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39 lines
980 B
Plaintext
39 lines
980 B
Plaintext
<sect2>
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<title>Copying old NSS library files</title>
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<para>
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If your normal Linux system runs glibc-2.0, you need to copy the NSS
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library files to the LFS partition. Certain statically linked programs
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still depend on the NSS library, especially programs that need to lookup
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usernames,userid's and groupid's. You can check which C library version
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your normal Linux system uses by running:
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</para>
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<blockquote><literallayout>
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<userinput>strings /lib/libc* | grep "release version"</userinput>
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</literallayout></blockquote>
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<para>
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The output of that command should tell you something like this:
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</para>
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<blockquote><literallayout>
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GNU C Library stable release version 2.1.3, by Roland McGrath et al.
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</literallayout></blockquote>
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<para>
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If you have Glibc-2.0.x installed on your starting distribution, copy
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the NSS library files by running:
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</para>
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<blockquote><literallayout>
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<userinput>cp -av /lib/libnss* $LFS/lib</userinput>
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</literallayout></blockquote>
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</sect2>
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