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* Configuration:  ln -s ./extra/Configs/Config.<arch> ./ConfigThen edit ./Config for your setup.  In particular, modify CROSS andKERNEL_SOURCE as necessary.  You may also want to modifySHARED_LIB_LOADER_PATH, DEVEL_PREFIX, and SYSTEM_DEVEL_PREFIX dependingon where you want to install the development environment.  By default,the development environment is installed into /usr/<arch>-linux-uclibc/.* Building:  make* Installing the development environment:(As root, if necessary,)  make installThis will install the header files, libraries, and the gccwrapper into the directories defined in Config.* Installing the target runtime environment:(As root, if necessary,)   make PREFIX=<temporary path> install_targetThis installs only the files that are necessary to run binariescompiled against uClibc.  Hint: You probably do not want to installthe target runtime environment on your host machine.* Using uClibc:To compile programs with uClibc,   export PATH={uClibc DEVEL_PREFIX}/bin:$PATHand then just ./configure and make as usual.Note: 	You may also want to look at extra/gcc-uclibc/gcc-uclibc.c for	additional information concerning what options and environment	variables the gcc wrapper handles.Note2: 	There is an unwholesomely huge amount of code out there that	depends on the presence of GNU libc header files.  We have GNU	libc header files.  So we have committed a horrible sin in	uClibc.  We _lie_ and claim to be GNU libc in order to force	many applications to work as their developers intended.  This	is IMHO, pardonable, since these defines are not really	intended to check for the presence of a particular library, but	rather are used to define an _interface_.  Some programs (such	as GNU binutils) are especially chummy with glibc, and need	this behavior disabled by adding CFLAGS+=-D__FORCE_NOGLIBC
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