Mounting the new partition
Now that we've created a file system, we want to be able to access
the partition. For that, we need to mount it, and have to choose a mount
point. In this book we assume that the file system is mounted under
/mnt/lfs, but it doesn't matter what directory
you choose.
Choose a mount point and assign it to the LFS environment variable
by running:
export LFS=/mnt/lfs
Now create the mount point and mount the LFS file system by running:
mkdir -p $LFS
mount /dev/xxx $LFS
Replace xxx with the designation of the LFS
partition.
If you have decided to use multiple partitions for LFS (say one for
/ and another for /usr), mount
them like this:
mkdir -p $LFS
mount /dev/xxx $LFS
mkdir $LFS/usr
mount /dev/yyy $LFS/usr
Of course, replace xxx and yyy
with the appropriate partition names.
You should also ensure that this new partition is not mounted with
permissions that are too restrictive (such as the nosuid, nodev or noatime
options). You can run the mount command without any
parameters to see with what options the LFS partition is mounted. If
you see nosuid, nodev or noatime, you will need to remount it.
Now that we've made ourselves a place to work in, we're ready to download
the packages.