2.6. Setting the $LFS Variable and the Umask

Throughout this book, the environment variable LFS will be used several times. You should ensure that this variable is always defined throughout the LFS build process. It should be set to the name of the directory where you will be building your LFS system - we will use /mnt/lfs as an example, but you may choose any directory name you want. If you are building LFS on a separate partition, this directory will be the mount point for the partition. Choose a directory location and set the variable with the following command:

export LFS=/mnt/lfs

Having this variable set is beneficial in that commands such as mkdir -v $LFS/tools can be typed literally. The shell will automatically replace $LFS with /mnt/lfs (or whatever value the variable was set to) when it processes the command line.

Now set the file mode creation mask (umask) to 022 in case the host distro uses a different default:

umask 022

Setting the umask to 022 ensures that newly created files and directories are only writable by their owner, but are readable and searchable (only for directories) by anyone (assuming default modes are used by the open(2) system call, new files will end up with permission mode 644 and directories with mode 755). An overly-permissive default can leave security holes in the LFS system, and an overly-restrictive default can cause strange issues building or using the LFS system.

[Caution]

Caution

Do not forget to check that LFS is set and the umask is set to 022 whenever you leave and reenter the current working environment (such as when doing a su to root or another user). Check that the LFS variable is set up properly with:

echo $LFS

Make sure the output shows the path to your LFS system's build location, which is /mnt/lfs if the provided example was followed.

Check that the umask is set up properly with:

umask

The output should be 022.

If any output of these two commands is incorrect, use the command given earlier on this page to set $LFS to the correct directory name and set umask to 022.

[Note]

Note

One way to ensure that the LFS variable and the umask are always set properly is to edit the .bash_profile file in both your personal home directory and in /root/.bash_profile and enter the export and umask commands above. In addition, the shell specified in the /etc/passwd file for all users that need the LFS variable must be bash to ensure that the .bash_profile file is incorporated as a part of the login process.

Another consideration is the method that is used to log into the host system. If logging in through a graphical display manager, the user's .bash_profile is not normally used when a virtual terminal is started. In this case, add the commands to the .bashrc file for the user and root. In addition, some distributions use an "if" test, and do not run the remaining .bashrc instructions for a non-interactive bash invocation. Be sure to place the commands ahead of the test for non-interactive use.