source: BOOK/final-preps/common/settingenviron.xml@ 76d02d9

sysvinit
Last change on this file since 76d02d9 was f9e40f7, checked in by William Harrington <kb0iic@…>, 9 years ago

Some hosts may set PKG_CONFIG_PATH in /etc/profile or /etc/profile.d and will be used after 'su - clfs'. Unset PKG_CONFIG_PATH variable will make sure only pkgconfig in /tools will be used and no packages will be picked up from the host i.e. guile or ncursesw.

  • Property mode set to 100644
File size: 4.6 KB
Line 
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../../general.ent">
5 %general-entities;
6]>
7
8<sect1 id="ch-final-preps-settingenviron">
9 <?dbhtml filename="settingenvironment.html"?>
10
11 <title>Setting Up the Environment</title>
12
13 <para os="a">Set up a good working environment by creating two new startup
14 files for the <command>bash</command> shell. While logged in as user
15 <systemitem class="username">clfs</systemitem>, issue the following
16 command to create a new <filename>.bash_profile</filename>:</para>
17
18<screen os="b"><userinput>cat &gt; ~/.bash_profile &lt;&lt; "EOF"
19<literal>exec env -i HOME=${HOME} TERM=${TERM} PS1='\u:\w\$ ' /bin/bash</literal>
20EOF</userinput></screen>
21
22 <para os="c">When logged on as user <systemitem class="username">clfs</systemitem>,
23 the initial shell is usually a <emphasis>login</emphasis> shell which
24 reads the <filename>/etc/profile</filename> of the host (probably
25 containing some settings and environment variables) and then
26 <filename>.bash_profile</filename>. The
27 <command>exec env -i.../bin/bash</command> command in the
28 <filename>.bash_profile</filename> file replaces the running shell with
29 a new one with a completely empty environment, except for the
30 <envar>HOME</envar>, <envar>TERM</envar>, and <envar>PS1</envar> variables.
31 This ensures that no unwanted and potentially hazardous environment
32 variables from the host system leak into the build environment. The
33 technique used here achieves the goal of ensuring a clean environment.</para>
34
35 <para os="d">The new instance of the shell is a <emphasis>non-login</emphasis>
36 shell, which does not read the <filename>/etc/profile</filename> or
37 <filename>.bash_profile</filename> files, but rather reads the
38 <filename>.bashrc</filename> file instead. Create the
39 <filename>.bashrc</filename> file now:</para>
40
41<screen os="e"><userinput>cat &gt; ~/.bashrc &lt;&lt; "EOF"
42<literal>set +h
43umask 022
44CLFS=/mnt/clfs
45LC_ALL=POSIX
46PATH=/cross-tools/bin:/bin:/usr/bin
47export CLFS LC_ALL PATH
48unset CFLAGS CXXFLAGS PKG_CONFIG_PATH</literal>
49EOF</userinput></screen>
50
51 <para os="f">The <command>set +h</command> command turns off
52 <command>bash</command>'s hash function. Hashing is ordinarily a useful
53 feature&mdash;<command>bash</command> uses a hash table to remember the
54 full path of executable files to avoid searching the <envar>PATH</envar>
55 time and again to find the same executable. However, the new tools should
56 be used as soon as they are installed. By switching off the hash function,
57 the shell will always search the <envar>PATH</envar> when a program is to
58 be run. As such, the shell will find the newly compiled tools in
59 <filename class="directory">/cross-tools</filename> as soon as they are
60 available without remembering a previous version of the same program in a
61 different location.</para>
62
63 <para os="g">Setting the user file-creation mask (umask) to 022 ensures that
64 newly created files and directories are only writable by their owner,
65 but are readable and executable by anyone (assuming default modes are
66 used by the open(2) system call, new files will end up with permission
67 mode 644 and directories with mode 755).</para>
68
69 <para os="h">The <envar>CLFS</envar> variable should be set to the
70 chosen mount point.</para>
71
72 <para os="i">The <envar>LC_ALL</envar> variable controls the localization
73 of certain programs, making their messages follow the conventions of a
74 specified country. Setting <envar>LC_ALL</envar> to <quote>POSIX</quote>
75 or <quote>C</quote> (the two are equivalent) ensures that everything will
76 work as expected in the temporary build environment.</para>
77
78 <para os="j">By putting <filename class="directory">/cross-tools/bin</filename>
79 at the beginning of the <envar>PATH</envar>, the cross-compiler
80 built in <xref linkend="chapter-cross-tools"/> will be picked up by
81 the build process for the temp-system packages before anything that
82 may be installed on the host. This, combined with turning off
83 hashing, helps to ensure that you will be using the cross-compile
84 tools to build the temp-system in /tools.</para>
85
86 <para os="k">The <envar>CFLAGS</envar>, <envar>CXXFLAGS</envar> and
87 <envar>PKG_CONFIG_PATH</envar> variables should not be set while building the
88 temporary system, so we unset them.</para>
89
90 <para os="l">Finally, to have the environment fully prepared for building the
91 temporary tools, source the just-created user profile:</para>
92
93<screen os="m"><userinput>source ~/.bash_profile</userinput></screen>
94
95</sect1>
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the repository browser.