That's strange, is this a new problem or you always had it?

I've just tested it, pharo 61 64 bits.

 $ wget -O - https://get.pharo.org/64/61+vm | bash
[SNIP]
$ ./pharo Pharo.image eval 1+1
2

Maybe the so called starter scripts (pharo, pharo-ui) are not the same
using zeroconf and by downloading a plain vm like that?

On Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 9:38 AM Otto Behrens <o...@finworks.biz> wrote:

> I am running with an absolute image path.
>
> The issue is definitely exec "$image" in the script. If I remove the "",
> i.e. exec $image, then it works.
>
> /opt/pharo/pharo6.1-64/bin/lib/pharo/5.0-201708271955/pharo "my.image
> startup.st"
>
> gives me the same problem
>
> On Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 9:28 AM, Julián Maestri <serp...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Try with ./pharo or try with an absolute image path.
>>
>> On Wed, Jun 27, 2018, 04:03 Tim Mackinnon <tim@testit.works> wrote:
>>
>>> I’ve not noticed that problem on ubuntu or AWS lambda so there must be
>>> something different going on.
>>>
>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>
>>> On 27 Jun 2018, at 07:30, Otto Behrens <o...@finworks.biz> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I just installed pharo 6.1 using the .zip file (
>>> http://files.pharo.org/platform/Pharo6.1-64-linux.zip) and battled to
>>> start up pharo with arguments.
>>>
>>> The issue is that the pharo bash script (in the extracted home dir)
>>> quotes all arguments:
>>>
>>> # execute
>>> exec "$LINUX/pharo" \
>>>         --plugins "$LINUX" \
>>>         --encoding utf8 \
>>>         -vm-display-X11 \
>>>         "$image"
>>>
>>> where
>>>
>>> image = $*
>>>
>>> The impact is that if I want to run a startup script, eg.
>>>
>>> pharo my.image startup.st
>>>
>>> pharo complains with "Could not open the Pharo image file: 'my.image
>>> startup.st'
>>>
>>> So I must run the executable directly?
>>>
>>> If so, some questions about the options that the bash script passes in:
>>> --plugins "$LINUX"    is this necessary? will the default not be enough?
>>> --encoding utf8          the usage output says for example --textenc
>>> default is "UTF-8". Is utf8 the same thing?
>>> -vm-display-X11        I tried starting without this, and it worked. Do
>>> I need to explicitly start with this?
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>> Otto
>>>
>>>
>

-- 



Guille Polito

Research Engineer

Centre de Recherche en Informatique, Signal et Automatique de Lille

CRIStAL - UMR 9189

French National Center for Scientific Research - *http://www.cnrs.fr
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