Installation of Net-tools
The instructions below automate the configuration process by piping
yes to the make command.
If you wish to run the interactive configuration process (by changing
the instruction to just make), but you are
not sure how to answer all the questions, then just accept the defaults.
This will be just fine in the majority of cases. What you're asked here
is a bunch of questions about which network protocols you've enabled
in your kernel. The default answers will enable the tools from this
package to work with the most common protocols: TCP, PPP, and several
others. You still need to actually enable these protocols in the
kernel—what you do here is merely tell the package to include
support for those protocols in its programs, but it's up to the kernel
to make the protocols available.
Note
This package has several unneeded protocols and hardware device
specific functions that are obsolete. To only build the minimum needed
for your system, skip the yes command and answer
each question interactively. The minimum needed options are 'UNIX
protocol family' and 'INET (TCP/IP) protocol family'.
For this package, we use the DESTDIR method of installation in order
to easily remove files from the build that overwrite those that we want
to keep or are not appropriate for our system.
Install Net-tools by running the
following commands:
export BINDIR='/usr/bin' SBINDIR='/usr/bin' &&
yes "" | make -j1 &&
make DESTDIR=$PWD/install -j1 install &&
rm install/usr/bin/{nis,yp}domainname &&
rm install/usr/bin/{hostname,dnsdomainname,domainname,ifconfig} &&
rm -r install/usr/share/man/man1 &&
rm install/usr/share/man/man8/ifconfig.8 &&
unset BINDIR SBINDIR
This package does not come with a test suite.
Now, as the root
user:
chown -R root:root install &&
cp -a install/* /
Command Explanations
export BINDIR='/usr/bin' SBINDIR='/usr/bin':
Ensure the executables are installed in the correct location.
yes "" | make : Piping yes
to make config skips the interactive configuration and
accepts the defaults.
rm ...: Remove unneeded programs and man pages.