Thanks Paul. I'll do that later. Boy do I feel silly! I should have known that.

:-)~MIKE~(-:


On Mon, Aug 4, 2014 at 2:16 PM, Paul Mooring <paul@getchef.com> wrote:
It's been a while since I did an LFS install, but I assume you have a partition mounted on `/mnt/lfs`.  If that's the case the easiest thing is to recreate the filesystem.  Imagine mount shows something like:

  /dev/sdb1 on /mnt/lfs type ext4 (rw)

You would un mount the filesystem:

  umount /mnt/lfs

Re-create the filesystem

  mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdb1

and remount it

  mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/lfs

Then you should have an empty filesystem waiting for you.


On Mon, Aug 4, 2014 at 1:48 PM, Michael Havens <bmike1@gmail.com> wrote:
I am confused. I need to start over. SO to do so I need to know what to delete. I think it is as easy as exiting back to the host system shell  then:

  cd /mnt/lfs; rm -rf *

and then I just need to start over from the point after I mkdir /mnt/lfs.
Is this correct?
:-)~MIKE~(-:

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--
Paul Mooring
Operations Engineer
Chef

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