Ryan Moszynski wrote these words on 12/10/05 08:53 CST: > Jeremy Huntwork wrote: > >>When you're in the chroot environment of your LFS system, just create a >>new unprivileged user via groupadd and useradd. > > my question still remains though. in the lfs > book, we chroot into the new system before it can stand on its own. > i'm new at this and the only way i can login to the new system while > i'm stil running the lfs live cd is by copying and pasting the chroot > instructions from the book. how do i change: > ----------------------------------------------- > chroot "$LFS" /usr/bin/env -i \ > HOME=/root TERM="$TERM" PS1='\u:\w\$ ' \ > PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin \ > /bin/bash --login > ------------------------------------------------ > if i wanted to login as a user other than root,
I'm not sure you're going to get a lot of help here with your problem. You've already been given the answer. If you are not familiar enough with Linux/Unix to know to use su to become another user, I'm not sure you are ready for LFS/BLFS. I know this comes off as cold, however, there is a level of knowledge expected, and support is going to be difficult for anyone until you gain that expected knowledge. -- Randy rmlscsi: [GNU ld version 2.15.94.0.2 20041220] [gcc (GCC) 3.4.3] [GNU C Library stable release version 2.3.4] [Linux 2.6.10 i686] 09:24:00 up 76 days, 18:48, 3 users, load average: 0.79, 1.11, 0.91 -- http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html Unsubscribe: See the above information page
