Creating a new partition
In order to build our new Linux system, we will need some space:
an empty disk partition. If you don't have a free partition, and no room
on any of your hard disks to make one, then you could build LFS on the
same partition as the one on which your current distribution is installed.
This procedure is not recommended for your first LFS install, but if you
are short on disk space, and you feel brave, take a look at the hint at
.
For a minimal system you will need a partition of around 1 GB.
This is enough to store all the source tarballs and compile all the packages.
But if you intend to use the LFS system as your primary Linux system, you
will probably want to install additional software, and will need more space
than this, probably around 2 or 3 GB.
As we almost never have enough RAM in our box, it is a good idea to
use a small disk partition as swap space -- this space is used by the kernel
to store seldom-used data to make room in memory for more urgent stuff.
The swap partition for your LFS system can be the same one as for your host
system, so you won't have to create another if your host system already uses
a swap partition.
Start the cfdisk program with an argument naming
the hard disk upon which the new partition must be created -- for example
/dev/hda for the primary IDE disk. Create a Linux native
partition and a swap partition, if needed. Please refer to the man page of
cfdisk if you don't yet know how to use the program.
Remember the designation of your new partition -- something like
hda5. This book will refer to it as the LFS partition.
If you (now) also have a swap partition, remember its designation too. These
names will later be needed for the /etc/fstab file.