%general-entities; ]> How to Build a CLFS System The CLFS system will be built by using a previously installed Linux distribution (such as Debian, Mandrake, Red Hat, or SuSE). This existing Linux system (the host) will be used as a starting point to provide necessary programs, including a compiler, linker, and shell, to build the new system. Select the development option during the distribution installation to be able to access these tools. As an alternative to installing an entire separate distribution onto your machine, you may wish to use the Linux From Scratch LiveCD. The CD works well as a host system, providing all the tools you need to successfully follow the instructions in this book. Additionally, it contains all the source packages, patches and a copy of this book. So once you have the CD, no network connection or additional downloads are necessary. For more information about the LFS LiveCD or to download a copy, visit of this book describes how to create a new Linux native partition and file system, the place where the new CLFS system will be compiled and installed. explains which packages and patches need to be downloaded to build a CLFS system and how to store them on the new file system. discusses the setup for an appropriate working environment. Please read carefully as it explains several important issues the developer should be aware of before beginning to work through and beyond. explains the installation of cross-compile tools which will be built on the host but be able to compile programs that run on the target machine. These cross-compile tools will be used to create the final-system. The process of building cross-compile tools first involves installing binutils into ${LFS}/cross-tools, so that we have an asembler and a linker for our target architecture. GCC is then compiled statically and installed into ${LFS}/cross-tools, this cross-compiler is used to build glibc for the final-system. The GCC cross-compiler is then rebuilt dynamically - this final cross-compiler is what will be used to build the final-system. In , the full CLFS system is cross-compiled. The system is built using a sysroot. Sysroot is a parameter passed to binutils and gcc that modifies its default search paths. To finish the installation, the CLFS-Bootscripts are set up in , and the kernel and boot loader are set up in . contains information on furthering the CLFS experience beyond this book. After the steps in this book have been implemented, the computer will be ready to reboot into the new CLFS system. This is the process in a nutshell. Detailed information on each step is discussed in the following chapters and package descriptions. Items that may seem complicated will be clarified, and everything will fall into place as the reader embarks on the CLFS adventure.