From: Richard Caldwell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>When I log back in as root the variable $LFS isn't recognised so I setup the
>variable again and ran "mkdir -pv $LFS". It wouldnt allow me to mount LFS or
>my swap drive so I assume that they are OK. Do I simply need to enter chroot
>environment again and carry on from where I was as I've run the chroot command
>and checked all symlinks and directories/files setup from 6.2 to 6.6 and they
>seem OK? I'm very apprehensive about messing up my install as I've done this
>before and couldn't start again for months
>due to time constraints!
After logging back in, run 'mount | grep $LFS' to find out if $LFS, $LFS/dev,
etc. are still mounted, they should be if the host has not been rebooted.
After checking the file systems (and re-mounting if neccesary) run the chroot
command in 6.4 and you're all set.
Note that you can put the commands located in 6.2.2, 6.2.3 and 6.4 in a shell
script to automate the process of mounting everything and chrooting in.
I hope that helps,
Walter
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