![[Note]](../images/note.png) 
        
          The commands in the remainder of this book must be performed while
          logged in as user root and no
          longer as user lfs. Also, double
          check that $LFS is set in root's environment.
        
        Currently, the whole directory hierarchy in $LFS is owned by the user lfs, a user that exists only on the host system.
        If the directories and files under $LFS
        are kept as they are, they will be owned by a user ID without a
        corresponding account. This is dangerous because a user account
        created later could get this same user ID and would own all the files
        under $LFS, thus exposing these files
        to possible malicious manipulation.
      
        To address this issue, change the ownership of the $LFS/* directories to user root by running the following command:
      
chown --from lfs -R root:root $LFS/{usr,var,etc,tools}
case $(uname -m) in
  x86_64) chown --from lfs -R root:root $LFS/lib64 ;;
esac