Prepare Diffutils for compilation:</para> <screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr</userinput></screen> diff --git a/chapter06/gawk.xml b/chapter06/gawk.xml index 41df7f965..710ef57ef 100644 --- a/chapter06/gawk.xml +++ b/chapter06/gawk.xml @@ -28,8 +28,8 @@ Diffutils, GCC, Gettext, Glibc, Grep, Make, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of Gawk</title> -<para>Patch Gawk to fix a bug which causes it to segfault when invoked on a -non-existent file:</para> +<para>Under some circumstances, Gawk-&gawk-version; attempts to free a chunk +of memory that was not allocated. This bug is fixed by the following patch:</para> <screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&gawk-segfault-patch;</userinput></screen> @@ -37,11 +37,15 @@ non-existent file:</para> <screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr --libexecdir=/usr/lib</userinput></screen> -<para>The configure script doesn't detect some functionality correctly. The -following commands correct this problem:</para> +<para>Due to a bug in the <command>configure</command> script, Gawk fails +to detect certain aspects of locale support in Glibc. This +bug leads to, e.g., Gettext testsuite failures. Work around this issue +by appending the missing macro definitions to <filename>config.h</filename>:</para> -<screen><userinput>echo "#define HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET 1" >> config.h -echo "#define HAVE_LC_MESSAGES 1" >> config.h</userinput></screen> +<screen><userinput>cat >>config.h <<"EOF" +<literal>#define HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET 1 +#define HAVE_LC_MESSAGES 1</literal> +EOF</userinput></screen> <para>Compile the package:</para> diff --git a/chapter06/glibc.xml b/chapter06/glibc.xml index c09759789..14ad42aa6 100644 --- a/chapter06/glibc.xml +++ b/chapter06/glibc.xml @@ -47,6 +47,23 @@ and linker cannot be adjusted before the Glibc install because the Glibc autoconf tests would give false results and defeat the goal of achieving a clean build.</para> +<para>The glibc-libidn tarball adds support for internationalized +domain names (IDN) to Glibc. Many programs that +support IDN require the full libidn library (see +<ulink url="&blfs-root;view/svn/general/libidn.html"/>), +not this add-on. +Unpack the tarball from within the Glibc source +directory:</para> + +<screen><userinput>tar jxf ../glibc-libidn-&glibc-version;.tar.bz2</userinput></screen> + +<para>In the vi_VN.TCVN locale, <command>bash</command> enters an infinite loop +at startup. It is unknown whether this is a <command>bash</command> bug or a +Glibc problem. Disable installation of this locale in order to avoid the +problem:</para> + +<screen><userinput>sed -i '/vi_VN.TCVN/d' localedata/SUPPORTED</userinput></screen> + <para>The Glibc documentation recommends building Glibc outside of the source directory in a dedicated build directory:</para> @@ -121,26 +138,36 @@ Prevent this warning with:</para> <para>Install the package:</para> -<screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen> +<screen><userinput>make install_root=/ install</userinput></screen> -<para>The locales that can make the system respond in a different -language were not installed by the above command. Install this -with:</para> +<para>The meaning of the make option:</para> -<screen><userinput>make localedata/install-locales</userinput></screen> +<variablelist> +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>install_root=/</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>This causes the Glibc Makefile not to run the +<filename>scripts/test-installation.pl</filename> script at the end +of Glibc installation. Since the toolchain has not been adjusted yet for +the new Glibc, this script would test Glibc installed in +<filename class="directory">/tools</filename> and fail because the +libidn add-on has not been installed there.</para></listitem> +</varlistentry> +</variablelist> -<para>To save time, an alternative to running the -previous command (which generates and installs every locale listed in the -glibc-&glibc-version;/localedata/SUPPORTED file) is to install only those -locales that are wanted and needed. This can be achieved by using the -<command>localedef</command> command. Information on this command is located in -the <filename>INSTALL</filename> file in the Glibc source. However, there -are a number of locales that are essential in order for the tests of -future packages to pass, in particular, the -<emphasis>libstdc++</emphasis> tests from GCC. The following -instructions, instead of the <parameter>install-locales</parameter> -target used above, will install the minimum set of locales necessary -for the tests to run successfully:</para> +<para>The locales that can make the system respond in a different +language were not installed by the above command. None of the +locales are required, but, if some of them are misssing, testuites of the +future packages would skip important testcases.</para> + +<para>Individual locales can be installed using the <command>localedef</command> +program. E.g., the first <command>localedef</command> command below combines +the <filename>/usr/share/i18n/locales/de_DE</filename> charset-independent +locale definition with the +<filename>/usr/share/i18n/charmaps/ISO-8859-1.gz</filename> charmap definition +and appends the result to the +<filename>/usr/lib/locale/locale-archive</filename> file. The following +instructions will install the minimum set of locales necessary +for the optimal coverage of tests:</para> <screen role="nodump"><userinput>mkdir -pv /usr/lib/locale localedef -i de_DE -f ISO-8859-1 de_DE @@ -152,23 +179,26 @@ localedef -i es_MX -f ISO-8859-1 es_MX localedef -i fa_IR -f UTF-8 fa_IR localedef -i fr_FR -f ISO-8859-1 fr_FR localedef -i fr_FR@euro -f ISO-8859-15 fr_FR@euro +localedef -i fr_FR.UTF-8 -f UTF-8 fr_FR localedef -i it_IT -f ISO-8859-1 it_IT localedef -i ja_JP -f EUC-JP ja_JP</userinput></screen> -<para>Some locales installed by the <command>make -localedata/install-locales</command> command above are not properly -supported by some applications that are in the LFS and BLFS books. -Because of the various problems that arise due to application -programmers making assumptions that break in such locales, LFS should -not be used in locales that utilize multibyte character sets -(including UTF-8) or right-to-left writing order. Numerous unofficial -and unstable patches are required to fix these problems, and it has -been decided by the LFS developers not to support such complex locales at this -time. This applies to the ja_JP and fa_IR locales as well—they have been -installed only for GCC and Gettext tests to pass, and the -<command>watch</command> program (part of the Procps package) does not work -properly in them. Various attempts to circumvent these restrictions are -documented in internationalization-related hints.</para> +<para>In addition, install the locale for your own country, language and +character set.</para> + +<para>Alternatively, install all locales +listed in the <filename>glibc-&glibc-version;/localedata/SUPPORTED</filename> +file (it includes every locale listed above and many more) +at once with the following time-consuming command:</para> + +<screen><userinput>make localedata/install-locales</userinput></screen> + +<para>Then use the <command>localedef</command> command to create and +install locales not listed in the +<filename>glibc-&glibc-version;/localedata/SUPPORTED</filename> file +in the unlikely case if you need them.</para> +<!-- The Live CD patches the localedata/SUPPORTED file instead of +running localedef, the results are equivalent --> </sect2> @@ -277,7 +307,7 @@ getent, iconv, iconvconfig, ldconfig, ldd, lddlibc4, locale, localedef, mtrace, nscd, nscd_nischeck, pcprofiledump, pt_chown, rpcgen, rpcinfo, sln, sprof, tzselect, xtrace, zdump, and zic</seg> <seg>ld.so, libBrokenLocale.[a,so], -libSegFault.so, libanl.[a,so], libbsd-compat.a, libc.[a,so], +libSegFault.so, libanl.[a,so], libbsd-compat.a, libc.[a,so], libcidn.so, libcrypt.[a,so], libdl.[a,so], libg.a, libieee.a, libm.[a,so], libmcheck.a, libmemusage.so, libnsl.a, libnss_compat.so, libnss_dns.so, libnss_files.so, libnss_hesiod.so, libnss_nis.so, libnss_nisplus.so, libpcprofile.so, @@ -366,8 +396,7 @@ by each given program or shared library</para> <varlistentry id="locale"> <term><command>locale</command></term> <listitem> -<para>Tells the compiler to enable or disable the use of POSIX locales -for built-in operations</para> +<para>Prints various information about the current locale</para> <indexterm zone="ch-system-glibc locale"><primary sortas="b-locale">locale</primary></indexterm> </listitem> </varlistentry> @@ -499,7 +528,10 @@ printing the currently executed function</para> <varlistentry id="libBrokenLocale"> <term><filename class="libraryfile">libBrokenLocale</filename></term> <listitem> -<para>Used by programs, such as Mozilla, to solve broken locales</para> +<para>Used internally by Glibc as a gross hack to get broken programs +(e.g., some Motif applications) running. See comments in +<filename>glibc-&glibc-version;/locale/broken_cur_max.c</filename> for more +information</para> <indexterm zone="ch-system-glibc libBrokenLocale"><primary sortas="c-libBrokenLocale">libBrokenLocale</primary></indexterm> </listitem> </varlistentry> @@ -507,7 +539,8 @@ printing the currently executed function</para> <varlistentry id="libSegFault"> <term><filename class="libraryfile">libSegFault</filename></term> <listitem> -<para>The segmentation fault signal handler</para> +<para>The segmentation fault signal handler, used by +<command>catchsegv</command></para> <indexterm zone="ch-system-glibc libSegFault"><primary sortas="c-libSegFault">libSegFault</primary></indexterm> </listitem> </varlistentry> @@ -537,6 +570,15 @@ in order to run certain Berkey Software Distribution (BSD) programs under Linux< </listitem> </varlistentry> +<varlistentry id="libcidn"> +<term><filename class="libraryfile">libcidn</filename></term> +<listitem> +<para>Used internally by Glibc for handling internationalized domain names in +the <function>getaddrinfo()</function> function</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-glibc libcrypt"><primary sortas="c-libcrypt">libcrypt</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + <varlistentry id="libcrypt"> <term><filename class="libraryfile">libcrypt</filename></term> <listitem> @@ -556,7 +598,8 @@ in order to run certain Berkey Software Distribution (BSD) programs under Linux< <varlistentry id="libg"> <term><filename class="libraryfile">libg</filename></term> <listitem> -<para>A runtime library for <command>g++</command></para> +<para>Dummy library containing no functions. Previously was a runtime library +for <command>g++</command></para> <indexterm zone="ch-system-glibc libg"><primary sortas="c-libg">libg</primary></indexterm> </listitem> </varlistentry> @@ -564,7 +607,9 @@ in order to run certain Berkey Software Distribution (BSD) programs under Linux< <varlistentry id="libieee"> <term><filename class="libraryfile">libieee</filename></term> <listitem> -<para>The Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) floating point library</para> +<para>Linking in this module forces error handling rules for math functions as +defined by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE). +The default is POSIX.1 error handling</para> <indexterm zone="ch-system-glibc libieee"><primary sortas="c-libieee">libieee</primary></indexterm> </listitem> </varlistentry> @@ -580,7 +625,7 @@ in order to run certain Berkey Software Distribution (BSD) programs under Linux< <varlistentry id="libmcheck"> <term><filename class="libraryfile">libmcheck</filename></term> <listitem> -<para>Contains code run at boot</para> +<para>Turns on memory allocation checking when linked to</para> <indexterm zone="ch-system-glibc libmcheck"><primary sortas="c-libmcheck">libmcheck</primary></indexterm> </listitem> </varlistentry> diff --git a/chapter06/grep.xml b/chapter06/grep.xml index 8322c6d45..f050a89a1 100644 --- a/chapter06/grep.xml +++ b/chapter06/grep.xml @@ -28,6 +28,16 @@ Diffutils, GCC, Gettext, Glibc, Make, Sed, and Texinfo</seg></seglistitem> <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of Grep</title> +<para>The current Grep package has many bugs, especially in the support of +multibyte locales. RedHat fixed some of them with the following patch:</para> + +<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&grep-fixes-patch;</userinput></screen> + +<para>In order for the tests added by this patch to pass, the permissions for +the test file have to be changed:</para> + +<screen><userinput>chmod +x tests/fmbtest.sh</userinput></screen> + <para>Prepare Grep for compilation:</para> <screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr --bindir=/bin</userinput></screen> diff --git a/chapter06/groff.xml b/chapter06/groff.xml index a2d8cb7e2..db13ad57e 100644 --- a/chapter06/groff.xml +++ b/chapter06/groff.xml @@ -28,14 +28,35 @@ Gawk, GCC, Glibc, Grep, Make, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of Groff</title> +<para>Apply the patch that adds the <quote>ascii8</quote> and +<quote>nippon</quote> devices to Groff:</para> + +<screen><userinput>zcat ../&groff-debian-patch; | patch -Np1</userinput></screen> + +<note><para>These devices are used by Man-DB when formatting non-English manual +pages that are not in the ISO-8859-1 encoding. Currently, there is no working +patch for Groff-1.19.x that adds this functionality. +<!-- Details: http://bugs.debian.org/196762 --> +</para></note> + +<para>Many screen fonts don't have Unicode single quotes and dashes in them. +Tell Groff to use the ASCII equivalents instead:</para> + +<screen><userinput>sed -i -e 's/2010/002D/' -e 's/2212/002D/' \ + -e 's/2018/0060/' -e 's/2019/0027/' font/devutf8/R.proto +</userinput></screen> + <para>Groff expects the environment variable <envar>PAGE</envar> to contain the default paper size. For users in the United States, <parameter>PAGE=letter</parameter> is appropriate. Elsewhere, -<parameter>PAGE=A4</parameter> may be more suitable.</para> +<parameter>PAGE=A4</parameter> may be more suitable. +While the default paper size is configured during compilation, it can be +overridden later by echoing either <quote>A4</quote> or <quote>letter</quote> +to the <filename>/etc/papersize</filename> file.</para> <para>Prepare Groff for compilation:</para> -<screen><userinput>PAGE=<replaceable>[paper_size]</replaceable> ./configure --prefix=/usr</userinput></screen> +<screen><userinput>PAGE=<replaceable>[paper_size]</replaceable> ./configure --prefix=/usr --enable-multibyte</userinput></screen> <para>Compile the package:</para> diff --git a/chapter06/iproute2.xml b/chapter06/iproute2.xml index 66d1ea86c..09d61143a 100644 --- a/chapter06/iproute2.xml +++ b/chapter06/iproute2.xml @@ -25,22 +25,12 @@ <segmentedlist> <segtitle>&dependencies;</segtitle> <seglistitem> - <seg>GCC, Glibc, Make, Linux-Headers, and Sed</seg> + <seg>DB, GCC, Glibc, Make, and Linux-Headers</seg> </seglistitem> </segmentedlist> </sect2> <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of IPRoute2</title> - <para>The <command>arpd</command> binary included in this package is - dependent on Berkeley DB. Because <command>arpd</command> is not a very - common requirement on a base Linux system, remove the dependency on - Berkeley DB by applying the <command>sed</command> command below. If - the <command>arpd</command> binary is needed, instructions for - compiling Berkeley DB can be found in the BLFS Book at <ulink - url="&blfs-root;view/svn/server/databases.html#db"/>. - </para> - - <screen><userinput>sed -i '/^TARGETS/s@arpd@@g' misc/Makefile</userinput></screen> <para>Prepare IPRoute2 for compilation:</para> <screen><userinput>chmod u+x configure && @@ -68,6 +58,16 @@ <para>Install the package:</para> <screen><userinput>make SBINDIR=/sbin install</userinput></screen> + + <para>The <command>arpd</command> binary links against the DB libraries + that reside in <filename class="directory">/usr</filename> and + uses a database in <filename>/var/lib/arpd/arpd.db</filename>. Thus, + according to the FHS, it must be + in <filename class="directory">/usr/sbin</filename>. Move it there: + </para> + + <screen><userinput>mv -v /sbin/arpd /usr/sbin</userinput></screen> + </sect2> <sect2 id="contents-iproute2" role="content"> @@ -75,8 +75,9 @@ <segmentedlist> <segtitle>Installed programs</segtitle> <seglistitem> - <seg>ctstat (link to lnstat), ifcfg, ifstat, ip, lnstat, nstat, routef, - routel, rtacct, rtmon, rtpr, rtstat (link to lnstat), ss, and tc. + <seg>arpd, ctstat (link to lnstat), ifcfg, ifstat, ip, lnstat, nstat, + routef, routel, rtacct, rtmon, rtpr, rtstat (link to lnstat), ss, + and tc. </seg> </seglistitem> </segmentedlist> @@ -84,6 +85,20 @@ <variablelist><bridgehead renderas="sect3">Short Descriptions</bridgehead> <?dbfo list-presentation="list"?> <?dbhtml list-presentation="table"?> + <varlistentry id="arpd"> + <term> + <command>arpd</command> + </term> + <listitem> + <para>Userspace ARP daemon, useful in really large networks, where + the kernelspace ARP implementation is insufficient, or + when setting up a honeypot</para> + <indexterm zone="ch-system-iproute2 arpd"> + <primary sortas="b-arpd">arpd</primary> + </indexterm> + </listitem> + </varlistentry> + <varlistentry id="ctstat"> <term> <command>ctstat</command> @@ -292,7 +307,7 @@ </term> <listitem> <para>Traffic Controlling Executable; this is for Quality Of -Service (QOS) and Class Of Service (COS) + Service (QOS) and Class Of Service (COS) implementations </para> diff --git a/chapter06/kbd.xml b/chapter06/kbd.xml index 52e8a734c..12d1810ef 100644 --- a/chapter06/kbd.xml +++ b/chapter06/kbd.xml @@ -28,6 +28,15 @@ Diffutils, Flex, GCC, Gettext, Glibc, Grep, Gzip, M4, Make, and Sed</seg></segli <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of Kbd</title> +<para>The behaviour of the Backspace and Delete keys is not consistent across the +keymaps in the Kbd package. The following patch fixes this issue for +i386 keymaps:</para> + +<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&kbd-backspace-patch;</userinput></screen> + +<para>After patching, the Backspace key generates the character with code 127, +and the Delete key generates a well-known escape sequence.</para> + <para>Patch Kbd to fix a bug in <command>setfont</command> that is triggered when compiling with GCC-&gcc-version;:</para> @@ -47,6 +56,11 @@ when compiling with GCC-&gcc-version;:</para> <screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen> +<note><para>For some languages (e.g., Belarusian) the Kbd package doesn't +provide a useful keymap (the stock <quote>by</quote> keymap assumes the +ISO-8859-5 encoding, while everybody uses CP1251 instead). Users of such +languages have to download working keymaps separately.</para></note> + </sect2> <sect2 id="contents-kbd" role="content"><title>Contents of Kbd</title> @@ -274,8 +288,9 @@ pressed on the keyboard</para> <varlistentry id="unicode_start"> <term><command>unicode_start</command></term> <listitem> -<para>Puts the keyboard and console in UNICODE mode. Never use it on LFS, -because applications are not configured to support UNICODE.</para> +<para>Puts the keyboard and console in UNICODE mode. Don't use this program +unless your keymap file is in the ISO-8859-1 encoding. For other encodings, +this utility produces incorrect results.</para> <indexterm zone="ch-system-kbd unicode_start"><primary sortas="b-unicode_start">unicode_start</primary></indexterm> </listitem> </varlistentry> diff --git a/chapter06/man-db.xml b/chapter06/man-db.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5d80c030a --- /dev/null +++ b/chapter06/man-db.xml @@ -0,0 +1,265 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> +<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd" [ + <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent"> + %general-entities; +]> +<sect1 id="ch-system-man-db" role="wrap"> +<title>Man-DB-&man-db-version;</title> +<?dbhtml filename="man-db.html"?> + +<indexterm zone="ch-system-man-db"><primary sortas="a-Man-DB">Man-DB</primary></indexterm> + +<sect2 role="package"><title/> +<para>The Man-DB package contains programs for finding and viewing man pages.</para> + +<segmentedlist> +<segtitle>&buildtime;</segtitle> +<segtitle>&diskspace;</segtitle> +<seglistitem><seg>0.1 SBU</seg><seg>1.1 MB</seg></seglistitem> +</segmentedlist> + +<segmentedlist> +<segtitle>&dependencies;</segtitle> +<seglistitem><seg>Bash, Binutils, Coreutils, Gawk, GCC, DB, +Glibc, Gettext, Grep, Make, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> +</segmentedlist> +</sect2> + +<sect2 role="installation"> +<title>Installation of Man-DB</title> + +<para>Three adjustments need to be made to the sources of Man-DB.</para> + +<para>The first one changes the location of translated manual pages that come +with Man-DB, in order for them to be accessible in both traditional and +UTF-8 locales:</para> + +<screen><userinput>mv man/de{_DE.88591,} && +mv man/es{_ES.88591,} && +mv man/it{_IT.88591,} && +mv man/ja{_JP.eucJP,} && +sed -i 's,\*_\*,??,' man/Makefile.in</userinput></screen> + +<para>The second change is a <command>sed</command> substitution to delete the +<quote>/usr/man</quote> lines in the +<filename>man_db.conf</filename> file to prevent redundant results when +using programs such as <command>whatis</command>:</para> + +<screen><userinput>sed -i '/\t\/usr\/man/d' src/man_db.conf.in</userinput></screen> + +<para>The third change accounts for programs that Man-DB should be able +to find at runtime, but that haven't been installed yet:</para> + +<screen><userinput>cat >>include/manconfig.h.in <<"EOF" +<literal>#define WEB_BROWSER "exec /usr/bin/lynx" +#define COL "/usr/bin/col" +#define VGRIND "/usr/bin/vgrind" +#define GRAP "/usr/bin/grap"</literal> +EOF</userinput></screen> + +<para>The <command>col</command> program is a part of the Util-linux package, +<command>lynx</command> is a text-based web browser +(see BLFS for installation instructions), +<command>vgrind</command> converts program sources to Groff input, +and <command>grap</command> is useful for typesetting graphs in Groff documents. +The <command>vgrind</command> and <command>grap</command> programs are +not normally needed for viewing manual pages. They are +not part of LFS or BLFS, but you should be able to install them yourself +after finishing LFS if you wish to do so.</para> + +<para>Prepare Man-DB for compilation:</para> + +<screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr --enable-mb-groff --disable-setuid</userinput></screen> + +<para>The meaning of the configure options:</para> + +<variablelist> +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>--enable-mb-groff</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>This tells the <command>man</command> program to +use the <quote>ascii8</quote> and <quote>nippon</quote> Groff devices for formatting non-ISO-8859-1 +manual pages.</para></listitem> +</varlistentry> +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>--disable-setuid</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>This disables making the <command>man</command> program +setuid to user <quote>man</quote>.</para></listitem> +</varlistentry> +</variablelist> + +<para>Compile the package:</para> + +<screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen> + +<para>Install the package:</para> + +<screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen> + +<para>Additional information regarding the compression of +man and info pages can be found in the BLFS book at +<ulink url="&blfs-root;view/cvs/postlfs/compressdoc.html"/>.</para> + +</sect2> + +<sect2><title>Non-English Manual Pages in LFS</title> + +<para>Linux distributions have different policies concerning the character +encoding in which manual pages are stored in the filesystem. E.g., RedHat +stores all manual pages in UTF-8, while Debian uses language-specific +(mostly 8-bit) encodings. This leads to incompatibility of packages with +manual pages designed for different distributions.</para> + +<para>LFS uses the same conventions as Debian. The relationship between +language codes and the expected encoding of manual pages is listed below. +Man-DB automatically converts them to the locale encoding while viewing.</para> + +<!-- Origin: man-db-2.4.3/src/encodings.c --> +<table frame='all'><title>Expected character encoding of manual pages</title> +<tgroup cols='2' align='center' colsep='1' rowsep='1'> +<thead> +<row><entry>Language (code)</entry><entry>Encoding</entry></row> +</thead> +<tbody> +<row><entry>Danish (da)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>German (de)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>English (en)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Spanish (es)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Finnish (fi)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>French (fr)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Irish (ga)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Galician (gl)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Indonesian (id)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Icelandic (is)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Italian (it)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Dutch (nl)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<!-- BUG: "no" is deprecated, should use "nb" or "nn" and symlinks --> +<row><entry>Norwegian (no)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<!-- END BUG --> +<row><entry>Portuguese (pt)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<row><entry>Swedish (sv)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-1</entry></row> +<!-- Languages below require patched groff --> +<row><entry>Czech (cs)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-2</entry></row> +<row><entry>Croatian (hr)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-2</entry></row> +<row><entry>Hungarian (hu)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-2</entry></row> +<row><entry>Japanese (ja)</entry><entry>EUC-JP</entry></row> +<row><entry>Korean (ko)</entry><entry>EUC-KR</entry></row> +<row><entry>Polish (pl)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-2</entry></row> +<row><entry>Russian (ru)</entry><entry>KOI8-R</entry></row> +<row><entry>Slovak (sk)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-2</entry></row> +<row><entry>Turkish (tr)</entry><entry>ISO-8859-9</entry></row> +</tbody> +</tgroup> +</table> + +<note><para>Manual pages in languages not in the list are not supported. +Norwegian doesn't work now because of the transition from no_NO to nb_NO +locale, and Korean is non-functional because of the incomplete Groff patch. +</para></note> + +<para>If upstream distributes the manual pages in the same encoding as +Man-DB expects, the manual pages can be copied to +<filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/<replaceable>[language code]</replaceable></filename>. +E.g., French manual pages +(<ulink url="http://ccb.club.fr/man/man-fr-1.58.0.tar.bz2"/>) +can be installed with the following command:</para> + +<screen role="nodump"><userinput>mkdir -p /usr/share/man/fr && +cp -rv man? /usr/share/man/fr</userinput></screen> + +<para>If upstream distributes manual pages in UTF-8 (i.e., <quote>for RedHat</quote>) +instead of the encoding listed in the table above, they have to be +converted from UTF-8 to the encoding listed in the table before +installation. E.g., Spanish manual pages +(<ulink url="http://ditec.um.es/~piernas/manpages-es/man-pages-es-1.55.tar.bz2"/>) +can be installed with the following commands:</para> + +<screen role="nodump"><userinput>mkdir -p /usr/share/man/es && +find man? -type f | grep -v 'man7/iso_8859-7.7' | \ +while read F ; do + iconv -f UTF-8 -t ISO-8859-1 $F >tmp ; mv tmp $F +done && +cp -rv man? /usr/share/man/es</userinput></screen> + +<note>The need to exclude the <filename>man7/iso_8859-7.7</filename> file +from the conversion process because it is already in ISO-8859-1 is a packaging +bug in man-pages-es-1.55. Future versions should not require this workaround.</note> + +</sect2> + +<sect2 id="contents-man-db" role="content"><title>Contents of Man-DB</title> + +<segmentedlist> +<segtitle>Installed programs</segtitle> +<seglistitem><seg>accessdb, apropos, catman, lexgrog, man, mandb, manpath, +and whatis</seg></seglistitem> +</segmentedlist> + +<variablelist><bridgehead renderas="sect3">Short Descriptions</bridgehead> +<?dbfo list-presentation="list"?> +<?dbhtml list-presentation="table"?> + + +<varlistentry id="accessdb"> +<term><command>accessdb</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Dumps the <command>whatis</command> database contents in human-readable form</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-man-db accessdb"><primary sortas="b-accessdb">accessdb</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="apropos"> +<term><command>apropos</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Searches the <command>whatis</command> database and displays the short descriptions +of system commands that contain a given string</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-man-db apropos"><primary sortas="b-apropos">apropos</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="catman"> +<term><command>catman</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Creates or updates the pre-formatted manual pages</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-man-db catman"><primary sortas="b-catman">catman</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="lexgrog"> +<term><command>lexgrog</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Displays one-line summary information about a given manual page</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-man-db lexgrog"><primary sortas="b-lexgrog">lexgrog</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="man"> +<term><command>man</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Formats and displays the requested manual page</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-man-db man"><primary sortas="b-man">man</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="mandb"> +<term><command>mandb</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Creates or updates the <command>whatis</command> database</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-man-db mandb"><primary sortas="b-mandb">mandb</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> + +<varlistentry id="whatis"> +<term><command>whatis</command></term> +<listitem> +<para>Searches the <command>whatis</command> database and displays the short descriptions +of system commands that contain the given keyword as a separate +word</para> +<indexterm zone="ch-system-man-db whatis"><primary sortas="b-whatis">whatis</primary></indexterm> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> +</variablelist> + +</sect2> + +</sect1> + diff --git a/chapter06/man.xml b/chapter06/man.xml index 371985d2e..e69de29bb 100644 --- a/chapter06/man.xml +++ b/chapter06/man.xml @@ -1,180 +0,0 @@ -<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> -<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd" [ - <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent"> - %general-entities; -]> -<sect1 id="ch-system-man" role="wrap"> -<title>Man-&man-version;</title> -<?dbhtml filename="man.html"?> - -<indexterm zone="ch-system-man"><primary sortas="a-Man">Man</primary></indexterm> - -<sect2 role="package"><title/> -<para>The Man package contains programs for finding and viewing man pages.</para> - -<segmentedlist> -<segtitle>&buildtime;</segtitle> -<segtitle>&diskspace;</segtitle> -<seglistitem><seg>0.1 SBU</seg><seg>1.3 MB</seg></seglistitem> -</segmentedlist> - -<segmentedlist> -<segtitle>&dependencies;</segtitle> -<seglistitem><seg>Bash, Binutils, Coreutils, Gawk, GCC, -Glibc, Grep, Make, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> -</segmentedlist> -</sect2> - -<sect2 role="installation"> -<title>Installation of Man</title> - -<para>Two adjustments need to be made to the sources of Man.</para> - -<para>The first is a <command>sed</command> substitution to add the -<parameter>-R</parameter> switch to the <envar>PAGER</envar> -variable so that escape sequences are properly handled by Less:</para> - -<screen><userinput>sed -i 's@-is@&R@g' configure</userinput></screen> - -<para>The second is also a <command>sed</command> substitution to comment out the -<quote>MANPATH /usr/man</quote> line in the -<filename>man.conf</filename> file to prevent redundant results when -using programs such as <command>whatis</command>:</para> - -<screen><userinput>sed -i 's@MANPATH./usr/man@#&@g' src/man.conf.in</userinput></screen> - -<para>Prepare Man for compilation:</para> - -<screen><userinput>./configure -confdir=/etc</userinput></screen> - -<para>The meaning of the configure options:</para> - -<variablelist> -<varlistentry> -<term><parameter>-confdir=/etc</parameter></term> -<listitem><para>This tells the <command>man</command> program to look for the -<filename>man.conf</filename> configuration file in the <filename -class="directory">/etc</filename> directory.</para></listitem> -</varlistentry> -</variablelist> - -<para>Compile the package:</para> - -<screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen> - -<para>This package does not come with a test suite.</para> - -<para>Install the package:</para> - -<screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen> - -<note><para>If you will be working on a terminal that does not support text -attributes such as color and bold, you can disable Select Graphic Rendition -(SGR) escape sequences by editing the <filename>man.conf</filename> file and -adding the <parameter>-c</parameter> option to the <envar>NROFF</envar> -variable. If you use multiple terminal types for one computer it may be better -to selectively add the <envar>GROFF_NO_SGR</envar> environment variable for the -terminals that do not support SGR.</para></note> - -<para>If the character set of the locale uses 8-bit characters, search for the -line beginning with <quote>NROFF</quote> in <filename>/etc/man.conf</filename>, -and verify that it matches the following:</para> - -<screen>NROFF /usr/bin/nroff -Tlatin1 -mandoc</screen> - -<para>Note that <quote>latin1</quote> should be used even if it is not -the character set of the locale. The reason is that, according to the -specification, <command>groff</command> has no means of typesetting -characters outside International Organization for Standards -(ISO) 8859-1 without some strange escape codes. When formatting man -pages, <command>groff</command> thinks that they are in the ISO 8859-1 -encoding and this <parameter>-Tlatin1</parameter> switch tells -<command>groff</command> to use the same encoding for output. Since -<command>groff</command> does no recoding of input characters, the -formatted result is really in the same encoding as input, and therefore -it is usable as the input for a pager.</para> - -<para>This does not solve the problem of a non-working -<command>man2dvi</command> program for localized man pages in -non-ISO 8859-1 locales. Also, it does not work with multibyte -character sets. The first problem does not currently have a solution. -The second issue is not of concern because the LFS installation does -not support multibyte character sets.</para> - -<para>Additional information with regards to the compression of -man and info pages can be found in the BLFS book at -<ulink url="&blfs-root;view/cvs/postlfs/compressdoc.html"/>.</para> - -</sect2> - - -<sect2 id="contents-man" role="content"><title>Contents of Man</title> - -<segmentedlist> -<segtitle>Installed programs</segtitle> -<seglistitem><seg>apropos, makewhatis, man, -man2dvi, man2html, and whatis</seg></seglistitem> -</segmentedlist> - -<variablelist><bridgehead renderas="sect3">Short Descriptions</bridgehead> -<?dbfo list-presentation="list"?> -<?dbhtml list-presentation="table"?> - -<varlistentry id="apropos"> -<term><command>apropos</command></term> -<listitem> -<para>Searches the <command>whatis</command> database and displays the short descriptions -of system commands that contain a given string</para> -<indexterm zone="ch-system-man apropos"><primary sortas="b-apropos">apropos</primary></indexterm> -</listitem> -</varlistentry> - -<varlistentry id="makewhatis"> -<term><command>makewhatis</command></term> -<listitem> -<para>Builds the <command>whatis</command> database; it reads all the man pages -in the <envar>MANPATH</envar> and writes the name and a short description in the -<command>whatis</command> database for each page</para> -<indexterm zone="ch-system-man makewhatis"><primary sortas="b-makewhatis">makewhatis</primary></indexterm> -</listitem> -</varlistentry> - -<varlistentry id="man"> -<term><command>man</command></term> -<listitem> -<para>Formats and displays the requested on-line man page</para> -<indexterm zone="ch-system-man man"><primary sortas="b-man">man</primary></indexterm> -</listitem> -</varlistentry> - -<varlistentry id="man2dvi"> -<term><command>man2dvi</command></term> -<listitem> -<para>Converts a man page into dvi format</para> -<indexterm zone="ch-system-man man2dvi"><primary sortas="b-man2dvi">man2dvi</primary></indexterm> -</listitem> -</varlistentry> - -<varlistentry id="man2html"> -<term><command>man2html</command></term> -<listitem> -<para>Converts a man page into HTML</para> -<indexterm zone="ch-system-man man2html"><primary sortas="b-man2html">man2html</primary></indexterm> -</listitem> -</varlistentry> - -<varlistentry id="whatis"> -<term><command>whatis</command></term> -<listitem> -<para>Searches the <command>whatis</command> database and displays the short descriptions -of system commands that contain the given keyword as a separate -word</para> -<indexterm zone="ch-system-man whatis"><primary sortas="b-whatis">whatis</primary></indexterm> -</listitem> -</varlistentry> -</variablelist> - -</sect2> - -</sect1> - diff --git a/chapter06/ncurses.xml b/chapter06/ncurses.xml index 50e2bdc33..2df394b7a 100644 --- a/chapter06/ncurses.xml +++ b/chapter06/ncurses.xml @@ -28,10 +28,49 @@ Gawk, GCC, Glibc, Grep, Make, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of Ncurses</title> +<!-- Uncomment if using a dated ncurses release instead of a numbered one. + +<para>Since the release of Ncurses-&ncurses-version;, some bugs have been fixed +and features added. The most important news are ....... +To get these fixes and features, apply the rollup patch:</para> + +<screen><userinput>bzcat ../&ncurses-rollup-patch; | patch -Np1</userinput></screen> +--> + +<para>Since the release of Ncurses-&ncurses-version;, a memory leak and some +display bugs were found and fixed upstream. Apply those fixes:</para> + +<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&ncurses-fixes-patch;</userinput></screen> <para>Prepare Ncurses for compilation:</para> -<screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr --with-shared --without-debug</userinput></screen> +<screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr --with-shared --without-debug --enable-widec</userinput></screen> + +<para>The meaning of the configure options:</para> + +<variablelist> +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>--enable-widec</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>This switch causes wide-character libraries +(e.g., <filename class="libraryfile">libncursesw.so.&ncurses-version;</filename>) +to be built instead of normal ones +(e.g., <filename class="libraryfile">libncurses.so.&ncurses-version;</filename>). +These wide-character libraries are usable in both multibyte and traditional 8-bit +locales, while normal libraries work properly only in 8-bit locales. +Wide-character and normal libraries are source-compatible, but not +binary-compatible.</para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> +<!-- +<varlistentry> +<term><parameter>- -without-cxx-binding</parameter></term> +<listitem><para>This optional switch causes the +<filename class="libraryfile">libncurses++w.a</filename> library +not to be built. Nothing in LFS and BLFS uses this library.</para> +</listitem> +</varlistentry> +--> +</variablelist> <para>Compile the package:</para> @@ -49,18 +88,49 @@ Gawk, GCC, Glibc, Grep, Make, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> <para>Fix a library that should not be executable:</para> -<screen><userinput>chmod -v 644 /usr/lib/libncurses++.a</userinput></screen> +<screen><userinput>chmod -v 644 /usr/lib/libncurses++w.a</userinput></screen> <para>Move the libraries to the <filename class="directory">/lib</filename> directory, where they are expected to reside:</para> -<screen><userinput>mv -v /usr/lib/libncurses.so.5* /lib</userinput></screen> - -<para>Because the libraries have been moved, a few symlinks point to -non-existent files. Recreate those symlinks:</para> - -<screen><userinput>ln -sfv ../../lib/libncurses.so.5 /usr/lib/libncurses.so -ln -sfv libncurses.so /usr/lib/libcurses.so</userinput></screen> +<screen><userinput>mv -v /usr/lib/libncursesw.so.5* /lib</userinput></screen> + +<para>Because the libraries have been moved, one symlink points to +a non-existent file. Recreate it:</para> + +<screen><userinput>ln -sfv ../../lib/libncursesw.so.5 /usr/lib/libncursesw.so</userinput></screen> + +<para>Many applications still expect the linker to be able to find +non-wide-character Ncurses libraries. Trick such applications into linking with +wide-character libraries by means of symlinks and linker scripts:</para> + +<screen><userinput>for lib in curses ncurses form panel menu ; do \ + rm -vf /usr/lib/lib${lib}.so ; \ + echo "INPUT(-l${lib}w)" >/usr/lib/lib${lib}.so ; \ + ln -sfv lib${lib}w.a /usr/lib/lib${lib}.a ; \ +done && +ln -sfv libncurses++w.a /usr/lib/libncurses++.a</userinput></screen> + +<para>Finally, make sure that old applications that look for +<filename class="libaryfile">-lcurses</filename> at build time are still +buildable:</para> + +<screen><userinput>echo "INPUT(-lncursesw)" >/usr/lib/libcursesw.so && +ln -sfv libncurses.so /usr/lib/libcurses.so && +ln -sfv libncursesw.a /usr/lib/libcursesw.a && +ln -sfv libncurses.a /usr/lib/libcurses.a</userinput></screen> + +<note><para>The instructions above don't create non-wide-character Ncurses +libraries since no package installed by compiling from sources would link +against them at runtime. +If you must have such libraries because of some binary-only application, +build them with the following commands:</para> +<screen role="nodump"><userinput>make distclean && +./configure --prefix=/usr --with-shared --without-normal \ + --without-debug --without-cxx-binding && +make sources libs && +cp -av lib/lib*.so.5* /usr/lib</userinput></screen> +</note> </sect2> @@ -71,8 +141,10 @@ ln -sfv libncurses.so /usr/lib/libcurses.so</userinput></screen> <segtitle>Installed libraries</segtitle> <seglistitem><seg>captoinfo (link to tic), clear, infocmp, infotocap (link to tic), reset (link to tset), tack, tic, toe, tput, and tset</seg> -<seg>libcurses.[a,so] (link to libncurses.[a,so]), libform.[a,so], libmenu.[a,so], -libncurses++.a, libncurses.[a,so], and libpanel.[a,so]</seg></seglistitem> +<seg>libcursesw.[a,so] (symlink and linker script to libncursesw.[a,so]), +libformw.[a,so], libmenuw.[a,so], +libncurses++w.a, libncursesw.[a,so], libpanelw.[a,so] and their +non-wide-character counterparts without "w" in the library names.</seg></seglistitem> </segmentedlist> <variablelist><bridgehead renderas="sect3">Short Descriptions</bridgehead> @@ -212,4 +284,3 @@ menu displayed during the kernel's <command>make menuconfig</command></para> </sect2> </sect1> - diff --git a/chapter06/perl.xml b/chapter06/perl.xml index 5948a25f6..6d1ea285a 100644 --- a/chapter06/perl.xml +++ b/chapter06/perl.xml @@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ <segmentedlist> <segtitle>&dependencies;</segtitle> -<seglistitem><seg>Bash, Binutils, Coreutils, Diffutils, +<seglistitem><seg>Bash, Binutils, Coreutils, DB, Diffutils, Gawk, GCC, Glibc, Grep, Make, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> </segmentedlist> </sect2> diff --git a/chapter06/readline.xml b/chapter06/readline.xml index 5d4e08c29..235f38e8c 100644 --- a/chapter06/readline.xml +++ b/chapter06/readline.xml @@ -43,7 +43,9 @@ GCC, Glibc, Grep, Make, Ncurses, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>SHLIB_LIBS=-lncurses</parameter></term> <listitem><para>This option forces Readline to link against the -<filename class="libraryfile">libncurses</filename> library.</para></listitem> +<filename class="libraryfile">libncurses</filename> +(really, <filename class="libraryfile">libncursesw</filename>) +library.</para></listitem> </varlistentry> </variablelist> diff --git a/chapter06/shadow.xml b/chapter06/shadow.xml index 810c90c19..1e0d03b0f 100644 --- a/chapter06/shadow.xml +++ b/chapter06/shadow.xml @@ -48,6 +48,11 @@ prior to building Shadow. Then add <parameter>--with-libcrack</parameter> to the <screen><userinput>sed -i 's/groups$(EXEEXT) //' src/Makefile find man -name Makefile -exec sed -i '/groups/d' {} \;</userinput></screen> +<para>Disable the installation of Chinese and Korean manual pages, since Man-DB +cannot format them properly:</para> + +<screen><userinput>sed -i -e 's/ ko//' -e 's/ zh_CN zh_TW//' man/Makefile</userinput></screen> + <para>Compile the package:</para> <screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen> diff --git a/chapter06/sysklogd.xml b/chapter06/sysklogd.xml index fb422e1c8..221e62074 100644 --- a/chapter06/sysklogd.xml +++ b/chapter06/sysklogd.xml @@ -33,6 +33,12 @@ Sysklogd with Linux 2.6 series kernels</para> <screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&sysklogd-fixes-patch;</userinput></screen> +<para>The following patch makes sysklogd treat bytes in the 0x80--0x9f range +literally in the messages being logged, instead of replacing them with octal +codes. Unpatched sysklogd would damage messages in the UTF-8 encoding.</para> + +<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&sysklogd-8bit-patch;</userinput></screen> + <para>Compile the package:</para> <screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen> diff --git a/chapter06/sysvinit.xml b/chapter06/sysvinit.xml index a322e69ec..a82fdd9a8 100644 --- a/chapter06/sysvinit.xml +++ b/chapter06/sysvinit.xml @@ -84,26 +84,15 @@ ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t1 -a -r now su:S016:once:/sbin/sulogin -1:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -I '\033(K' tty1 9600 -2:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -I '\033(K' tty2 9600 -3:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -I '\033(K' tty3 9600 -4:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -I '\033(K' tty4 9600 -5:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -I '\033(K' tty5 9600 -6:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -I '\033(K' tty6 9600 +1:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty tty1 9600 +2:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty tty2 9600 +3:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty tty3 9600 +4:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty tty4 9600 +5:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty tty5 9600 +6:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty tty6 9600 # End /etc/inittab</literal> EOF</userinput></screen> - -<para>The <parameter>-I '\033(K'</parameter> option tells -<command>agetty</command> to send this escape sequence to the terminal -before doing anything else. This escape sequence switches the console -character set to a user-defined one, which can be modified by running -the <command>setfont</command> program. The <command>console</command> -initscript from the LFS-Bootscripts package calls the <command>setfont</command> -program during system startup. Sending this escape sequence is -necessary for people who use non-ISO 8859-1 screen fonts, but it does -not affect native English speakers.</para> - </sect2> diff --git a/chapter06/texinfo.xml b/chapter06/texinfo.xml index fc3138517..93c83c465 100644 --- a/chapter06/texinfo.xml +++ b/chapter06/texinfo.xml @@ -29,6 +29,14 @@ Diffutils, GCC, Gettext, Glibc, Grep, Make, Ncurses, and Sed</seg></seglistitem> <sect2 role="installation"> <title>Installation of Texinfo</title> +<para>The <command>info</command> program makes assumptions such as that +a string occupies the same number of character cells on the screen and bytes +in memory and that one can break the string anywhere, which fail in +UTF-8 based locales. The patch below makes them valid +by falling back to English messages when a multibyte locale is in use:</para> + +<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&texinfo-multibyte-patch;</userinput></screen> + <para>Texinfo allows local users to overwrite arbitrary files via a symlink attack on temporary files. Apply the following patch to fix this:</para> @@ -63,6 +71,7 @@ root of the TeX tree if, for example, a TeX package will be installed later.</para></listitem> </varlistentry> </variablelist> +<!-- FIXME: doesn't the TeX installation in BLFS overwrite files there? --> <para>The Info documentation system uses a plain text file to hold its list of menu entries. The file is located at diff --git a/chapter06/udev.xml b/chapter06/udev.xml index 3d89e3187..8b77b1b58 100644 --- a/chapter06/udev.xml +++ b/chapter06/udev.xml @@ -78,6 +78,7 @@ the configuration files here:</para> <screen><userinput>install -m644 -D -v docs/writing_udev_rules/index.html /usr/share/doc/udev-&udev-version;/index.html</userinput></screen> +<!-- Not for the LiveCD --> <!-- Edit Me --> <para>Run the <command>udevstart</command> program to create our full complement of device nodes.</para> diff --git a/chapter06/vim.xml b/chapter06/vim.xml index 2083d4786..aecbe3ac8 100644 --- a/chapter06/vim.xml +++ b/chapter06/vim.xml @@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ class="directory">/etc</filename>:</para> <variablelist> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>--enable-multibyte</parameter></term> -<listitem><para>This optional but highly recommended switch enables support for +<listitem><para>This switch enables support for editing files in multibyte character encodings. This is needed if using a locale with a multibyte character set. This switch is also helpful to be able to edit text files initially created in Linux distributions like Fedora Core that @@ -75,6 +75,18 @@ redirecting the output to a log file.</para> <screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen> +<para>In UTF-8 locales, the <command>vimtutor</command> program +tries to convert the tutorials from ISO-8859-1 to UTF-8. Since +some tutorials are not in ISO-8859-1, the text in them is thus made unreadable. +If you unpacked the <filename>vim-&vim-version;-lang.tar.gz</filename> +archive and are going to use a UTF-8 based locale, remove non-ISO-8859-1 +tutorials. An English tutorial will be used instead.</para> +<!-- Removal is used instead of conversion in order for the user to be able to +painlessly revert his UTF-8 locale choice. --> + +<screen><userinput>rm -f /usr/share/vim/vim63/tutor/tutor.{gr,pl,ru,sk} +rm -f /usr/share/vim/vim63/tutor/tutor.??.*</userinput></screen> + <para>Many users are used to using <command>vi</command> instead of <command>vim</command>. To allow execution of <command>vim</command> when users habitually enter <command>vi</command>, create a diff --git a/chapter07/console.xml b/chapter07/console.xml index 315112366..ee34edcb9 100644 --- a/chapter07/console.xml +++ b/chapter07/console.xml @@ -17,96 +17,209 @@ <para>This section discusses how to configure the <command>console</command> bootscript that sets up the keyboard map and the console font. If non-ASCII - characters (e.g., the British pound sign and Euro character) will not be used - and the keyboard is a U.S. one, skip this section. Without the configuration - file, the <command>console</command> bootscript will do nothing.</para> + characters (e.g., the copyright sign, the British pound sign and Euro symbol) + will not be used and the keyboard is a U.S. one, skip this section. Without + the configuration file, the <command>console</command> bootscript will do + nothing.</para> <para>The <command>console</command> script reads the <filename>/etc/sysconfig/console</filename> file for configuration information. Decide which keymap and screen font will be used. Various language-specific - HOWTO's can also help with this (see <ulink - url="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX/other-lang.html"/>. A pre-made - <filename>/etc/sysconfig/console</filename> file with known settings for several - countries was installed with the LFS-Bootscripts package, so the relevant - section can be uncommented if the country is supported. If still in doubt, look - in the <filename class="directory">/usr/share/kbd</filename> directory for valid - keymaps and screen fonts. Read <filename>loadkeys(1)</filename> and - <filename>setfont(8)</filename> to determine the correct arguments for - these programs. Once decided, create the configuration file with the following - command:</para> - -<screen><userinput>cat >/etc/sysconfig/console <<"EOF" -<literal>KEYMAP="<replaceable>[arguments for loadkeys]</replaceable>" -FONT="<replaceable>[arguments for setfont]</replaceable>"</literal> + HOWTOs can also help with this, see <ulink + url="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX/other-lang.html"/>. If still in + doubt, look in the <filename class="directory">/usr/share/kbd</filename> + directory for valid keymaps and screen fonts. Read + <filename>loadkeys(1)</filename> and <filename>setfont(8)</filename> manual + pages to determine the correct arguments for these programs.</para> + + <para>The <filename>/etc/sysconfig/console</filename> file should contain lines + of the form: VARIABLE="value". The following variables are recognized:</para> + + <variablelist> + + <varlistentry> + <term>KEYMAP</term> + <listitem> + <para>This variable specifies the arguments for the + <command>loadkeys</command> program, typically, the name of keymap + to load, e.g., <quote>es</quote>. If this variable is not set, the + bootscript will not run the <command>loadkeys</command> program, + and the default kernel keymap will be used.</para> + </listitem> + </varlistentry> + + <varlistentry> + <term>KEYMAP_CORRECTIONS</term> + <listitem> + <para>This (rarely used) variable + specifies the arguments for the second call to the + <command>loadkeys</command> program. This is useful if the stock keymap + is not completely satisfactory and a small adjustment has to be made. E.g., + to include the Euro sign into a keymap that normally doesn't have it, + set this variable to <quote>euro2</quote>.</para> + </listitem> + </varlistentry> + + <varlistentry> + <term>FONT</term> + <listitem> + <para>This variable specifies the arguments for the + <command>setfont</command> program. Typically, this includes the font + name, <quote>-m</quote>, and the name of the application character + map to load. E.g., in order to load the <quote>lat1-16</quote> font + together with the <quote>8859-1</quote> application character map + (as it is appropriate in the USA), <!-- because of the copyright sign --> + set this variable to <quote>lat1-16 -m 8859-1</quote>. + If this variable is not set, the bootscript will not run the + <command>setfont</command> program, and the default VGA font will be + used together with the default application character map.</para> + </listitem> + </varlistentry> + + <varlistentry> + <term>UNICODE</term> + <listitem> + <para>Set this variable to <quote>1</quote>, <quote>yes</quote> or + <quote>true</quote> in order to put the + console into UTF-8 mode. This is useful in UTF-8 based locales and + harmful otherwise.</para> + </listitem> + </varlistentry> + + <varlistentry> + <term>LEGACY_CHARSET</term> + <listitem> + <para>For many keyboard layouts, there is no stock Unicode keymap in + the Kbd package. The <command>console</command> bootscript will + convert an available keymap to UTF-8 on the fly if this variable is + set to the encoding of the available non-UTF-8 keymap. Note, however, + that dead keys (i.e., keys that don't produce a character by + themselves, but put an accent onto a character procuced by the next + key; there are no dead keys on the standard US keyboard) and composing + (i.e., pressing Ctrl+. A E in order to produce the Æ character) + will not work in UTF-8 mode without the special kernel patch. + This variable is useful only in UTF-8 mode.</para> + </listitem> + </varlistentry> + + <varlistentry> + <term>BROKEN_COMPOSE</term> + <listitem> + <para>Set this to <quote>0</quote> if you are going to apply the kernel patch in + Chapter 8. Note that you also have to add the character set expected + by composition rules in your keymap to the FONT variable after the + <quote>-m</quote> switch. This variable is useful only in UTF-8 mode.</para> + </listitem> + </varlistentry> + + </variablelist> + + <para>Support for compiling the keymap directly into the kernel has been + removed because there were reports that it leads to incorrect results.</para> + + <para>Some examples:</para> + + <itemizedlist> + + <listitem> + <para>For a non-Unicode setup, only the KEYMAP and FONT variables are + generally needed. E.g., for a Polish setup, one would use:</para> + +<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat > /etc/sysconfig/console << "EOF" +<literal># Begin /etc/sysconfig/console + +KEYMAP="pl2" +FONT="lat2a-16 -m 8859-2" + +# End /etc/sysconfig/console</literal> EOF</userinput></screen> + </listitem> - <para>For example, for Spanish users who also want to use the Euro - character (accessible by pressing AltGr+E), the following settings are - correct:</para> + <listitem> + <para>As mentioned above, it is sometimes necessary to adjust a + stock keymap slightly. The following example adds the Euro symbol to the + German keymap:</para> -<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat >/etc/sysconfig/console <<"EOF" -<literal>KEYMAP="es euro2" -FONT="lat9-16 -u iso01"</literal> +<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat > /etc/sysconfig/console << "EOF" +<literal># Begin /etc/sysconfig/console + +KEYMAP="de-latin1" +KEYMAP_CORRECTIONS="euro2" +FONT="lat0-16 -m 8859-15" + +# End /etc/sysconfig/console</literal> EOF</userinput></screen> + </listitem> - <note> - <para>The <envar>FONT</envar> line above is correct only for the ISO 8859-15 - character set. If using ISO 8859-1 and, therefore, a pound sign - instead of Euro, the correct <envar>FONT</envar> line would be:</para> + <listitem> + <para>The following is a Unicode-enabled example for Bulgarian, where a stock + UTF-8 keymap exists and defines no dead keys or composition rules:</para> -<screen role="nodump"><userinput>FONT="lat1-16"</userinput></screen> - </note> +<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat > /etc/sysconfig/console << "EOF" +<literal># Begin /etc/sysconfig/console + +UNICODE="1" +KEYMAP="bg_bds-utf8" +FONT="LatArCyrHeb-16" + +# End /etc/sysconfig/console</literal> +EOF</userinput></screen> + </listitem> + + <listitem> + <para>Due to the use of a 512-glyph LatArCyrHeb-16 font in the previous + example, bright colors are no longer available on the Linux console unless + a framebuffer is used. If one wants to have bright colors without + framebuffer and can live without characters not belonging to his language, + it is still possible to use a language-specific 256-glyph font, as + illustrated below.</para> - <para>If the <envar>KEYMAP</envar> or <envar>FONT</envar> variable is not set, - the <command>console</command> initscript will not run the corresponding - program.</para> - - <para>In some keymaps, the Backspace and Delete keys send characters different - from ones in the default keymap built into the kernel. This confuses some - applications. For example, Emacs displays its help (instead of erasing the - character before the cursor) when Backspace is pressed. To check if the keymap - in use is affected (this works only for i386 keymaps):</para> - -<screen role="nodump"><userinput>zgrep '\W14\W' <replaceable>[/path/to/your/keymap]</replaceable></userinput></screen> - - <para>If the keycode 14 is Backspace instead of Delete, create the - following keymap snippet to fix this issue:</para> - -<screen role="nodump"><userinput>mkdir -pv /etc/kbd && cat > /etc/kbd/bs-sends-del <<"EOF" -<literal> keycode 14 = Delete Delete Delete Delete - alt keycode 14 = Meta_Delete - altgr alt keycode 14 = Meta_Delete - keycode 111 = Remove - altgr control keycode 111 = Boot - control alt keycode 111 = Boot -altgr control alt keycode 111 = Boot</literal> +<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat > /etc/sysconfig/console << "EOF" +<literal># Begin /etc/sysconfig/console + +UNICODE="1" +KEYMAP="bg_bds-utf8" +FONT="cyr-sun16" + +# End /etc/sysconfig/console</literal> EOF</userinput></screen> + </listitem> + + <listitem> + <para>The following example illustrates keymap autoconversion from + ISO-8859-15 to UTF-8 and enabling dead keys in Unicode mode:</para> + +<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat > /etc/sysconfig/console << "EOF" +<literal># Begin /etc/sysconfig/console - <para>Tell the <command>console</command> script to load this - snippet after the main keymap:</para> +UNICODE="1" +KEYMAP="de-latin1" +KEYMAP_CORRECTIONS="euro2" +LEGACY_CHARSET="iso-8859-15" +BROKEN_COMPOSE="0" +FONT="LatArCyrHeb-16 -m 8859-15" -<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat >>/etc/sysconfig/console <<"EOF" -<literal>KEYMAP_CORRECTIONS="/etc/kbd/bs-sends-del"</literal> +# End /etc/sysconfig/console</literal> EOF</userinput></screen> + </listitem> - <para>To compile the keymap directly into the kernel instead of - setting it every time from the <command>console</command> bootscript, - follow the instructions given in <xref linkend="ch-bootable-kernel" role="."/> - Doing this ensures that the keyboard will always work as expected, - even when booting into maintenance mode (by passing - <parameter>init=/bin/sh</parameter> to the kernel), because the - <command>console</command> bootscript will not be run in that - situation. Additionally, the kernel will not set the screen font - automatically. This should not pose many problems because ASCII characters - will be handled correctly, and it is unlikely that a user would need - to rely on non-ASCII characters while in maintenance mode.</para> - - <para>Since the kernel will set up the keymap, it is possible to omit - the <envar>KEYMAP</envar> variable from the - <filename>/etc/sysconfig/console</filename> configuration file. It can - also be left in place, if desired, without consequence. Keeping it - could be beneficial if running several different kernels where it is - difficult to ensure that the keymap is compiled into every one of - them.</para> + <listitem> + <para>For Chinese, Japanese, Korean and some other languages, the Linux + console cannot be configured to display the needed characters. Users + who need such languages should install the X Window System, fonts that + cover the necessary character ranges, and the proper input method (e.g., + SCIM, it supports a wide variety of languages).</para> + </listitem> + + </itemizedlist> + + <!-- Added because folks keep posting their console file with X questions + to blfs-support list --> + <note> + <para>The <filename>/etc/sysconfig/console</filename> file only controls the + Linux text console localization. It has nothing to do with setting the proper + keyboard layout and terminal fonts in the X Window System, with ssh sessions + or with a serial console.</para> + </note> </sect1> diff --git a/chapter07/profile.xml b/chapter07/profile.xml index dd53a5141..e2748d9df 100644 --- a/chapter07/profile.xml +++ b/chapter07/profile.xml @@ -69,17 +69,20 @@ for the desired language (e.g., <quote>en</quote>) and <replaceable>[CC]</replaceable> with the two-letter code for the appropriate country (e.g., <quote>GB</quote>). <replaceable>[charmap]</replaceable> should - be replaced with the canonical charmap for your chosen locale.</para> + be replaced with the canonical charmap for your chosen locale. Optional + modifiers such as <quote>@euro</quote> may also be present.</para> <para>The list of all locales supported by Glibc can be obtained by running the following command:</para> <screen role="nodump"><userinput>locale -a</userinput></screen> - <para>Locales can have a number of synonyms, e.g. <quote>ISO-8859-1</quote> + <para>Charmaps can have a number of aliases, e.g., <quote>ISO-8859-1</quote> is also referred to as <quote>iso8859-1</quote> and <quote>iso88591</quote>. - Some applications cannot handle the various synonyms correctly, so it is - safest to choose the canonical name for a particular locale. To determine + Some applications cannot handle the various synonyms correctly (e.g., require + that <quote>UTF-8</quote> is written as <quote>UTF-8</quote>, not + <quote>utf8</quote>), so it is safest in most + cases to choose the canonical name for a particular locale. To determine the canonical name, run the following command, where <replaceable>[locale name]</replaceable> is the output given by <command>locale -a</command> for your preferred locale (<quote>en_GB.iso88591</quote> in our example).</para> @@ -115,6 +118,7 @@ LC_ALL=[locale name] locale int_prefix</userinput></screen> Further instructions assume that there are no such error messages from Glibc.</para> + <!-- FIXME: the xlib example will became obsolete real soon --> <para>Some packages beyond LFS may also lack support for your chosen locale. One example is the X library (part of the X Window System), which outputs the following error message:</para> @@ -139,23 +143,33 @@ LC_ALL=[locale name] locale int_prefix</userinput></screen> <screen><userinput>cat > /etc/profile << "EOF" <literal># Begin /etc/profile -export LANG=<replaceable>[ll]</replaceable>_<replaceable>[CC]</replaceable>.<replaceable>[charmap]</replaceable> +export LANG=<replaceable>[ll]</replaceable>_<replaceable>[CC]</replaceable>.<replaceable>[charmap]</replaceable><replaceable>[@modifiers]</replaceable> export INPUTRC=/etc/inputrc # End /etc/profile</literal> EOF</userinput></screen> - <note> - <para>The <quote>C</quote> (default) and <quote>en_US</quote> (the - recommended one for United States English users) locales are different.</para> - </note> - - <para>Setting the keyboard layout, screen font, and locale-related environment - variables are the only internationalization steps needed to support locales - that use ordinary single-byte encodings and left-to-right writing direction. - More complex cases (including UTF-8 based locales) require additional steps - and additional patches because many applications tend to not work properly - under such conditions. These steps and patches are not included in the LFS - book and such locales are not yet supported by LFS.</para> + <para>The <quote>C</quote> (default) and <quote>en_US</quote> (the recommended + one for United States English users) locales are different. <quote>C</quote> + uses the US-ASCII 7-bit character set, and treats bytes with the high bit set + as invalid characters. That's why, e.g., the <command>ls</command> command + substitutes them with question marks in that locale. Also, an attempt to send + mail with such characters from Mutt or Pine results in non-RFC-conforming + messages being sent (the charset in the outgoing mail is indicated as <quote>unknown + 8-bit</quote>). So you can use the <quote>C</quote> locale only if you are sure that + you will never need 8-bit characters.</para> + + <para>UTF-8 based locales are not supported well by many programs. E.g., the + <command>watch</command> program displays only ASCII characters in UTF-8 + locales and has no such restriction in traditional 8-bit locales like en_US. + Without patches and/or installing software beyond BLFS, in UTF-8 based locales + you will not be able to do such basic tasks as printing plain-text files from + the command line, recording Windows-readable CDs with filenames containing + non-ASCII characters, viewing ID3v1 tags in MP3 files and so on. Work is in + progress to document and, if possible, fix such problems, see + <ulink url="&blfs-root;view/svn/introduction/locale-issues.html"/>. + It is, however, safe to use UTF-8 based locales if you are going to use only + KDE or GNOME and never open the terminal.</para> + <!-- All abovementioned problems except "watch" have a known fix beyond BLFS --> </sect1> diff --git a/chapter08/fstab.xml b/chapter08/fstab.xml index 439057b4f..fb7961346 100644 --- a/chapter08/fstab.xml +++ b/chapter08/fstab.xml @@ -65,4 +65,43 @@ EOF</userinput></screen> <filename>usbcore</filename> must be listed in <filename>/etc/sysconfig/modules</filename>.</para> + <para>Filesystems with MS-DOS or Windows origin (i.e.: vfat, ntfs, smbfs, cifs, + iso9660, udf) need the <quote>iocharset</quote> mount option in order for + non-ASCII characters in file names to be interpreted properly. The value + of this option should be the same as the character set of your locale, + adjusted in such a way that the kernel understands it. This works if the + relevant character set definition (found under File systems -> + Native Language Support) has been compiled into the kernel + or built as a module. The <quote>codepage</quote> option is also needed for + vfat and smbfs filesystems. It + should be set to the codepage number used under MS-DOS in your country. E.g., + in order to mount USB flash drives, a ru_RU.KOI8-R user would need the + following line in <filename>/etc/fstab</filename>:</para> + +<screen>/dev/sda1 /media/flash vfat noauto,user,quiet,showexec,iocharset=koi8r,codepage=866 0 0</screen> + + <para>The corresponding line for ru_RU.UTF-8 users is:</para> + +<screen>/dev/sda1 /media/flash vfat noauto,user,quiet,showexec,iocharset=utf8,codepage=866 0 0</screen> + + <note><para>In the latter case, the kernel emits the following message:</para> + +<screen><computeroutput>FAT: utf8 is not a recommended IO charset for FAT filesystems, filesystem will be case sensitive!</computeroutput></screen> + + <para>This negative recommendation should be ignored, since all other values + of the <quote>iocharset</quote> option result in wrong display of filenames in + UTF-8 locales.</para></note> + + <para>It is also possible to specify default codepage and iocharset values for + some filesystems during kernel configuration. The relevant parameters + are named + <quote>Default NLS Option</quote> (CONFIG_NLS_DEFAULT), + <quote>Default Remote NLS Option</quote> (CONFIG_SMB_NLS_DEFAULT), + <quote>Default codepage for FAT</quote> (CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_CODEPAGE), and + <quote>Default iocharset for FAT</quote> (CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_IOCHARSET). + There is no way to specify these settings for the + ntfs filesystem at kernel compilation time.</para> + <!-- Personally, I find it more foolproof to always specify the iocharset and + codepage in /etc/fstab for MS-based filesystems - Alexander E. Patrakov --> + </sect1> diff --git a/chapter08/kernel.xml b/chapter08/kernel.xml index fcac33a39..457e1c2fb 100644 --- a/chapter08/kernel.xml +++ b/chapter08/kernel.xml @@ -48,6 +48,13 @@ in the kernel source tree for alternative methods to the way this book configures the kernel.</para> + <para>By default, the Linux kernel generates wrong sequences of bytes when + dead keys are used in UTF-8 keyboard mode. Also, one cannot copy and paste + non-ASCII characters when UTF-8 mode is active. Fix these issues with the + patch:</para> + +<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&linux-utf8-patch;</userinput></screen> + <para>Prepare for compilation by running the following command:</para> <screen><userinput>make mrproper</userinput></screen> @@ -57,14 +64,7 @@ kernel compilation. Do not rely on the source tree being clean after un-tarring.</para> - <para>If, in <xref linkend="ch-scripts-console" role=","/> it was decided to - compile the keymap into the kernel, issue the command below:</para> - -<screen role="nodump"><userinput>loadkeys -m /usr/share/kbd/keymaps/<replaceable>[path to keymap]</replaceable> > \ - drivers/char/defkeymap.c</userinput></screen> - - <para>For example, if using a Dutch keyboard, use - <filename>/usr/share/kbd/keymaps/i386/qwerty/nl.map.gz</filename>.</para> + <!-- Support for compiling a keymap into the kernel is deliberately removed --> <para>Configure the kernel via a menu-driven interface. BLFS has some information regarding particular kernel configuration requirements of diff --git a/general.ent b/general.ent index 1d474f0c7..a3d990ae2 100644 --- a/general.ent +++ b/general.ent @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> -<!ENTITY version "SVN-20060103"> -<!ENTITY releasedate "January 3, 2006"> +<!ENTITY version "SVN-20060105"> +<!ENTITY releasedate "January 5, 2006"> <!ENTITY milestone "6.2"> <!ENTITY generic-version "development"> <!-- Use "development", "testing", or "x.y[-pre{x}]" --> @@ -22,6 +22,7 @@ <!ENTITY alpha-gnu "ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/"> <!ENTITY kernel "http://www.kernel.org/pub/"> <!ENTITY sourceforge "http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/"> +<!ENTITY alexpatches "&lfs-root;~alexander/patches/"> <!ENTITY % patches-entities SYSTEM "patches.ent"> %patches-entities; @@ -34,6 +35,7 @@ <!ENTITY bison-version "2.1"> <!ENTITY bzip2-version "1.0.3"> <!ENTITY coreutils-version "5.93"> +<!ENTITY db-version "4.4.16"> <!ENTITY dejagnu-version "1.4.4"> <!ENTITY diffutils-version "2.8.1"> <!ENTITY e2fsprogs-version "1.38"> @@ -47,7 +49,8 @@ <!ENTITY gettext-version "0.14.5"> <!ENTITY glibc-version "2.3.6"> <!ENTITY grep-version "2.5.1a"> -<!ENTITY groff-version "1.19.2"> +<!ENTITY groff-version "1.18.1.1"> +<!ENTITY groff-patchlevel "10"> <!ENTITY grub-version "0.97"> <!ENTITY gzip-version "1.3.5"> <!ENTITY hotplug-version "2004_09_23"> @@ -56,18 +59,19 @@ <!ENTITY iproute2-version "051007"> <!ENTITY kbd-version "1.12"> <!ENTITY less-version "394"> -<!ENTITY lfs-bootscripts-version "3.2.1"> +<!ENTITY lfs-bootscripts-version "20051223"> <!ENTITY libtool-version "1.5.22"> <!ENTITY linux-version "2.6.12.5"> <!ENTITY linux-dl-version "2.6"> <!ENTITY linux-libc-headers-version "2.6.12.0"> <!ENTITY m4-version "1.4.4"> <!ENTITY make-version "3.80"> -<!ENTITY man-version "1.6b"> +<!ENTITY man-db-version "2.4.3"> <!ENTITY man-pages-version "2.18"> <!ENTITY mktemp-version "1.5"> <!ENTITY module-init-tools-version "3.2.2"> <!ENTITY ncurses-version "5.5"> +<!-- <!ENTITY ncurses-date "20050319"> --> <!ENTITY patch-version "2.5.4"> <!ENTITY perl-version "5.8.7"> <!ENTITY procps-version "3.2.6"> diff --git a/patches.ent b/patches.ent index 4d1331cd2..1f4fafa50 100644 --- a/patches.ent +++ b/patches.ent @@ -1,12 +1,15 @@ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <!-- Start of Common Patches --> -<!ENTITY bzip2-docs-patch "bzip2-&bzip2-version;-install_docs-1.patch"> <!ENTITY bzip2-bzgrep-patch "bzip2-&bzip2-version;-bzgrep_security-1.patch"> +<!ENTITY bzip2-docs-patch "bzip2-&bzip2-version;-install_docs-1.patch"> +<!ENTITY coreutils-i18n-patch "coreutils-&coreutils-version;-i18n-1.patch"> <!ENTITY coreutils-suppress-patch "coreutils-&coreutils-version;-suppress_uptime_kill_su-1.patch"> <!ENTITY coreutils-uname-patch "coreutils-&coreutils-version;-uname-1.patch"> +<!ENTITY diffutils-i18n-patch "diffutils-&diffutils-version;-i18n-1.patch"> + <!ENTITY expect-spawn-patch "expect-&expect-version;-spawn-1.patch"> <!ENTITY flex-fixes-patch "flex-&flex-version;-debian_fixes-3.patch"> @@ -15,24 +18,37 @@ <!ENTITY gcc-specs-patch "gcc-&gcc-version;-specs-1.patch"> +<!ENTITY grep-fixes-patch "grep-&grep-version;-redhat_fixes-2.patch"> + +<!ENTITY groff-debian-patch "groff_&groff-version;-&groff-patchlevel;.diff.gz"> + <!ENTITY gzip-security_fix-patch "gzip-&gzip-version;-security_fixes-1.patch"> +<!ENTITY kbd-backspace-patch "kbd-&kbd-version;-backspace-1.patch"> <!ENTITY kbd-gcc4_fixes-patch "kbd-&kbd-version;-gcc4_fixes-1.patch"> <!ENTITY inetutils-gcc4_fixes-patch "inetutils-&inetutils-version;-gcc4_fixes-3.patch"> <!ENTITY inetutils-man_pages-patch "inetutils-&inetutils-version;-no_server_man_pages-1.patch"> +<!ENTITY linux-utf8-patch "linux-&linux-version;-utf8_input-2.patch"> + <!ENTITY mktemp-tempfile-patch "mktemp-&mktemp-version;-add_tempfile-3.patch"> +<!ENTITY ncurses-fixes-patch "ncurses-&ncurses-version;-fixes-1.patch"> +<!-- <!ENTITY ncurses-rollup-patch "ncurses-&ncurses-version;-&ncurses-date;-patch.sh.bz2"> --> + <!ENTITY perl-libc-patch "perl-&perl-version;-libc-1.patch"> +<!ENTITY sysklogd-8bit-patch "sysklogd-&sysklogd-version;-8bit-1.patch"> + <!ENTITY shadow-configure-patch "shadow-&shadow-version;-configure_fix-1.patch"> <!ENTITY sysklogd-fixes-patch "sysklogd-&sysklogd-version;-fixes-1.patch"> -<!ENTITY tar-sparse_fix-patch "tar-&tar-version;-sparse_fix-1.patch"> <!ENTITY tar-gcc4_fix-patch "tar-&tar-version;-gcc4_fix_tests-1.patch"> +<!ENTITY tar-sparse_fix-patch "tar-&tar-version;-sparse_fix-1.patch"> -<!ENTITY texinfo-tempfile_fix-patch "texinfo-&texinfo-version;-tempfile_fix-2.patch"> +<!ENTITY texinfo-multibyte-patch "texinfo-&texinfo-version;-multibyte-2.patch"> +<!ENTITY texinfo-tempfile_fix-patch "texinfo-&texinfo-version;-tempfile_fix-1.patch"> <!ENTITY util-linux-cramfs-patch "util-linux-&util-linux-version;-cramfs-1.patch"> |