Installation of Glibc
Unpack the glibc-linuxthreads in the glibc-2.2.1 directory, not in 
/usr/src. 
Install Glibc by running the following commands:
	mknod -m 0666 /dev/null c 1 3 &&
	touch /etc/ld.so.conf &&
	mkdir /usr/src/glibc-build &&
	cd /usr/src/glibc-build &&
	sed s/"\$(PERL)"/"\/usr\/bin\/perl"/ \
	   ../glibc-2.2.1/malloc/Makefile
		> tmp~ &&
	mv tmp~ ../glibc-2.2.1/malloc/Makefile &&
		
	sed "s/root/0/" ../glibc-2.2.1/login/Makefile 
		> tmp~ && 
	mv tmp~ ../glibc-2.2.1/login/Makefile &&
		
	../glibc-2.2.1/configure \
	   --prefix=/usr --enable-add-ons 
		\
	   --libexecdir=/usr/bin &&
		
	sed s/"cross-compiling = yes"/"cross-compiling = no"/ 
		\
	   config.make > config.make~
		&&
	mv config.make~ config.make &&
	make &&
	make install &&
	make localedata/install-locales
During the configure stage you will see the following warning:
configure: warning:
*** An auxiliary program is missing or too old;
*** some features will be disabled.
*** Check the INSTALL file for required versions.
This warning refers to the missing msgfmt program from the gettext
package. But there is nothing to worry about: Glib will still be
installed the same way as when msgfmt is present. It can safely be
ignored in our case.
By exiting the chroot'ed environment and re-entering it, you will be
able to get rid of the "I have no name!" message in the command prompt,
which is caused by bash's inability to resolve a userid to a username.
You don't have to exit and re-enter chroot, but it's highly recommended
to ensure a properly working bash.
Run the following commands to accomplish this:
	logout
	chroot $LFS /usr/bin/env -i HOME=/root
		\
	   TERM=$TERM /bin/bash --login