<sect2><title> </title><para> </para></sect2> <sect2> <title>Installation of Diffutils</title> <para>Prepare Diffutils to be compiled:</para> <para><screen><userinput>LDFLAGS="-static" CPPFLAGS=-Dre_max_failures=re_max_failures2 \ ./configure --prefix=$LFS/static --disable-nls</userinput></screen></para> <para>The meaning of the configure options are:</para> <itemizedlist> <listitem><para><userinput>LDFLAGS="-static":</userinput> This is the most common way to tell a package that all programs should be statically linked. This way the <emphasis>LDFLAGS</emphasis> environment variable is set but only in the subshell that the <filename>configure</filename> script runs in. When <userinput>configure</userinput> is done its job, the <emphasis>LDFLAGS</emphasis> variable won't exist anymore.</para></listitem> <listitem><para><userinput>CPPFLAGS=-Dre_max_failures=re_max_failures2:</userinput> The <emphasis>CPPFLAGS</emphasis> variable is a variable that's read by the cpp program (C PreProcessor). The value of this variable tells the preprocessor to replace every instance of <emphasis>re_max_failures</emphasis> it finds with <emphasis>re_max_failures2</emphasis> before handing the source file to the compiler itself for compilation. This package has problems linking statically on systems that run an older Glibc version and this construction fixes that problem.</para></listitem> </itemizedlist> <para>Continue with compiling the package:</para> <para><screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen></para> <para>And finish off installing the package:</para> <para><screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen></para> </sect2>