Throughout this book, the environment variable LFS
will be used several times. You should ensure that
this variable is always defined throughout the LFS build process. It
should be set to the name of the directory where you will be building
your LFS system - we will use /mnt/lfs
as an example, but the directory choice is up to you. If you are
building LFS on a separate partition, this directory will be the
mount point for the partition. Choose a directory location and set
the variable with the following command:
export LFS=/mnt/lfs
Having this variable set is beneficial in that commands such as mkdir -v $LFS/tools can be typed literally. The shell will automatically replace “$LFS” with “/mnt/lfs” (or whatever the variable was set to) when it processes the command line.
Do not forget to check that LFS
is set
whenever you leave and reenter the current working environment
(such as when doing a su to root
or another user). Check that the
LFS
variable is set up properly with:
echo $LFS
Make sure the output shows the path to your LFS system's build
location, which is /mnt/lfs
if the
provided example was followed. If the output is incorrect, use the
command given earlier on this page to set $LFS
to the correct directory name.
One way to ensure that the LFS
variable
is always set is to edit the .bash_profile
file in both your personal home
directory and in /root/.bash_profile
and enter the export command above. In addition, the shell
specified in the /etc/passwd
file for
all users that need the LFS
variable
needs to be bash to ensure that the /root/.bash_profile
file is incorporated as a
part of the login process.