Question:
What is the best Linux host to use when building a Linux From Scratch distro?
ag
2012-09-04 07:54:50 UTC
Hello, I have been using various Linux Distributions for quite some time now. I have researched a project called Linux From Scratch that teaches people how to build their own custom distributions. However on many user forums people have run into problems that seem related to their host distribution. I was wondering what would anyone who has built a Linux From Scratch distro would recommend as a good host system. Thank You.

btw. I currently have Fedora 17 64 bit edition set up on my computer. Will that work?
Five answers:
Neerp
2012-09-04 13:26:04 UTC
LFS has its own live CD now, LFS LiveCD. You would probably have best results using that. They also recommend Fedora or Gentoo, but there is no guarantee your specific install will work. If it were me, I'd use their live CD to build my own LFS system.



What you have "should" work. It "probalby" will work. It has a slight chance of not working....
ogles
2016-10-29 03:37:16 UTC
Best Linux Build
sitzman
2016-10-12 05:00:00 UTC
you have already got it. The kernel is the equipment. Now you elect to do what's elementary as RYO, Roll your guy or woman. Ian Murdock became between the 1st that made Debian, certainly one of various. The professional pronounciation of Debian is 'deb ee n'. The call comes from the names of the writer of Debian, Ian Murdock, and his spouse, Debra. LFS is a sturdy getting to understand website. Now deliver at the same time a LUG, Linux clientele team and get to hacking. Any *nix equipment is a collaborative endeavour, that's certainly one of its strengths as nicely as one thank you to maintain it good. Or connect a team that's in progression point now and study as you code alongside with friends. !#CrunchBang is an exciting one that is in simple terms now migrating to a Debian kernel. GNU/Linux is an incredible thank you to commence. chuffed Coding!
Connie
2012-09-04 13:14:17 UTC
Fedora will certainly work.

The vast majority of people who use LFS use a Debian based system, as that assures stability, but is not as "bleeding edge" as Fedora or Ubuntu.

The http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html#what-dist link suggest everything apart from Fedora Core 4 should work well.
Brazo
2012-09-06 20:39:42 UTC
I think this will be better fitting in a Linux forum.


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