Now the partition has been made, we can create a file system on it. Most widely used in the Linux world is the second extended file system (ext2), but with the high-capacity hard disks of today the so-called journaling file systems are becoming increasingly popular. Here we will create an ext2 file system, but build instructions for other file systems can be found at http://beyond.linuxfromscratch.org/view/cvs/postlfs/filesystems.html.
To create an ext2 file system on the LFS partition run the following:
mke2fs /dev/xxx |
Replace xxx with the name of the LFS partition (something like hda5).
If you created a (new) swap partition you need to initialize it as a swap partition too (also known as formatting, like you did above with mke2fs) by running:
mkswap /dev/yyy |
Replace yyy with the name of the swap partition.