Greasemonkey as completely stopped working for me on ubuntu 12.10, firefox 
17 and greasemonkey 1.5 so perhaps you're having a similar problem and it 
has nothing to do with your script?


On Monday, 26 November 2012 08:47:11 UTC, Chuck Simmons wrote:
>
> See, you didn't need a link to my script to tell me that.  ;-)
>
> Thanks.  I got past that part of my confusion.  There was an @requires tag 
> in the header of the script. 
>
> The key symptoms in this problem report are that I had installed a new 
> version of the script, and when I reinstalled the old version which had 
> been working, things continued to be broken.  Since greasemonkey (well, 
> something) fetches files as of installation time, reinstalling the old 
> script does not restore the state of the gm_scripts/ directory.  It should 
> be possible for sufficiently experienced troubleshooting documentation to 
> eventually list this symptom and point to the gm_script/ directory and the 
> @requires tag in the header of the script.  All without needing to have a 
> link to my script.
>
> I wasn't asking "can you proofread my 6,000 line script"; I was asking 
> "what general techniques do people use to troubleshoot greasemonkey 
> scripts, particularly when they see <these> symptoms".
>
> g'luck, Chuck
>
>
> On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 7:43 AM, Anthony Lieuallen 
> <[email protected]<javascript:>
> > wrote:
>
>> I don't know what updater.php is, but it is not part of Greasemonkey.
>>
>> When you want help with a particular script, you basically always have to 
>> post a link to it, or nobody can really do anything besides guess wildly.  
>> Whatever updater.php is, there's almost definitely a reference to it 
>> somewhere within your script.
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 5:02 AM, Chuck Simmons 
>> <[email protected]<javascript:>
>> > wrote:
>>
>>> As near as I can tell, the updater.php file that greasemonkey uses for a 
>>> script installed from disk must have changed at some point.  When I 
>>> reloaded my app, it must have installed a broken updater.php that prevented 
>>> my script from being executed.  I was getting an error to the effect that 
>>> there was a missing '=' sign in some xml in updater.php.  Replacing 
>>> updater.php with a file containing a comment seems to have fixed my problem.
>>
>>
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>
>

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