Hi Alexandre,

  as Cédrick said there is no need to generate a new image from scratch.
Pharo is basically divided in two parts an image (that is the one that it
is generated by the process you want to run) and a virtual machine to run
the image.
The image is multi-OS you can download a 32 bits image and run it in any of
the supported operating systems.
Usually the VM will run in different OSs, there is a VM for  Mac OS, one
for Windows and one for Unix(es).
The VM came in 32 and 64 bits flavors.

You should try to run the pre built version of the pack. And again using
the Pharo Launcher will be the simpler option.

Cheers,
Pablo


On Wed, Nov 28, 2018 at 1:02 PM Cédrick Béler <cdric...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Alexandre,
>
> Do you really want to « bootstrap » an image ? You don’t need to (just use
> an official image).
>
> Try here, either through the launcher or the curl command line:
>
> https://pharo.org/download (Linux for thé launcher or at the end of the
> page from the command line.
>
> HTH,
>
> Cedrick
>
> Envoyé de mon iPhone
>
> Le 28 nov. 2018 à 11:23, Garreau, Alexandre <galex-...@galex-713.eu> a
> écrit :
>
> Le 28/11/2018 à 11h17, Garreau, Alexandre a écrit :
>
> This VM uses a separate heartbeat thread to update its internal clock
>
> and handle events.  For best operation, this thread should run at a
>
> higher priority, however the VM was unable to change the priority.  The
>
> effect is that heavily loaded systems may experience some latency
>
> issues.  If this occurs, please create the appropriate configuration
>
> file in /etc/security/limits.d/ as shown below:
>
>
> cat <<END | sudo tee /etc/security/limits.d/pharo.conf
>
> *      hard    rtprio  2
>
> *      soft    rtprio  2
>
> END
>
>
> and report to the pharo mailing list whether this improves behaviour.
>
>
> Btw changing this didn’t improve anything until then, since build still
> fails (but the error disappeared).
>
> Sorry to clutter with a second mail.
>
>

-- 
Pablo Tesone.
teso...@gmail.com

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