where is linux-f10-flashplugin ?

2012-02-22 Thread Chuck Bacon
Looks like FreeBSD mirrors have been hacked; more than one has an empty
pub/FreeBSD directory, and those which have a ports/distfiles directory
don't have an linux directory at all.  I've faithfully followed the
FreeBSD handbook for 8.2, and it says the last port is that one.  Help,
please?
   Chuck Bacon c...@cape.com

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Re: where is linux-f10-flashplugin ?

2012-02-22 Thread Vincent Hoffman
On 22/02/2012 20:16, Chuck Bacon wrote:
 Looks like FreeBSD mirrors have been hacked; more than one has an empty
 pub/FreeBSD directory, and those which have a ports/distfiles directory
 don't have an linux directory at all.  I've faithfully followed the
 FreeBSD handbook for 8.2, and it says the last port is that one.  Help,
 please?
Chuck Bacon c...@cape.com

from the makefile
MASTER_SITES=  
http://fpdownload.macromedia.com/get/flashplayer/pdc/${PORTVERSION:C/r/\./}/:plugin
\
ftp://ftp.ipt.ru/pub/download/

but for me cd /usr/ports/www/linux-f10-flashplugin11; make fetch worked.

vince

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Re: flashplugin

2009-11-18 Thread Steve Polyack

David Collins wrote:

I have periodically tested with getting flash working, and everytime I
try it fails and I go back to undoing everything I have done and
re-installing gnash. Gnash works but it does have a few niggles. 


I tried the following:

  

This is what I did for a 7.2 box.  Note that there are compatibility

 # pkg_info -orx linux  linux-stuff
 # pkg_delete -rx linux

 # cd /compat/linux
 # find . -type f -ls
 # rm -rf *

 # sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16

 OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=   f10
 OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=   f10

   to /etc/make.conf.

 # portinstall www/nspluginwrapper
 # nspluginwrapper -v -a -i

* Finally, fire up Firefox and check that it has loaded the flash plugin by
  typing 'about:plugins' into the URL bar.  Find a site with flash content[*],
  and enjoy.



Everything installed easily and about:plugins has Shockwave Flash and
FutureSplash Player as enabled. But, when I go to youtube.com all I get a black
screen and the video doesn't load.

Does anyone have any ideas why flash isn't working?
  
Set linux_enable=YES in /etc/rc.conf and make sure you are mounting 
linprocfs:

/etc/fstab:
# DeviceMountpointFStypeOptionsDumpPass#
linproc/compat/linux/proc linprocfs rw00


Check dmesg(8) or other system logs after trying to use flash and see if 
anything is being logged.


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Re: flashplugin

2009-11-18 Thread David Collins

  This is what I did for a 7.2 box.  Note that there are compatibility
 
   # pkg_info -orx linux  linux-stuff
   # pkg_delete -rx linux
 
   # cd /compat/linux
   # find . -type f -ls
   # rm -rf *
 
   # sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16
 
   OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=   f10
   OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=   f10
 
 to /etc/make.conf.
 
   # portinstall www/nspluginwrapper
   # nspluginwrapper -v -a -i
 
  * Finally, fire up Firefox and check that it has loaded the flash plugin by
typing 'about:plugins' into the URL bar.  Find a site with flash 
  content[*],
and enjoy.

 Set linux_enable=YES in /etc/rc.conf and make sure you are mounting 
 linprocfs:
 /etc/fstab:
 # DeviceMountpointFStypeOptionsDumpPass#
 linproc/compat/linux/proc linprocfs rw00

Mounted linprocfs and it worked perfectly! Method tested and works on
another 7.2 box

Thanks :)
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Re: flashplugin

2009-11-17 Thread David Collins

I have periodically tested with getting flash working, and everytime I
try it fails and I go back to undoing everything I have done and
re-installing gnash. Gnash works but it does have a few niggles. 

I tried the following:

 This is what I did for a 7.2 box.  Note that there are compatibility

  # pkg_info -orx linux  linux-stuff
  # pkg_delete -rx linux

  # cd /compat/linux
  # find . -type f -ls
  # rm -rf *

  # sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16

  OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=   f10
  OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=   f10

to /etc/make.conf.

  # portinstall www/nspluginwrapper
  # nspluginwrapper -v -a -i

 * Finally, fire up Firefox and check that it has loaded the flash plugin by
   typing 'about:plugins' into the URL bar.  Find a site with flash content[*],
   and enjoy.

Everything installed easily and about:plugins has Shockwave Flash and
FutureSplash Player as enabled. But, when I go to youtube.com all I get a black
screen and the video doesn't load.

Does anyone have any ideas why flash isn't working?

David
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Re: flashplugin

2009-11-17 Thread David Jackson
I never had tried to install Linux flash. I did install Windows flash 
under Firefox on Wine and it worked. I found that the freebsd port for 
Wine would not work but if I downloaded the source from WineHQ and 
compiled it would work fine, however, i tried a more recent version of 
Wine which did not compile right on FreeBSD, my current properly 
compiled wine version is,  1.1.7. You can try the most recent version of 
Wine and see if tht works, if not you can try 1.1.7 which worked well 
for me.


David Collins wrote:

I have periodically tested with getting flash working, and everytime I
try it fails and I go back to undoing everything I have done and
re-installing gnash. Gnash works but it does have a few niggles. 


I tried the following:

  

This is what I did for a 7.2 box.  Note that there are compatibility

 # pkg_info -orx linux  linux-stuff
 # pkg_delete -rx linux

 # cd /compat/linux
 # find . -type f -ls
 # rm -rf *

 # sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16

 OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=   f10
 OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=   f10

   to /etc/make.conf.

 # portinstall www/nspluginwrapper
 # nspluginwrapper -v -a -i

* Finally, fire up Firefox and check that it has loaded the flash plugin by
  typing 'about:plugins' into the URL bar.  Find a site with flash content[*],
  and enjoy.



Everything installed easily and about:plugins has Shockwave Flash and
FutureSplash Player as enabled. But, when I go to youtube.com all I get a black
screen and the video doesn't load.

Does anyone have any ideas why flash isn't working?

David
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-29 Thread Wayne Sierke
On Thu, 2009-10-29 at 03:32 +, RW wrote:
 On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 20:04:24 +
 Freminlins freminl...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
  I must admit I gave up ever getting Flash to work RELIABLY on FreeBSD
  a long time ago. It's just too hard, too much work, and not worth the
  misery of installing heaps of crud just to get a flipping browser
  plugin working unreliably.
 
 Some time ago I installed the windows version of Firefox and Flash
 under wine  and I've found it pretty reliable. I don't use it all the
 time just on the small number of sites where flash is essential.

I have also done that in the past and more recently I've been using
Google's Chrome browser in wine. It's not perfect but I've found it to
be generally adequate.


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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Polytropon
On Tue, 27 Oct 2009 20:56:11 -0400, PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca wrote:
 I have tried them all... now I have linux-f10 with
 flashplayer10 installed and all I get is an error that flashplugin.so
 cannot be started because a shared file freetype.so.6 cannot be
 found... It's there allright and is linked to fretype.so.6.13 or some
 number like that... 

In FreeBSD, libraries are linked to version numbers from
generic names, such as 

/usr/local/lib/libfreetype.so@ - libfreetype.so.9

If a program requires freetype, it requests the library
function and tells the dynamic linker if it requires a
certain version. If this version is not available, the
linker throws an error.

You can check if the link structures are correct by performing
a ll (often = ls -laFG) on the specific file in /usr/local/lib.

If the structures are not present, or a library is missing,
maybe you need to update the requested facility; in this
case, it may be neccessary to update freetype or even the
whole X subsystem...



 the fine name may not be correct as I don't have it
 in front of me... but then, where is this shared file supposed to be?

Libraries of third party software go in /usr/local/lib. For
some packages that install in the /opt fashion, they are
located in /usr/local/pkgname/lib. The linker has to be
notified to search such paths.



 The setups for the flashplayer are such a ridiculous mess that I can
 only laugh...

A modern technique that requires me to jump around in
such a way is not worth that I am using it. Imagine you
would need to do this to enable displaying PNG images or
formatiing text paragraph-wise in a web browser...

And some funny people call Flash a standard! :-)

And when I think that Flash is mostly abused to make the
web inaccessible, to display ads (or even just images),
then... no, thank you. If a content designer (ab)uses Flash
to make his web site unaccessible to you (as a person
who uses the FreeBSD operating system and its programs),
he doesn't want you to see the web site, it's that simple.

I'm going to have fun with Flash soon on my 8.0-RC
testing system, so I closely follow such discussions
and the included batteries, erm, advices. :-)


 There are obviously conflicts or something screwing things
 up from other programs like gimp or ImageMagic or gstreamers or some
 such stuff...

Yes, there seems to be a defective library dependency,
mostly due to incomplete updates.



-- 
Polytropon
Magdeburg, Germany
Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0
Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ...
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Matthew Seaman

Polytropon wrote:

On Tue, 27 Oct 2009 20:56:11 -0400, PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca wrote:

I have tried them all... now I have linux-f10 with
flashplayer10 installed and all I get is an error that flashplugin.so
cannot be started because a shared file freetype.so.6 cannot be
found... It's there allright and is linked to fretype.so.6.13 or some
number like that... 


In FreeBSD, libraries are linked to version numbers from
generic names, such as 


/usr/local/lib/libfreetype.so@ - libfreetype.so.9



In this case, the missing library is almost certainly

 /usr/compat/linux/usr/lib/libfreetype.so.6

which works by the Linux rules -- so the library the app tries to link
against is libfreetype.so.6, which is a link to libfreetype.so.6.3.18. 


I'm fairly confident that this is the case, because the FreeBSD native
Freetype library is 


 /usr/local/lib/libfreetype.so.9

Completely different ABI version number, unlike what the OP posted.

To the OP: that shlib comes from the linux_base-f10-10_2 package on my
machine, so unless you're missing chunks of that package you should have
it.  Use 'pkg_info -g linux_base\*' to see if any of the package contents
have got lost or scrambled.  It will probably tell you that 
/compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache doesn't match the original checksum, but that's
normal, as that file is modified whenever you install any other linux shlibs.
Further more, the linux ld.so.cache file should contain a record for 
libfreetype:

% /compat/linux/sbin/ldconfig -p | grep freetype
   libfreetype.so.6 (libc6) = /usr/lib/libfreetype.so.6

You should be able to rebuild it by

# /compat/linux/sbin/ldconfig -v -n /lib /usr/lib /usr/X11R6/lib

Cheers,

Matthew

--
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil.   7 Priory Courtyard
 Flat 3
PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate
 Kent, CT11 9PW



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Tony McC
On Tue, 27 Oct 2009 16:43:11 -0500
PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca wrote:

 I wish someone could explain to me why I am no longer able to install 
 flashplugin ... none of the methods work for me on amy version... I
 have literally tried them all..
 the latest was linux-f10 - I cleaned out all the linux stuff,
 umounted the proc sytem cleaned out everything I could find related
 (?) to linux and reinstalled. No go, no way, José!
 I did catch some kind of warning that flashed by on the screen about 
 Glib - seems to be gstreamer related...??? and the only thing I can
 find is the error message that flashplugin.so (or whatever the file
 is) could not be loaded because shared file libfreetype.so.6 could
 not be found... and the only libfreetype.so.6 file on the s;ystem is 
 ...so.6.something.something...
 If the system is smart enought to not find the right file, it ought
 to be smart enought to know where this file should be and to what it
 is related... duh !

Hi PJ,

I hope you won't take this the wrong way, it really isn't intended to
be an insult, but looking at your posting history I seriously wonder if
FreeBSD is for you.  You seem to want everything to just work without
having to think about it, so perhaps Windows would be better for you?
You ask questions in a very random way, try things without any clear
plan, and when given advice you seem to quickly move on to some other
difficulty rather than getting used to one thing at a time.  It does
take time and effort to learn to use FreeBSD effectively, but once you
have learned it (i.e., started to gain a deep understanding of how
things work separately and together rather than just managing to fix
things piecemeal without any real understanding) it works wonderfully
with a huge range of hardware and software.  If you do want to stick
with FreeBSD it might be better if you just sat down with the Manual
and read through systematically before trying to tweak things.  But my
guess is that you really would be happier and more productive with a
Windows OS.  That isn't meant to be a please go away and let us get on
with using FreeBSD, it is an honest reaction to the pain and confusion
you seem to cause yourself as you randomly try things in FreeBSD. 

Best,
Tony
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Polytropon
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 12:53:18 +, Tony McC af...@btinternet.com wrote:
 You seem to want everything to just work without
 having to think about it, so perhaps Windows would be better for you?
 [...]
 But my
 guess is that you really would be happier and more productive with a
 Windows OS.  That isn't meant to be a please go away and let us get on
 with using FreeBSD, it is an honest reaction to the pain and confusion
 you seem to cause yourself as you randomly try things in FreeBSD. 

In Windows, things don't work without thinking. The
misbelief that is does is grounded in the fact that
other people have to deal with problems, while the
user praises Windows for its easyness of use.

In PJ's case, maybe PC-BSD is a good choice. As far as
I know, they offer a working Flash plugin that can
be installed by their PBI system. I haven't tested
this because PC-BSD with its KDE centric concept simply
isn't my cup of tea, but that doesn't mean that it's
not a good OS - hey, it's still FreeBSD. :-)

Tony, I can understand that you might get the impression
that PJ doesn't have a full understanding of the concepts
and procedures needed to know in order to properly operate
FreeBSD. This may be true. But he's constantly learning
and understanding, and I think even with the troubles he
likes to use FreeBSD (PJ, correct me if I'm wrong).

When I came to FreeBSD (from a Linux and WEGA background,
with lots of strange mainframe knowledge), I had similar
trouble. I had many issues with C, too, before it became
my primary programming language, but the fact that I can
master FreeBSD now (at a sufficient level) is due to the
fact that I had much good help, especially from this list,
as well as much practice. Recognizing and resolving library
requirements can surely be such a step into the right
direction. It's not a state, it's a process.

In the future, PJ will not only know that things work, but
additionally understand *how* and *why* they work, and this
will make him a master of FreeBSD, too.




-- 
Polytropon
Magdeburg, Germany
Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0
Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ...
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Tony McC
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 14:10:25 +0100
Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:

 In Windows, things don't work without thinking. The
 misbelief that is does is grounded in the fact that
 other people have to deal with problems, while the
 user praises Windows for its easyness of use.
 
 In PJ's case, maybe PC-BSD is a good choice. As far as
 I know, they offer a working Flash plugin that can
 be installed by their PBI system. I haven't tested
 this because PC-BSD with its KDE centric concept simply
 isn't my cup of tea, but that doesn't mean that it's
 not a good OS - hey, it's still FreeBSD. :-)
 
 Tony, I can understand that you might get the impression
 that PJ doesn't have a full understanding of the concepts
 and procedures needed to know in order to properly operate
 FreeBSD. This may be true. But he's constantly learning
 and understanding, and I think even with the troubles he
 likes to use FreeBSD (PJ, correct me if I'm wrong).
 
 When I came to FreeBSD (from a Linux and WEGA background,
 with lots of strange mainframe knowledge), I had similar
 trouble. I had many issues with C, too, before it became
 my primary programming language, but the fact that I can
 master FreeBSD now (at a sufficient level) is due to the
 fact that I had much good help, especially from this list,
 as well as much practice. Recognizing and resolving library
 requirements can surely be such a step into the right
 direction. It's not a state, it's a process.
 
 In the future, PJ will not only know that things work, but
 additionally understand *how* and *why* they work, and this
 will make him a master of FreeBSD, too.

Hi Polytropon,

thanks, I hope you are right, and I would love to see PJ become a
master of FreeBSD, but my impression from the mailing list is that that
progress is going to be too long and too frustrating.  I suppose only
PJ can know if he/she feels that progress is happening.  Nonetheless, I
stand by the advice to work systematically through the handbook and try
to gain a real understanding rather than a series of fixes.  I suppose
I was suggesting that rather than address endless frustrating symptoms
of what looks like a mismatch between PJ's character (not ability, I
certainly do not wish to disparage that - by character I mean a
reluctance to stand back, slow down and approach the learning
systematically and to give it the time it will need) and the FreeBSD
way of doing things, it might be better to just move to something
more pre-packaged.  PC-BSD may well be a good choice, I haven't tried
it.

Oh, and you are exactly right about the kind of understanding that can
come with spending time with FreeBSD.  But perhaps it's not for
everyone.  

Best,
Tony

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread PJ
,
you can read it and study it... but you will forget anything you have
read almost immediately if you are not applying what you are studying at
once... there may be some residual information captured by one's brain
but practical application is about the only way to really learn and
understand... especially with the help of those who have dared to tread
there before you...
and their help is really invaluable.
Also, from the suggestions and solutions I have received on the list, I
have learned many, many little tips and tricks that I would never have
picked up without extensive digging.
I really turn to the list when I have some problem about which I am not
totally clear or have difficulty resolving. But then, I must admit, I
don't really depend on the list as it is really very simple to fix the
problems I have by just installing a fresh system and then setting up
the programs and don't bother with fixing things just start all over...
not very informative but easy to fix (maybe a bit time consuming) . As I
have stated before, things like flashplugin have become a problem only
after I started doing some other things like cloning and dump/restores.
But I did set up flashplugin correctly on both 64bit and 32bit machines
and it worked just fine... until I changed things while cloning. The 64
machine still works fine... and I'm sure I'll get the 32bit going as
well; even if it means setting up a new system.
Oh, well...enought palaver... back to the grind...
and thanks for the help, again. ;-)
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread PJ
Tony McC wrote:
 On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 14:10:25 +0100
 Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:

   
 In Windows, things don't work without thinking. The
 misbelief that is does is grounded in the fact that
 other people have to deal with problems, while the
 user praises Windows for its easyness of use.

 In PJ's case, maybe PC-BSD is a good choice. As far as
 I know, they offer a working Flash plugin that can
 be installed by their PBI system. I haven't tested
 this because PC-BSD with its KDE centric concept simply
 isn't my cup of tea, but that doesn't mean that it's
 not a good OS - hey, it's still FreeBSD. :-)

 Tony, I can understand that you might get the impression
 that PJ doesn't have a full understanding of the concepts
 and procedures needed to know in order to properly operate
 FreeBSD. This may be true. But he's constantly learning
 and understanding, and I think even with the troubles he
 likes to use FreeBSD (PJ, correct me if I'm wrong).

 When I came to FreeBSD (from a Linux and WEGA background,
 with lots of strange mainframe knowledge), I had similar
 trouble. I had many issues with C, too, before it became
 my primary programming language, but the fact that I can
 master FreeBSD now (at a sufficient level) is due to the
 fact that I had much good help, especially from this list,
 as well as much practice. Recognizing and resolving library
 requirements can surely be such a step into the right
 direction. It's not a state, it's a process.

 In the future, PJ will not only know that things work, but
 additionally understand *how* and *why* they work, and this
 will make him a master of FreeBSD, too.
 

 Hi Polytropon,

 thanks, I hope you are right, and I would love to see PJ become a
 master of FreeBSD, but my impression from the mailing list is that that
 progress is going to be too long and too frustrating.  I suppose only
 PJ can know if he/she feels that progress is happening.  Nonetheless, I
 stand by the advice to work systematically through the handbook and try
 to gain a real understanding rather than a series of fixes.  I suppose
 I was suggesting that rather than address endless frustrating symptoms
 of what looks like a mismatch between PJ's character (not ability, I
 certainly do not wish to disparage that - by character I mean a
 reluctance to stand back, slow down and approach the learning
 systematically and to give it the time it will need) and the FreeBSD
 way of doing things, it might be better to just move to something
 more pre-packaged.  PC-BSD may well be a good choice, I haven't tried
 it.

 Oh, and you are exactly right about the kind of understanding that can
 come with spending time with FreeBSD.  But perhaps it's not for
 everyone.  
   
Hi Tony,
I understand you POV but...
I don't see why FreeBSD should not be for everyone. It sure would be
great if we could lose MS and their associate mush.

I see no reason why a FreeBSD user should have to become as master of
the system. If the software is properly set up and maintained, there
should be no need for huge techincal know-how. Your assumption is that
the user should have enough knowledge to fix bugs or problems that are
caused by technical errors and/or complexities.
Isn't it a litttle absurd that often small updates to ports/progams
cause huge problems in adapting to the new versions? Maybe that is an
indication that the original concept of the port/proram was somewhat
lacking and that just puts us right smack on a par with MS, Adobe and
all the overbloated programs associated therewith.
When FreeBSD programs are set up right and work fine it's a real
delight... but when an update or small change blows things apart and you
have to go back to kindergarden to learn a new universe... it's nt
very comforting.
Cheers.
PJ=he not she  heh...heh...heh :-)
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Tony McC
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 09:13:02 -0400
PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca wrote:

 But to study the manual is beyond the capabilities of anyone ... sure,
 you can read it and study it... but you will forget anything you have
 read almost immediately if you are not applying what you are studying
 at once... there may be some residual information captured by one's
 brain but practical application is about the only way to really learn
 and understand... especially with the help of those who have dared to
 tread there before you... and their help is really invaluable.

Hi PJ,

ok, I tried (I was also trying to offer you support, just a different
kind). There was a lot of irrelevant material in your response but the
part I have quoted shows such a deep misunderstanding of what I was
trying to suggest that I think I'm done. I honestly hope you do get
past your headaches with FreeBSD, one way or another.

Best,
Tony

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Tony McC
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:00:00 +
Tony McC af...@btinternet.com wrote:

 Hi PJ,
 
 ok, I tried (I was also trying to offer you support, just a different
 kind). There was a lot of irrelevant material in your response but the
 part I have quoted shows such a deep misunderstanding of what I was
 trying to suggest that I think I'm done. I honestly hope you do get
 past your headaches with FreeBSD, one way or another.

Replying to myself, sorry.  I think I owe you an apology for a grumpy
response.  I think it comes down to the fact our learning styles must
be very different.  You seem to like to try things first and then try
to understand when things go wrong.  I like to gain a reasonably firm
theoretical understanding first and then try out things according to a
plan, keeping notes at each stage.  When something happens that I don't
understand then of course I learn from that.   I think we are just
different.  So no, I'm not suggesting you learn the manual by heart
before going any further.  I am suggesting that you *start* with the
manual, take it step by step, and only try things that might break your
system when a) you think you have a firm grasp of what you are doing
and b) you have a contingency plan to revert to the way things were
before if something surprising happens.  And, again, as part of a
learning style, when I do come across those uncomfortable surprises
(and I do), I generally assume that I must have done something stupid,
not that FreeBSD itself is stupid. That is also a learning experience
for me.

Best,
Tony

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread PJ
Tony McC wrote:
 On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:00:00 +
 Tony McC af...@btinternet.com wrote:

   
 Hi PJ,

 ok, I tried (I was also trying to offer you support, just a different
 kind). There was a lot of irrelevant material in your response but the
 part I have quoted shows such a deep misunderstanding of what I was
 trying to suggest that I think I'm done. I honestly hope you do get
 past your headaches with FreeBSD, one way or another.
 

 Replying to myself, sorry.  I think I owe you an apology for a grumpy
 response.  I think it comes down to the fact our learning styles must
 be very different.  You seem to like to try things first and then try
 to understand when things go wrong.  I like to gain a reasonably firm
 theoretical understanding first and then try out things according to a
 plan, keeping notes at each stage.  When something happens that I don't
 understand then of course I learn from that.   I think we are just
 different.  So no, I'm not suggesting you learn the manual by heart
 before going any further.  I am suggesting that you *start* with the
 manual, take it step by step, and only try things that might break your
 system when a) you think you have a firm grasp of what you are doing
 and b) you have a contingency plan to revert to the way things were
 before if something surprising happens.  And, again, as part of a
 learning style, when I do come across those uncomfortable surprises
 (and I do), I generally assume that I must have done something stupid,
 not that FreeBSD itself is stupid. That is also a learning experience
 for me.

 Best,
 Tony

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That's cool. NP.
My thing is simply... if it works use it. If it doesn't try to fix it...
and here's where you sometimes have to learn or find help.  8-)

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Polytropon
 dared to tread
 there before you...

The main goal of reading manpages is UNDERSTANDING them. Nearly
nobody knows all options of all existing programs in all the
variations, but if you know how to obtain information and how
to interpret it, you're already on the next stage.



 Also, from the suggestions and solutions I have received on the list, I
 have learned many, many little tips and tricks that I would never have
 picked up without extensive digging.

This is true for mee, to. I keep copies of messages that I find
interesting, maybe a useful set of PF rules or a neat awk trick.



 I really turn to the list when I have some problem about which I am not
 totally clear or have difficulty resolving. But then, I must admit, I
 don't really depend on the list as it is really very simple to fix the
 problems I have by just installing a fresh system and then setting up
 the programs and don't bother with fixing things just start all over...
 not very informative but easy to fix (maybe a bit time consuming) .

Hmm... I always found reinstalling everything from scratch more
time consuming than investigating the problem and just correcting
THIS particular problem.



 As I
 have stated before, things like flashplugin have become a problem only
 after I started doing some other things like cloning and dump/restores.

How to both things stand in relation?



 But I did set up flashplugin correctly on both 64bit and 32bit machines
 and it worked just fine... until I changed things while cloning. 

Cloning shouldn't have changed anything, it's a read-only process
on the source side.





-- 
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Magdeburg, Germany
Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0
Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ...
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread PJ
 be some residual information captured by one's brain
 but practical application is about the only way to really learn and
 understand... especially with the help of those who have dared to tread
 there before you...
 

 The main goal of reading manpages is UNDERSTANDING them. Nearly
 nobody knows all options of all existing programs in all the
 variations, but if you know how to obtain information and how
 to interpret it, you're already on the next stage.



   
 Also, from the suggestions and solutions I have received on the list, I
 have learned many, many little tips and tricks that I would never have
 picked up without extensive digging.
 

 This is true for mee, to. I keep copies of messages that I find
 interesting, maybe a useful set of PF rules or a neat awk trick.



   
 I really turn to the list when I have some problem about which I am not
 totally clear or have difficulty resolving. But then, I must admit, I
 don't really depend on the list as it is really very simple to fix the
 problems I have by just installing a fresh system and then setting up
 the programs and don't bother with fixing things just start all over...
 not very informative but easy to fix (maybe a bit time consuming) .
 

 Hmm... I always found reinstalling everything from scratch more
 time consuming than investigating the problem and just correcting
 THIS particular problem.



   
 As I
 have stated before, things like flashplugin have become a problem only
 after I started doing some other things like cloning and dump/restores.
 

 How to both things stand in relation?



   
 But I did set up flashplugin correctly on both 64bit and 32bit machines
 and it worked just fine... until I changed things while cloning. 
 

 Cloning shouldn't have changed anything, it's a read-only process
 on the source side.
   
Yeah, but stupid errors are not. I know I made one really dumb mistake
when I restored to the wrong partition. Fortunately I was working with
several different disks and was able to avoid losing important data... I
wound up redoing it all... but now I understand the dump/restore process
pretty well... anyway I goofed somewhere. but what is strange is that
the only obvious problem I have is this flashplugin - no matter what I
do, I cannot get it to work.
I do recall that at some point there was an update for flash or firefox
and I think I allowed Firefox to update it... so the problem just may be
with Firefox itself.  And I just don't feel like going through a
reinstallation of Firefox again... that is probably the most lengthy and
tortuous installation of anything except for OpenOffice.org (I only use
the binaries for that) and my cpus are 2.4 or 3Ghz. Anyway, I've given
up on flash... I don't go to youtube or the like so I don't really miss
it... it's just annoying that I can't access some sites properly when
using FreeBSD.

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Polytropon
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 15:45:24 -0400, PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca wrote:
 Yeah, but stupid errors are not.

Nobody can make all the errors.



 anyway I goofed somewhere. but what is strange is that
 the only obvious problem I have is this flashplugin - no matter what I
 do, I cannot get it to work.

But obviously, as others are running it, it's possible.



 I do recall that at some point there was an update for flash or firefox
 and I think I allowed Firefox to update it... so the problem just may be
 with Firefox itself. 

That may be possible.



 And I just don't feel like going through a
 reinstallation of Firefox again... that is probably the most lengthy and
 tortuous installation of anything except for OpenOffice.org (I only use
 the binaries for that) and my cpus are 2.4 or 3Ghz.

That's the reason that I really prefer precompiled packages.
If you think that you system is all messed up, delete /usr/local
and start installing from packages. Pay attention to run the
files needed from /etc/mtree to restore the hierarchy for
the /usr/local subtree.



 Anyway, I've given
 up on flash...

I did so from its beginning. :-)



 I don't go to youtube or the like so I don't really miss
 it...

There's youtube-dl. :-)



 it's just annoying that I can't access some sites properly when
 using FreeBSD.

That's not FreeBSD's fault. If professional web designers
need to optimize their content in order to prevent you from
properly accessing it, it's their fault. I would complain to
them, or just ignore them. Content that its creator doesn't
want me to see is not worth seeing.



-- 
Polytropon
Magdeburg, Germany
Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0
Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ...
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Jerry
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 22:25:53 +0100
Polytropon Polytropon free...@edvax.de replied:

[snip]

That's not FreeBSD's fault. If professional web designers
need to optimize their content in order to prevent you from
properly accessing it, it's their fault. I would complain to
them, or just ignore them. Content that its creator doesn't
want me to see is not worth seeing.

You don't really believe that do you. Web creators attempt to make their
sites accessible to the largest possible audience. It is probably cost
prohibited, if even reasonably possible to make a site 100% viewable in
every browsers (don't forget lynxs) available. Any intelligent business
plan would dictate that they therefore concentrate on the largest
possible audience.

This problem, like the nVidea 64 bit drivers, rests with FreeBSD. You
simply cannot expect any software developer to develop and maintain a
product for what is in reality a niche OS.

-- 
Jerry
ges...@yahoo.com

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Polytropon
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:55:20 -0400, Jerry ges...@yahoo.com wrote:
 On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 22:25:53 +0100
 Polytropon Polytropon free...@edvax.de replied:
 
 [snip]
 
 That's not FreeBSD's fault. If professional web designers
 need to optimize their content in order to prevent you from
 properly accessing it, it's their fault. I would complain to
 them, or just ignore them. Content that its creator doesn't
 want me to see is not worth seeing.
 
 You don't really believe that do you.

 Web creators attempt to make their
 sites accessible to the largest possible audience.

Let's say, they *should*. I've seen (or not seen) web pages...
for example one that doesn't even tell you which page you
are on without Flash. Very useful for blind persons.



 It is probably cost
 prohibited, if even reasonably possible to make a site 100% viewable in
 every browsers (don't forget lynxs) available.

In most cases where Flash is used, it is used to annoy
users with animated advertisement (where previously animated
GIFs had been used) or to implement something that simple
as a list of further links (which can be done in HTML, in
JavaScript, but shouldn't require a proprietary plugin).

If a web page is viewable in lynx, it's high quality. The
term quality does not refer to the amount of different
media embedded, nor does it refer to the amount of different
fonts, font sizes, colors and images used. It refers to what
you said: largest possible audience. This includes all
the exceptions, such as blind users who need a readout
on a braille line, or a synthesized speech output.

You can, however, achieve this with Flash, if you embed
it correctly and maybe offer an alternative (No 'Flash'
version) of the content. The same is for using the alt=
and longdesc= attributes in HTML for images.

Okay, I will be honest: Nobody does this today anymore.
Well... I do... but I'm completely mad.



 Any intelligent business
 plan would dictate that they therefore concentrate on the largest
 possible audience.

Let's say, the largest subset of the possible audience, that
would be more correct. Web developers, as well as cretors
of viruses and malware, rely on what the majority of PC users
do use: Windows and Flash. If this is present, fine. If
not... NO CONTENT FOR YOU! NEXT ONE! :-)



 This problem, like the nVidea 64 bit drivers, rests with FreeBSD.

FreeBSD develops nVidia's GPUs and their drivers? I don't think
so. For FreeBSD users there are two options on the side of
nVidia:
a) open up the devices and the drivers so the
   community can develop quality drivers
b) develop quality drivers in-house and offer
   binary packages
And of course, for the users:
c) If it doesn't run on my OS, I don't buy it.

FreeBSD's and X's sources are free, so it's easy to implement
the drivers. Vice versa, it's not easy to develop drivers for
a GPU that (FreeBSD's and X's) developers don't know enough
about.

According to Flash, why would you think it's okay to require
a proprietary plugin that is developed in a closed way and
hooks SO DEEPLY into the system that it's that hard to implement?
And when you think about the benefits of having such a plugin...
sometimes you are glad that you can easily TURN IT OFF.

Again the analogy for images: Sometimes, their use makes a
web page ugly as sin and unreadable. Then I just switch the
images off in Opera. I don't need a plugin from an arbitrary
company to see PNG images, and know that this company does
not offer such a plugin for my platform, and that the plugin
for viewing PNG images hooks deeply into the system's kernel
so there is no 100% usable free alternative of it.

The day that Flash is an open standard and can be used the
same way as PNG images in a web page (and through the means
of a web browser), I will be glad to review my attitude.



 You
 simply cannot expect any software developer to develop and maintain a
 product for what is in reality a niche OS.

Well, I don't expect the software development company to do so.
They have the change to make Flash a standard (by opening it).
If they don't, it's okay, it is their right to do so. But then,
a web developer can't expect me to buy an expensive PC with
some Windows and a prone-to-abuse plugin of Flash just to
see some advertisement or something else that every half-skilled
web developer could easily implement with HTML, CSS and maybe
JavaScript.





-- 
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Magdeburg, Germany
Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0
Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ...
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread Adam Vande More
On Wed, Oct 28, 2009 at 4:55 PM, Jerry ges...@yahoo.com wrote:

 On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 22:25:53 +0100

 You don't really believe that do you. Web creators attempt to make their
 sites accessible to the largest possible audience. It is probably cost
 prohibited, if even reasonably possible to make a site 100% viewable in
 every browsers (don't forget lynxs) available. Any intelligent business
 plan would dictate that they therefore concentrate on the largest
 possible audience.

 This problem, like the nVidea 64 bit drivers, rests with FreeBSD. You
 simply cannot expect any software developer to develop and maintain a
 product for what is in reality a niche OS.

 --
 Jerry

 ges...@yahoo.com


Nvidia 64 is a different animal.  They have communicated why they didn't
release such a driver, and my understanding is that most or all of those
shortcomings have been remedied in 8 making discussion of a new amd64 binary
possible now.  It is also my understanding FreeBSD in one form or another
has attempted to bridge to gap with adobe, and haven't received feedback and
are basically ignored.  Disdain could easily be interpreted by such a
response.  I'm unclear as to what you expect FreeBSD to do in such a
situation.

-- 
Adam Vande More
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread PJ
Polytropon wrote:
 On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:55:20 -0400, Jerry ges...@yahoo.com wrote:
   
 On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 22:25:53 +0100
 Polytropon Polytropon free...@edvax.de replied:

 [snip]

 
 That's not FreeBSD's fault. If professional web designers
 need to optimize their content in order to prevent you from
 properly accessing it, it's their fault. I would complain to
 them, or just ignore them. Content that its creator doesn't
 want me to see is not worth seeing.
   
 You don't really believe that do you.
 

   
 Web creators attempt to make their
 sites accessible to the largest possible audience.
 

 Let's say, they *should*. I've seen (or not seen) web pages...
 for example one that doesn't even tell you which page you
 are on without Flash. Very useful for blind persons.



   
 It is probably cost
 prohibited, if even reasonably possible to make a site 100% viewable in
 every browsers (don't forget lynxs) available.
 

 In most cases where Flash is used, it is used to annoy
 users with animated advertisement (where previously animated
 GIFs had been used) or to implement something that simple
 as a list of further links (which can be done in HTML, in
 JavaScript, but shouldn't require a proprietary plugin).

 If a web page is viewable in lynx, it's high quality. The
 term quality does not refer to the amount of different
 media embedded, nor does it refer to the amount of different
 fonts, font sizes, colors and images used. It refers to what
 you said: largest possible audience. This includes all
 the exceptions, such as blind users who need a readout
 on a braille line, or a synthesized speech output.

 You can, however, achieve this with Flash, if you embed
 it correctly and maybe offer an alternative (No 'Flash'
 version) of the content. The same is for using the alt=
 and longdesc= attributes in HTML for images.

 Okay, I will be honest: Nobody does this today anymore.
 Well... I do... but I'm completely mad.



   
 Any intelligent business
 plan would dictate that they therefore concentrate on the largest
 possible audience.
 

 Let's say, the largest subset of the possible audience, that
 would be more correct. Web developers, as well as cretors
 of viruses and malware, rely on what the majority of PC users
 do use: Windows and Flash. If this is present, fine. If
 not... NO CONTENT FOR YOU! NEXT ONE! :-)



   
 This problem, like the nVidea 64 bit drivers, rests with FreeBSD.
 

 FreeBSD develops nVidia's GPUs and their drivers? I don't think
 so. For FreeBSD users there are two options on the side of
 nVidia:
   a) open up the devices and the drivers so the
  community can develop quality drivers
   b) develop quality drivers in-house and offer
  binary packages
 And of course, for the users:
   c) If it doesn't run on my OS, I don't buy it.

 FreeBSD's and X's sources are free, so it's easy to implement
 the drivers. Vice versa, it's not easy to develop drivers for
 a GPU that (FreeBSD's and X's) developers don't know enough
 about.

 According to Flash, why would you think it's okay to require
 a proprietary plugin that is developed in a closed way and
 hooks SO DEEPLY into the system that it's that hard to implement?
 And when you think about the benefits of having such a plugin...
 sometimes you are glad that you can easily TURN IT OFF.

 Again the analogy for images: Sometimes, their use makes a
 web page ugly as sin and unreadable. Then I just switch the
 images off in Opera. I don't need a plugin from an arbitrary
 company to see PNG images, and know that this company does
 not offer such a plugin for my platform, and that the plugin
 for viewing PNG images hooks deeply into the system's kernel
 so there is no 100% usable free alternative of it.

 The day that Flash is an open standard and can be used the
 same way as PNG images in a web page (and through the means
 of a web browser), I will be glad to review my attitude.



   
 You
 simply cannot expect any software developer to develop and maintain a
 product for what is in reality a niche OS.
 

 Well, I don't expect the software development company to do so.
 They have the change to make Flash a standard (by opening it).
 If they don't, it's okay, it is their right to do so. But then,
 a web developer can't expect me to buy an expensive PC with
 some Windows and a prone-to-abuse plugin of Flash just to
 see some advertisement or something else that every half-skilled
 web developer could easily implement with HTML, CSS and maybe
 JavaScript.
   

HEY, GUYS

I think you're forgetting one very important aspect of all this crap...
the fault lies with ADOBE just look at the greedy sobs - they
produce overpriced products (that, incidentally, they sell to the
kChinese at ludicrous prices  or repates and tolerate their illegal
copying) which are notoriously buggy - they bloat the OSs and never
really fix their errors they are the ones who should provide some

Re: flashplugin

2009-10-28 Thread RW
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 20:04:24 +
Freminlins freminl...@gmail.com wrote:


 I must admit I gave up ever getting Flash to work RELIABLY on FreeBSD
 a long time ago. It's just too hard, too much work, and not worth the
 misery of installing heaps of crud just to get a flipping browser
 plugin working unreliably.

Some time ago I installed the windows version of Firefox and Flash
under wine  and I've found it pretty reliable. I don't use it all the
time just on the small number of sites where flash is essential.
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-27 Thread Jerry
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 20:06:30 -0400
PJ PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca replied:

Thank you very much Herbert,

I appreciate your input.
As I wrote in my original query, I had auccessfully installed the
lilnux-flashplugin9 on FreeBSD 7.2 both on a 64 bit portable _ Acer
Travelmate 4400 - and on a couple of disks on the same machine (i386).
I followed the instructions  from
http://crnl.org/blog/2008/11/01/flash-9-for-freebsd-71#comment-form

 upgrade FreeBSD. Once that's done the rest is straight forward.
 
Step 1: Enable Linux compatibility and linprocfs
Add linux_enable=YES to /etc/rc.conf. Add
compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16 to /etc/sysctl.conf. Add
OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=f8 to /etc/make.conf. Add this line
to /etc/fstab:
linproc /usr/compat/linux/proc linprocfs rw 0 0
Then run these commands:
mkdir -p /usr/compat/linux/proc
mount /usr/compat/linux/proc
/etc/rc.d/abi start
/etc/rc.d/sysctl start   
Step 2: Update ports and install all the needed software
You will now need to install the following ports and their
dependencies:
cd /usr/ports/emulators/linux_base-f8  make install clean
cd /usr/ports/www/linux-flashplugin9  make install clean
cd /usr/ports/www/nspluginwrapper  make install clean
Follow the nspluginwrapper instructions to enable all
available plugins:
# nspluginwrapper -v -a -i
Auto-install plugins from /usr/X11R6/lib/browser_plugins
Looking for plugins in /usr/X11R6/lib/browser_plugins
Auto-install plugins from /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin
Looking for plugins in /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin
Install plugin /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin/libflashplayer.so
into /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins/npwrapper.libflashplayer.so
Auto-install plugins from /root/.mozilla/plugins
Looking for plugins in /root/.mozilla/plugins
Restart or open Firefox 3 and enter about:plugins into your
address bar. You should see something like the following:

And that's it! Open your favourite Flash site and all
 should
work.
If your browser doesn't register the Shockwave Flash plugin
as pictured above, you might need to do a bit of extra work as I had to
do on one of my machines:
cd /usr/local/lib/firefox3/plugins  ln -s
/usr/local/lib/browser_plugins/npwrapper.libflashplayer.so
npwrapper.libflashplayer.so
I'm not sure why one of my machines needed this, but it
might happen to you so this is just a heads up.
Update: I have learned that the change with the plugin
directory is due to a change in FreeBSD's Firefox 3 port. If you're
running port version 3.0.1_1 or later you will need to use the new
plugin directory as shown above. CVS change history can be seen here.
Enjoy!

That is precisely why I keep an XP box nearby. There is no way in hell
that I would want to personally, or expect a colleague for that matter,
to waste valuable time getting a simple plug-in to work; especially
since I can do it in a matter of seconds on a Microsoft product.

-- 
Jerry
ges...@yahoo.com

|===
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|

Nuclear war would really set back cable.

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-27 Thread Paul Schmehl

--On Tuesday, October 27, 2009 04:13:52 -0500 Jerry ges...@yahoo.com wrote:


That is precisely why I keep an XP box nearby. There is no way in hell
that I would want to personally, or expect a colleague for that matter,
to waste valuable time getting a simple plug-in to work; especially
since I can do it in a matter of seconds on a Microsoft product.



The problem is, it's not a simple plugin.  It is on Windows.  On FreeBSD it 
requires manipulation precisely because *there is no plugin* for FreeBSD.  It's 
a Linux plugin being adapted to FreeBSD using linux emulation, which adds a 
layer of complexity that Windows doesn't have to deal with.


Imagine trying to get a Mac executable to run on Windows, and maybe you can 
understand why flash has always been problematic on FreeBSD (although great 
progress has been made.)


--
Paul Schmehl, Senior Infosec Analyst
As if it wasn't already obvious, my opinions
are my own and not those of my employer.
***
It is as useless to argue with those who have
renounced the use of reason as to administer
medication to the dead. Thomas Jefferson

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-27 Thread Sergio de Almeida Lenzi


 
 That is precisely why I keep an XP box nearby. There is no way in hell
 that I would want to personally, or expect a colleague for that matter,
 to waste valuable time getting a simple plug-in to work; especially
 since I can do it in a matter of seconds on a Microsoft product.
 

Strange.. it has been a long time since I used a windows box... our
computers
here at home and in the offices are all freebsd... and flash works like
a charm
in 64 and 32 bits using R7.2 and 8.0... it is faster than windows, no
problem
with the browser

We use gnome 2.26 and epiphany with the libxul backend libxine as
multimedia,
and pulseaudio as audio driver...

we have several notebooks running R7.2 and some acer notebooks running
Linux too
all with gnome 2.26..  no problem at all  only 

At home, sometimes I use a windows box (ancient XP)... for a game (IL2
1946)... 



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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-27 Thread PJ

Sergio de Almeida Lenzi wrote:
  

That is precisely why I keep an XP box nearby. There is no way in hell
that I would want to personally, or expect a colleague for that matter,
to waste valuable time getting a simple plug-in to work; especially
since I can do it in a matter of seconds on a Microsoft product.




Strange.. it has been a long time since I used a windows box... our
computers
here at home and in the offices are all freebsd... and flash works like
a charm
in 64 and 32 bits using R7.2 and 8.0... it is faster than windows, no
problem
with the browser

We use gnome 2.26 and epiphany with the libxul backend libxine as
multimedia,
and pulseaudio as audio driver...

we have several notebooks running R7.2 and some acer notebooks running
Linux too
all with gnome 2.26..  no problem at all  only 


At home, sometimes I use a windows box (ancient XP)... for a game (IL2
1946)... 




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I wish someone could explain to me why I am no longer able to install 
flashplugin ... none of the methods work for me on amy version... I have 
literally tried them all..
the latest was linux-f10 - I cleaned out all the linux stuff, umounted 
the proc sytem cleaned out everything I could find related (?) to linux 
and reinstalled. No go, no way, José!
I did catch some kind of warning that flashed by on the screen about 
Glib - seems to be gstreamer related...??? and the only thing I can find 
is the error message that flashplugin.so (or whatever the file is) could 
not be loaded because shared file libfreetype.so.6 could not be 
found... and the only libfreetype.so.6 file on the s;ystem is 
...so.6.something.something...
If the system is smart enought to not find the right file, it ought to 
be smart enought to know where this file should be and to what it is 
related... duh !

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-27 Thread Sergio de Almeida Lenzi
Ok... supose you use FreeBSD 7.2 P3  (last version) but the RELEASE
should work too..

supose you use AMD64

1) compile a custom kernel with SEM (semaphore enable) (sem_enable=YES)
in the loader.conf
2) deinstall all linux stuff,  remove the /compat/linux from the system,
deinstall all pkg with linux
3) supose you will choose the basics... that is linux fc4
4) mount the /proc and linprocfs  in fstab
linproc /compat/linux/proc linprocfsrw,noauto   0   0
proc/proc   procfs  rw  0   0
5) install portmaster (recomended)
6) portmaster -Bdg www/linuxpluginwrapper
7) portmaster -Bdg www/linux-flashplugin9
8) mount -a (this will mount the /proc and linprocfs
9) nspluginwapper -v -a -i   
10 ) if you are using epiphany.
cd /usr/local/lib/epiphany/2.26/plugins;ln
-s /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins/*.so .
11) make sure linux module is on the kernel..
12) run browserand type about:plugins(this will show you the
plugin running)


This sure works...

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-27 Thread PJ
Sergio de Almeida Lenzi wrote:
 Ok... supose you use FreeBSD 7.2 P3  (last version) but the RELEASE
 should work too..

 supose you use AMD64

 1) compile a custom kernel with SEM (semaphore enable)
 (sem_enable=YES) in the loader.conf
 2) deinstall all linux stuff,  remove the /compat/linux from the
 system, deinstall all pkg with linux
 3) supose you will choose the basics... that is linux fc4
 4) mount the /proc and linprocfs  in fstab
 linproc /compat/linux/proc linprocfs rw,noauto 0 0
 proc /proc procfs rw 0 0
 5) install portmaster (recomended)
 6) portmaster -Bdg www/linuxpluginwrapper
 7) portmaster -Bdg www/linux-flashplugin9
 8) mount -a (this will mount the /proc and linprocfs
 9) nspluginwapper -v -a -i  
 10 ) if you are using epiphany. cd
 /usr/local/lib/epiphany/2.26/plugins;ln -s
 /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins/*.so .
 11) make sure linux module is on the kernel..
 12) run browserand type about:plugins(this will show you the
 plugin running)


 This sure works...

The installation on the Acer travelmate 4400 turion 64bid was quite
simple - just following instructions I found for installing flashplayer9
... it went without a problem

The problem is on 7.2 p4 if I'm not mistaken on i386 - as I said, I was
able to install flashplayer9 and all went well, but the something
happened and I don't know what... now it is impossible to install any
flashplayer... I have tried them all... now I have linux-f10 with
flashplayer10 installed and all I get is an error that flashplugin.so
cannot be started because a shared file freetype.so.6 cannot be
found... It's there allright and is linked to fretype.so.6.13 or some
number like that... the fine name may not be correct as I don't have it
in front of me... but then, where is this shared file supposed to be?
The setups for the flashplayer are such a ridiculous mess that I can
only laugh...There are obviously conflicts or something screwing things
up from other programs like gimp or ImageMagic or gstreamers or some
such stuff...

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-26 Thread Freminlins
2009/10/25 Matthew Seaman m.sea...@infracaninophile.co.uk


% pkg_info -r linux-f10-flashplugin-10.0r32
Information for linux-f10-flashplugin-10.0r32:

Depends on:
Dependency: linux_base-f10-10_2
Dependency: linux-f10-openssl-0.9.8g
Dependency: linux-f10-openldap-2.4.12_1
Dependency: linux-f10-libssh2-0.18
Dependency: linux-f10-cyrus-sasl2-2.1.22
Dependency: linux-f10-curl-7.19.4_4
Dependency: linux-f10-nspr-4.7.4
Dependency: linux-f10-sqlite3-3.5.9_1
Dependency: linux-f10-nss-3.12.2.0


Why the hell the Flash plugin (for Linux) needs openldap and sqlite I do not
know. SASL too for that matter.

I must admit I gave up ever getting Flash to work RELIABLY on FreeBSD a long
time ago. It's just too hard, too much work, and not worth the misery of
installing heaps of crud just to get a flipping browser plugin working
unreliably.



 Cheers,

Matthew


MF.
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-26 Thread PJ
Thank you very much Herbert,

I appreciate your input.
As I wrote in my original query, I had auccessfully installed the
lilnux-flashplugin9 on FreeBSD 7.2 both on a 64 bit portable _ Acer
Travelmate 4400 - and on a couple of disks on the same machine (i386). I
followed the instructions  from
http://crnl.org/blog/2008/11/01/flash-9-for-freebsd-71#comment-form

 upgrade FreeBSD. Once that's done the rest is straight forward.
 
Step 1: Enable Linux compatibility and linprocfs
Add linux_enable=YES to /etc/rc.conf. Add
compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16 to /etc/sysctl.conf. Add
OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=f8 to /etc/make.conf. Add this line to /etc/fstab:
linproc /usr/compat/linux/proc linprocfs rw 0 0
Then run these commands:
mkdir -p /usr/compat/linux/proc
mount /usr/compat/linux/proc
/etc/rc.d/abi start
/etc/rc.d/sysctl start   
Step 2: Update ports and install all the needed software
You will now need to install the following ports and their
dependencies:
cd /usr/ports/emulators/linux_base-f8  make install clean
cd /usr/ports/www/linux-flashplugin9  make install clean
cd /usr/ports/www/nspluginwrapper  make install clean
Follow the nspluginwrapper instructions to enable all
available plugins:
# nspluginwrapper -v -a -i
Auto-install plugins from /usr/X11R6/lib/browser_plugins
Looking for plugins in /usr/X11R6/lib/browser_plugins
Auto-install plugins from /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin
Looking for plugins in /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin
Install plugin /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin/libflashplayer.so
into /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins/npwrapper.libflashplayer.so
Auto-install plugins from /root/.mozilla/plugins
Looking for plugins in /root/.mozilla/plugins
Restart or open Firefox 3 and enter about:plugins into your
address bar. You should see something like the following:

And that's it! Open your favourite Flash site and all should
work.
If your browser doesn't register the Shockwave Flash plugin
as pictured above, you might need to do a bit of extra work as I had to
do on one of my machines:
cd /usr/local/lib/firefox3/plugins  ln -s
/usr/local/lib/browser_plugins/npwrapper.libflashplayer.so
npwrapper.libflashplayer.so
I'm not sure why one of my machines needed this, but it
might happen to you so this is just a heads up.
Update: I have learned that the change with the plugin
directory is due to a change in FreeBSD's Firefox 3 port. If you're
running port version 3.0.1_1 or later you will need to use the new
plugin directory as shown above. CVS change history can be seen here.
Enjoy!
 
Worked without a problem. But while learning how to dump/restore to make
clones, I cannot imagine what happened, but I found that the machines
now had lilnux-fc4 distribution. This did not work. I have tried to
install all the versions  of  linux, except the f10, and all versions of
flashplayer 0 7, 9 and even 10 ... no way will it work...so I just have
to abandon it an accept the fact that Adobe sucks just as much as
MushWindows.

I have also tried following the instructions in the manual and have lost
a tremendous lot of time... really, this is the kind of shit that we
just don't need ... why do we tolerate the likes of Adobe and MS?
(Rhetorical question)
Thanks, anyway.
   
 
   

herbert langhans wrote:
 I have some instructions on http://freebsd.langhans.com.pl/af/index.html - 
 not updated for a while, but it might be some useful input.

 Cheers
 herb langhans


 On Sat, Oct 24, 2009 at 07:56:58PM -0400, PJ wrote:
   
 Is there any definitive install guide for flashplugin.
 I was able to install it on a 7.2 64bit machine and then on an i386 but
 somehow it has morphed into god-knows-what and no longer works.
 I thought I had installed it with linux-f8 emulations but I found the
 linux-f4 on the machine... so I don't know what is going on.
 Now, trying to reinstall under linux-f8 and flashplugin9 does not work...
 Adobe seems to be toally unreliable as to what they are doing with their
 software; at least from what I can see about the problems users are
 having with their products.
 So, the question - what is the latest method to get the flashplugin to
 work - what linux emulation, whick version of flashplugin... stumble,
 bumble and mumble ...
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-26 Thread PJ
Matthew Seaman wrote:
 PJ wrote:
 Is there any definitive install guide for flashplugin.
 I was able to install it on a 7.2 64bit machine and then on an i386 but
 somehow it has morphed into god-knows-what and no longer works.

 This is what I did for a 7.2 box.  Note that there are compatibility
 issues between new versions of Linux emulation and older versions of
 FreeBSD, so don't expect this to work with anything older.

 * Make a note of all the linux-emulated software you have installed
  for later reference:

 # pkg_info -orx linux  linux-stuff

  We save the package origins in particular, because this procedure
  will result in a name change for most linux packages.

 * Delete everything linux related

 # pkg_delete -rx linux

 * Check and clean out /compat/linux -- there shouldn't be any interesting
  files left in this directory after the above step.  As I recall, when I
  did this, there was a ldconfig.hints file (which would be regenerated on
  demand), and some Acrobat related stuff under /compat/linux/home/matthew
  which I didn't care about, and which shouldn't have been there anyhow.

 # cd /compat/linux
 # find . -type f -ls
 # rm -rf *

 * Change the default Linux kernel version for emulation:

 # sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16

  Also add compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16 to /etc/sysctl.conf so it
  gets reset on reboots.

 * Tell the ports system we want to use Fedora-10 as the Linux base by
 adding

 OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=   f10
 OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=   f10

   to /etc/make.conf.

 * Now install www/linux-f10-flashplugin10 from ports -- this should
 have all
  of the following as dependencies (modulo any version updates that may
 have
  happened since writing this):

 % pkg_info -r linux-f10-flashplugin-10.0r32
 Information for linux-f10-flashplugin-10.0r32:

 Depends on:
 Dependency: linux_base-f10-10_2
 Dependency: linux-f10-openssl-0.9.8g
 Dependency: linux-f10-openldap-2.4.12_1
 Dependency: linux-f10-libssh2-0.18
 Dependency: linux-f10-cyrus-sasl2-2.1.22
 Dependency: linux-f10-curl-7.19.4_4
 Dependency: linux-f10-nspr-4.7.4
 Dependency: linux-f10-sqlite3-3.5.9_1
 Dependency: linux-f10-nss-3.12.2.0

  if that isn't the case and you aren't getting the f10 flavour of those
  ports, double check everything you've done so far for errors, and try
 again
  from the top.

 * Add nspluginwrapper to enable Firefox to load the flash add-on:

 # portinstall www/nspluginwrapper

  (This has a dependency list as long as your arm, so it might take some
  time...)

  Following the install instructions for the nspluginwrapper package
 (which
  you can redisplay by pkg_info -Dx nspluginwrapper)  install
 whatever globally
  available plugins there are by running this as root:

 # nspluginwrapper -v -a -i

  This puts plugins into /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins/ which Firefox
 should
  read.  Alternatively, install the plugins locally to your own user
 account
  by running that command under your own UID:

 % nspluginwrapper -v -a -i

 * Finally, fire up Firefox and check that it has loaded the flash
 plugin by
  typing 'about:plugins' into the URL bar.  Find a site with flash
 content[*],
  and enjoy.

 * Check the list you made at the first step, and reinstall any other
 linux
  applications you want. 
 So far I've found flash10 under Fedora10 to be pretty stable and
 inoffensive
 on FreeBSD 7.2.  You even get the sound track on Flash movies. 
 However I'm
 still running Firefox with xpi-flashblock-1.5.11.2 and
 xpi-noscript-1.9.3.3 on general principles

 Adobe Acrobat isn't working, but I think that's more to do with the
 map_at_zero stuff introduced in the last security advisory.

 Cheers,

 Matthew

 [*] I think there are one or two flash based things at YouTube.com

Much appreciated, Matthew.
I will give it a shot... maybe I should have tried to clean things out
earlier... I was just too-dumb-lazy and din't know the shortcuts you
offer above.
Will let you know... but it may take some time as I have to catch up
with lost time  energy. :-)
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-26 Thread PJ
Freminlins wrote:
 2009/10/25 Matthew Seaman m.sea...@infracaninophile.co.uk


   
% pkg_info -r linux-f10-flashplugin-10.0r32
Information for linux-f10-flashplugin-10.0r32:

Depends on:
Dependency: linux_base-f10-10_2
Dependency: linux-f10-openssl-0.9.8g
Dependency: linux-f10-openldap-2.4.12_1
Dependency: linux-f10-libssh2-0.18
Dependency: linux-f10-cyrus-sasl2-2.1.22
Dependency: linux-f10-curl-7.19.4_4
Dependency: linux-f10-nspr-4.7.4
Dependency: linux-f10-sqlite3-3.5.9_1
Dependency: linux-f10-nss-3.12.2.0

 

 Why the hell the Flash plugin (for Linux) needs openldap and sqlite I do not
 know. SASL too for that matter.

 I must admit I gave up ever getting Flash to work RELIABLY on FreeBSD a long
 time ago. It's just too hard, too much work, and not worth the misery of
 installing heaps of crud just to get a flipping browser plugin working
 unreliably.
   
I haven't tried your last suggestion yet... but it will be the last...
I'm only wanted to be able to use it for my own development stuff - I
have to time for the youtubes and mindless twitterings. Fortunately, as
much as I hate MS, flash does work on it. But adobe and ms muck up the
system so that it lumbers along like a humpty-Dumpty overstuffed
S-car-go! ;-)
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-25 Thread herbert langhans
I have some instructions on http://freebsd.langhans.com.pl/af/index.html - not 
updated for a while, but it might be some useful input.

Cheers
herb langhans


On Sat, Oct 24, 2009 at 07:56:58PM -0400, PJ wrote:
 Is there any definitive install guide for flashplugin.
 I was able to install it on a 7.2 64bit machine and then on an i386 but
 somehow it has morphed into god-knows-what and no longer works.
 I thought I had installed it with linux-f8 emulations but I found the
 linux-f4 on the machine... so I don't know what is going on.
 Now, trying to reinstall under linux-f8 and flashplugin9 does not work...
 Adobe seems to be toally unreliable as to what they are doing with their
 software; at least from what I can see about the problems users are
 having with their products.
 So, the question - what is the latest method to get the flashplugin to
 work - what linux emulation, whick version of flashplugin... stumble,
 bumble and mumble ...
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-- 
sprachtraining langhans
herbert langhans, warschau
http://www.langhans.com.pl
herbert dot raimund at gmx dot net
+0048 603 341 441

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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-25 Thread Matthew Seaman

PJ wrote:

Is there any definitive install guide for flashplugin.
I was able to install it on a 7.2 64bit machine and then on an i386 but
somehow it has morphed into god-knows-what and no longer works.


This is what I did for a 7.2 box.  Note that there are compatibility
issues between new versions of Linux emulation and older versions of 
FreeBSD, so don't expect this to work with anything older.


* Make a note of all the linux-emulated software you have installed
 for later reference:

# pkg_info -orx linux  linux-stuff

 We save the package origins in particular, because this procedure 
 will result in a name change for most linux packages.


* Delete everything linux related

# pkg_delete -rx linux

* Check and clean out /compat/linux -- there shouldn't be any interesting
 files left in this directory after the above step.  As I recall, when I
 did this, there was a ldconfig.hints file (which would be regenerated on
 demand), and some Acrobat related stuff under /compat/linux/home/matthew
 which I didn't care about, and which shouldn't have been there anyhow.

# cd /compat/linux
# find . -type f -ls
# rm -rf *

* Change the default Linux kernel version for emulation:

# sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16

 Also add compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16 to /etc/sysctl.conf so it
 gets reset on reboots.

* Tell the ports system we want to use Fedora-10 as the Linux base by adding

OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=   f10
OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=   f10

  to /etc/make.conf.

* Now install www/linux-f10-flashplugin10 from ports -- this should have all
 of the following as dependencies (modulo any version updates that may have
 happened since writing this):

% pkg_info -r linux-f10-flashplugin-10.0r32
Information for linux-f10-flashplugin-10.0r32:

Depends on:
Dependency: linux_base-f10-10_2
Dependency: linux-f10-openssl-0.9.8g
Dependency: linux-f10-openldap-2.4.12_1
Dependency: linux-f10-libssh2-0.18
Dependency: linux-f10-cyrus-sasl2-2.1.22
Dependency: linux-f10-curl-7.19.4_4
Dependency: linux-f10-nspr-4.7.4
Dependency: linux-f10-sqlite3-3.5.9_1
Dependency: linux-f10-nss-3.12.2.0

 if that isn't the case and you aren't getting the f10 flavour of those
 ports, double check everything you've done so far for errors, and try again
 from the top.

* Add nspluginwrapper to enable Firefox to load the flash add-on:

# portinstall www/nspluginwrapper

 (This has a dependency list as long as your arm, so it might take some
 time...)

 Following the install instructions for the nspluginwrapper package (which
 you can redisplay by pkg_info -Dx nspluginwrapper)  install whatever globally
 available plugins there are by running this as root:

# nspluginwrapper -v -a -i

 This puts plugins into /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins/ which Firefox should
 read.  Alternatively, install the plugins locally to your own user account
 by running that command under your own UID:

% nspluginwrapper -v -a -i

* Finally, fire up Firefox and check that it has loaded the flash plugin by
 typing 'about:plugins' into the URL bar.  Find a site with flash content[*],
 and enjoy.

* Check the list you made at the first step, and reinstall any other linux
 applications you want.  


So far I've found flash10 under Fedora10 to be pretty stable and inoffensive
on FreeBSD 7.2.  You even get the sound track on Flash movies.  However I'm
still running Firefox with xpi-flashblock-1.5.11.2 and xpi-noscript-1.9.3.3 on 
general principles

Adobe Acrobat isn't working, but I think that's more to do with the map_at_zero 
stuff introduced in the last security advisory.

Cheers,

Matthew

[*] I think there are one or two flash based things at YouTube.com

--
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil.   7 Priory Courtyard
 Flat 3
PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate
 Kent, CT11 9PW



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Description: OpenPGP digital signature


flashplugin

2009-10-24 Thread PJ
Is there any definitive install guide for flashplugin.
I was able to install it on a 7.2 64bit machine and then on an i386 but
somehow it has morphed into god-knows-what and no longer works.
I thought I had installed it with linux-f8 emulations but I found the
linux-f4 on the machine... so I don't know what is going on.
Now, trying to reinstall under linux-f8 and flashplugin9 does not work...
Adobe seems to be toally unreliable as to what they are doing with their
software; at least from what I can see about the problems users are
having with their products.
So, the question - what is the latest method to get the flashplugin to
work - what linux emulation, whick version of flashplugin... stumble,
bumble and mumble ...
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-24 Thread Glen Barber
Howdy,

On Sat, Oct 24, 2009 at 7:56 PM, PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca wrote:
 Is there any definitive install guide for flashplugin.
 I was able to install it on a 7.2 64bit machine and then on an i386 but
 somehow it has morphed into god-knows-what and no longer works.

Any errors?

 I thought I had installed it with linux-f8 emulations but I found the
 linux-f4 on the machine... so I don't know what is going on.
 Now, trying to reinstall under linux-f8 and flashplugin9 does not work...

I used the steps in the handbook[1] to get flash on my FreeBSD 8
machines.  I never used flash on 7 because it wasn't worth the
trouble.  Things have changed since.

 Adobe seems to be toally unreliable as to what they are doing with their
 software; at least from what I can see about the problems users are
 having with their products.

Any major software vendor fits in this category, IMHO.  Not everything
works for everyone.  Computer configurations, hardware, OS, etc differ
from person to person, company to company.

 So, the question - what is the latest method to get the flashplugin to
 work - what linux emulation, whick version of flashplugin... stumble,
 bumble and mumble ...


[1] - 
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/desktop-browsers.html#MOZ-FLASH-PLUGIN

HTH.

-- 
Glen Barber
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Re: flashplugin

2009-10-24 Thread PJ
Glen Barber wrote:
 Howdy,

 On Sat, Oct 24, 2009 at 7:56 PM, PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca wrote:
   
 Is there any definitive install guide for flashplugin.
 I was able to install it on a 7.2 64bit machine and then on an i386 but
 somehow it has morphed into god-knows-what and no longer works.
 

 Any errors?
   
I was just about to add what I had forgotten...
latest fiddling with the non-working installation gives error: shared
object libdl.so.2 not found required by libflashplugin.so

And I've roamed the web trying to find solutions, but nothing really is
solid... I used some instructions from crnl.org-blog-Flash 9 for
FreeBSD 7.1 and it worked when I first installed it both on 7.2 x64bit
and i386... but that wasn't for long..
   
 I thought I had installed it with linux-f8 emulations but I found the
 linux-f4 on the machine... so I don't know what is going on.
 Now, trying to reinstall under linux-f8 and flashplugin9 does not work...
 

 I used the steps in the handbook[1] to get flash on my FreeBSD 8
 machines.  I never used flash on 7 because it wasn't worth the
 trouble.  Things have changed since.
   
I've been using 7.2 thinking it was to be stable for a while... oh,
well... now I'm waiting for 8 to be released before switching.
   
 Adobe seems to be toally unreliable as to what they are doing with their
 software; at least from what I can see about the problems users are
 having with their products.
 

 Any major software vendor fits in this category, IMHO.
But MS and Adobe are unbelievabley horrendous...and why they don't fix
the problems their software have had for many years already is beyond me..
   Not everything
 works for everyone.  Computer configurations, hardware, OS, etc differ
 from person to person, company to company.
   
Well, that's normal if the user has no idea of what they are doing...
I'd hope I know a little more than that... but that doesn't help
eityher... for instance, the only way I can get Windoze XP office to
work is to set up a new user and it works fine... the original user
just refuses to work... ridiculous... but then, I only use the damned
thing when someone else has forceed me to open what they have made...
   
 So, the question - what is the latest method to get the flashplugin to
 work - what linux emulation, whick version of flashplugin... stumble,
 bumble and mumble ...
 


 [1] - 
 http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/desktop-browsers.html#MOZ-FLASH-PLUGIN

   
Yeah, I had installed that and it worked fine... but now it no longer
works... I had it on two machines and two installations of 7.2 on the
same machine... but now ... it no longer works... and I don't understand
why... I did install gimp and inksckape on one of the installations, but
neither the other nor this one wanted to work... so hurray for adobe and
Linux... I waste more time trying to get their stuff to work without
hindrances and

Thanks for the suggestions.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-08-04 Thread Edwin L. Culp

Conrad J. Sabatier [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:


On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:00:27 -0500
Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


Hey all,

I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to
work too well at least with firefox.
One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and
Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is
freeze

I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted
status. Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have
heard gnash doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works
halfway?


I just installed the HEAD version of Gnash today, and I must say, it's
working much, much better than the official release version (0.8.3).
Sites that malfunctioned before are now displaying properly at last!


I'm sorry but I must ask.  What version of flash can be reliably  
viewed?  I guess many if not most are new asking for flash9 or flash8.  
 I find few that are satisfied with flash7.


Thanks,

ed


See http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/#downloading for instructions on
how to get the source code.  You'll also need to install devel/bazaar-ng
in order to fetch it.

--
PROOF OF GOD #483. ARGUMENT FROM PROBABLE PROOF
  (1) God exists.
  (2) Can I prove it?  Probably.
  (3) Therefore, God exists.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-08-04 Thread David Gurvich
For youtube, gnash works better than linux-flashplugin7 and worse than
wine+flash9 on i386.  I understand that amd64 has difficulties with
wine, making gnash or similar the only option.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-08-03 Thread Conrad J. Sabatier
On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:00:27 -0500
Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hey all,
 
 I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to
 work too well at least with firefox. 
 One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and 
 Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is
 freeze
 
 I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted
 status. Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have
 heard gnash doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works
 halfway?

I just installed the HEAD version of Gnash today, and I must say, it's
working much, much better than the official release version (0.8.3).
Sites that malfunctioned before are now displaying properly at last!

See http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/#downloading for instructions on
how to get the source code.  You'll also need to install devel/bazaar-ng
in order to fetch it.

-- 
PROOF OF GOD #483. ARGUMENT FROM PROBABLE PROOF
  (1) God exists.
  (2) Can I prove it?  Probably.
  (3) Therefore, God exists.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-08-03 Thread Sam Fourman Jr.
On Sun, Aug 3, 2008 at 8:47 PM, Conrad J. Sabatier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:00:27 -0500
 Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hey all,

 I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to
 work too well at least with firefox.
 One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and
 Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is
 freeze

 I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted
 status. Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have
 heard gnash doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works
 halfway?

 I just installed the HEAD version of Gnash today, and I must say, it's
 working much, much better than the official release version (0.8.3).
 Sites that malfunctioned before are now displaying properly at last!

maybe the gnash-devel port should be updated

Sam Fourman Jr.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread Wojciech Puchar

Unfortunately, I don't think Adobe is likely to give a damn about people
who would switch to FreeBSD (or FreeBSD spin-off like PC-BSD) if there


do we need whole lot FreeBSD users? no. after certain amount of users 
quality starts to go down. the same was with linux



whether there's a current, stable Flash player available.  Adobe wants
market penetration -- which it's just as happy to get by people being
stuck on MS Windows as by any other means.


simply don't use flash if it's author don't want you to do it - as that's 
what exactly is. they want only windoze and linux users to use flash, so 
don't use it.

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread prad
On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 09:17:12 +0200 (CEST)
Wojciech Puchar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 simply don't use flash if it's author don't want you to do it - as
 that's what exactly is. they want only windoze and linux users to use
 flash, so don't use it.

i don't use flash - don't need to see all those advertizements. and
quite frankly, i generally find flash sites irritating anyway.

i occasionally like to see some things on youtube (classical music
videos), but i found i could just download them and use ffmpeg to
convert.

i'd rather wait for gnash to come up to speed - or not bother.

-- 
In friendship,
prad

  ... with you on your journey
Towards Freedom
http://www.towardsfreedom.com (website)
Information, Inspiration, Imagination - truly a site for soaring I's
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread Wojciech Puchar

flash, so don't use it.


i don't use flash - don't need to see all those advertizements. and
quite frankly, i generally find flash sites irritating anyway.


i don't use it because sites that RELY on flash rarely (almost never) have 
any useful contents.




i occasionally like to see some things on youtube (classical music
videos), but i found i could just download them and use ffmpeg to


youtube-dl from ports is nice script that do all that. you just give a 
link to this.


youtube made people so dumb that they can't just put their movies on some 
server making it HTTP/FTP accessible, they have to put it on youtube and 
get converted to crap-quality. the movies are at best - recognizable.

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread Gerard
On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 09:53:05 +0200 (CEST)
Wojciech Puchar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  flash, so don't use it.
 
  i don't use flash - don't need to see all those advertizements. and
  quite frankly, i generally find flash sites irritating anyway.
 
 i don't use it because sites that RELY on flash rarely (almost never)
 have any useful contents.

However, there are many banking institutions that use Flash. I also
belong to several 'Officials Associations' that require the use of
Flash. They are using Flash, not just to make my life easier, but to
simplify theirs.

All this nonsense about using third party programs to download content
from sites such as, but not limited to YouTube, is just unacceptable.
If I navigate to a URL, I fully expect to be able to view all of that
site's content as easily using FreeBSD as I can using Window's with IE.
or even Firefox. Anything less is just not acceptable.


-- 
Gerard
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

A free society is one where it is safe to be unpopular.

Adlai Stevenson


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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread dick hoogendijk
On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 14:05:19 -0400
Gerard [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 All this nonsense about using third party programs to download content
 from sites such as, but not limited to YouTube, is just unacceptable.
 If I navigate to a URL, I fully expect to be able to view all of that
 site's content as easily using FreeBSD as I can using Window's with
 IE. or even Firefox. Anything less is just not acceptable.

Then you have a few options:
1. use windows
2. use linux
3. use solaris
4. buy Adobe
The latter simply does not support native FreeBSD.

But I agree with you: Flash is not always shit or not needed. Quite a
few times it gives somthing extra that makes the web more attractive.
People stating it's advertizing 99% of the time are simply wrong.

-- 
Dick Hoogendijk -- PGP/GnuPG key: 01D2433D
++ http://nagual.nl/ + SunOS sxce snv90 ++
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread Jerry McAllister
On Mon, Jun 16, 2008 at 08:11:50PM +0200, dick hoogendijk wrote:

 On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 14:05:19 -0400
 Gerard [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  All this nonsense about using third party programs to download content
  from sites such as, but not limited to YouTube, is just unacceptable.
  If I navigate to a URL, I fully expect to be able to view all of that
  site's content as easily using FreeBSD as I can using Window's with
  IE. or even Firefox. Anything less is just not acceptable.
 
 Then you have a few options:
 1. use windows
 2. use linux
 3. use solaris
 4. buy Adobe
 The latter simply does not support native FreeBSD.
 
 But I agree with you: Flash is not always shit or not needed. Quite a
 few times it gives somthing extra that makes the web more attractive.
 People stating it's advertizing 99% of the time are simply wrong.

Flash is useful, even on business pages.   It can be more efficient at
transmitting certain types of information.  But, businesses that allow
their web designer to supplant his|her ego by putting flash or any other
cute trick in the way of getting business done are failing to manage their 
business and are welcome to go ahead and have their business fail.

jerry

 
 -- 
 Dick Hoogendijk -- PGP/GnuPG key: 01D2433D
 ++ http://nagual.nl/ + SunOS sxce snv90 ++
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread Wojciech Puchar

But I agree with you: Flash is not always shit or not needed. Quite a


yes you are right. not always, just USUALLY.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread prad
On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 15:21:45 -0400
Jerry McAllister [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 But, businesses that allow
 their web designer to supplant his|her ego by putting flash or any
 other cute trick in the way of getting business done are failing to
 manage their business and are welcome to go ahead and have their
 business fail.

absolutely! they are masochistically engaged in self-flashalation. :D

-- 
In friendship,
prad

  ... with you on your journey
Towards Freedom
http://www.towardsfreedom.com (website)
Information, Inspiration, Imagination - truly a site for soaring I's
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread Mario Lobo
On Monday 16 June 2008 16:49:45 prad wrote:
 On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 15:21:45 -0400

 Jerry McAllister [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  But, businesses that allow
  their web designer to supplant his|her ego by putting flash or any
  other cute trick in the way of getting business done are failing to
  manage their business and are welcome to go ahead and have their
  business fail.

 absolutely! they are masochistically engaged in self-flashalation. :D

Kinda makes me amost sorry that when a tool comes out with the intent of 
aiding criativity, ends up hipnotizing people to use every knob and switch 
there is.

Some times I miss the good/old netscape 4.xx fast-loading/simple pages days.

-- 
Mario Lobo
http://www.mallavoodoo.com.br
FreeBSD since version 2.2.8 [not Pro-Audio YET!!] (99,7% winedows FREE)
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread cpghost
On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 20:11:50 +0200
dick hoogendijk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 14:05:19 -0400
 Gerard [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  All this nonsense about using third party programs to download
  content from sites such as, but not limited to YouTube, is just
  unacceptable. If I navigate to a URL, I fully expect to be able to
  view all of that site's content as easily using FreeBSD as I can
  using Window's with IE. or even Firefox. Anything less is just not
  acceptable.
 
 Then you have a few options:
 1. use windows
 2. use linux
 3. use solaris
 4. buy Adobe
 The latter simply does not support native FreeBSD.

 But I agree with you: Flash is not always shit or not needed. Quite a
 few times it gives somthing extra that makes the web more attractive.
 People stating it's advertizing 99% of the time are simply wrong.

The problem with Flash is neither

 * Flash ads (blockable with NoScript) NOR

 * Adobe's dismal/no support of FreeBSD (other alternatives exist) NOR

 * the closed-sourceness of Adobe's Flash Player (runs in isolated
   virtualized sandboxes where it won't do much harm, either
   intentionally or unintentionally)

but the fact that Flash *content* itself is being routinely blocked /
filtered at the edge of many corporate networks for security reasons,
and the number of corporate networks that block Flash is increasing
daily... and IMHO rightly so!

If your company decided to block Flash content because they are afraid
of industrial or economic espionage with Flash-based malware -- and
there's an increasing number of companies in Europe, Taiwan, Korea,
Japan and China which do just that for exactly this reason -- your only
recourse is to insist that websites provide alternative non-Flash
paths. It's not a Adobe against FreeBSD thing, it's a very simple
matter of accessibility in general to content and a whole technology
that is deemed untrusted by the security people responsible for
company's valuable data.

Hobbyists usually don't have so many sensitive data on their machines,
or they don't care much about them if they leaked outside, but companies
can't afford being this lax: they've got much more to lose if something
goes wrong.

Nothing against Flash: those who want to provide it or view it, nice!
But any respectable site ought to provide a viable alternative to an
important class of users: it's not just us FreeBSD users, it's far,
FAR more than that!

-cpghost.

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-16 Thread RW
On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 00:36:36 +0200
cpghost [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 The problem with Flash is neither ...
 

 but the fact that Flash *content* itself is being routinely blocked /
 filtered at the edge of many corporate networks for security reasons,

That's sounds more like the beginning of a solution, than a problem.
No one cares about FreeBSD, but people surfing when they should be
working are a major demographic.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-15 Thread Chad Perrin
On Sun, Jun 08, 2008 at 04:34:17AM -0500, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
 for what it is worth, between 3 companies that I do consulting for, there
 are about 250 workstations that currently use, Windows ME, or Windows
 2000.Flash and Microsoft Outlook remain the only 2 reasons we can not use
 PC-BSD. Wine is making some GREAT Progress, and very shortly if not already,
 Outlook will run in wine, and the lack of a current flash player will remain
 the only thing standing in the way of 250 more PC-BSD stations.

Unfortunately, I don't think Adobe is likely to give a damn about people
who would switch to FreeBSD (or FreeBSD spin-off like PC-BSD) if there
were a current, stable Flash player for the platform.  All Adobe's likely
to care about is people who use FreeBSD (or a spin-off) regardless of
whether there's a current, stable Flash player available.  Adobe wants
market penetration -- which it's just as happy to get by people being
stuck on MS Windows as by any other means.

So . . . if you want your situation to provide some kind of influence on
Adobe to provide current, stable Flash players for FreeBSD and its
spin-offs, you need to come up with numbers of FreeBSD-based desktop
systems, not a number of systems running a platform Adobe already
supports that *isn't* FreeBSD-based, no matter how much you'd like to
change those systems to PC-BSD.

-- 
Chad Perrin [ content licensed PDL: http://pdl.apotheon.org ]
awj @reddit: The terms never and always are never always true.


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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-11 Thread eculp

Quoting Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED]:


Hey all,

I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to work too
well at least with firefox.
One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and
Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is freeze

I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted status.
Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have heard gnash
doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works halfway?


I've got a question.  A friend has been loaning me his old laptop at  
work that runs Ubuntu and flash runs fine.  I have not been able to  
make it fail, yet at least. Could there be a clue in Ubuntu somewhare?  
 I'm actually thinking of running it under kqemu, if there isn't too  
much overhead, on my amd64 laptop until this gets sorted out.


If anyone has flash9 working dependably under freebsd, please let us know how.

Thanks,

ed
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-11 Thread eculp

Quoting herbert langhans [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

There are some instructions how you can get the Flashplayer running.  
Not perfect, but it will do in many cases.

http://freebsd.langhans.com.pl/af/index.html


Excellent howto Herb.  My problem is that it seems that firefox-devel  
doesn't work with amd64 but being stubborn, I'm forcing a compile just  
to be sure.  If it doesn't work on my laptop amd64 I will find a i386  
to test on.  Thanks for you work and documentation


Have a great day,

ed



Cheers
herbs

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*** Sprachtraining Langhans
*** http://www.langhans.com.pl
*** [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-11 Thread Robert Huff

eculp writes:

  I've got a question.  A friend has been loaning me his old laptop
  at work that runs Ubuntu and flash runs fine.  I have not been
  able to make it fail, yet at least. Could there be a clue in
  Ubuntu somewhare?  I'm actually thinking of running it under
  kqemu, if there isn't too much overhead, on my amd64 laptop until
  this gets sorted out.

The Flashplugins in the ports collection are the Linux
versions, which require both a) an interface between the plugin and
the browser and b) the Linux emulation layer.
My last information about Flash9, gleaned from various FreeBSD
mailing lists: the problem is thought to be _somewhere_ between the
plugin and the emulation layer.  This is roughly equivalent to
saying there is a mouse somewhere in inesrt your continent here.
The current set of permanent pest control experts (the Linux
emulation crew) has considered the matter and decided this is not
worth the time.  As of the time I heard about it, this was in part
because a) Flash9 had tangible problems under Linux and b) even if
they knew what was broken in the plugin the track record of Adobe
being willing to fix it was poor.  (Volunteers for a special mission
should apply on the emulation@ list.)
Don't get me wrong - I'd love to have a working Flashcurrent
even under emulation.  But after _years_ of having hopes raised and
dashed I'm pretty much waiting for Flash10 which is supposed to have
an open spec API (ABI??).


Robert Huff

.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-11 Thread eculp

Quoting Robert Huff [EMAIL PROTECTED]:



eculp writes:


 I've got a question.  A friend has been loaning me his old laptop
 at work that runs Ubuntu and flash runs fine.  I have not been
 able to make it fail, yet at least. Could there be a clue in
 Ubuntu somewhare?  I'm actually thinking of running it under
 kqemu, if there isn't too much overhead, on my amd64 laptop until
 this gets sorted out.


The Flashplugins in the ports collection are the Linux
versions, which require both a) an interface between the plugin and
the browser and b) the Linux emulation layer.
My last information about Flash9, gleaned from various FreeBSD
mailing lists: the problem is thought to be _somewhere_ between the
plugin and the emulation layer.  This is roughly equivalent to
saying there is a mouse somewhere in inesrt your continent here.
The current set of permanent pest control experts (the Linux
emulation crew) has considered the matter and decided this is not
worth the time.  As of the time I heard about it, this was in part
because a) Flash9 had tangible problems under Linux and b) even if
they knew what was broken in the plugin the track record of Adobe
being willing to fix it was poor.  (Volunteers for a special mission
should apply on the emulation@ list.)
Don't get me wrong - I'd love to have a working Flashcurrent
even under emulation.  But after _years_ of having hopes raised and
dashed I'm pretty much waiting for Flash10 which is supposed to have
an open spec API (ABI??).


Great information, Robert.  Thanks.

ed
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-10 Thread herbert langhans
There are some instructions how you can get the Flashplayer running. Not 
perfect, but it will do in many cases.
http://freebsd.langhans.com.pl/af/index.html

Cheers
herbs

-- 
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*** Sprachtraining Langhans
*** http://www.langhans.com.pl
*** [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-09 Thread Jerry McAllister
On Sat, Jun 07, 2008 at 05:09:08PM -0700, Tobias Hoellrich wrote:

 [Disclaimer: I work for Adobe Systems. I have nothing to do with the
 Flash Player. I'm a grunt who works on other stuff. This is my personal
 opinion as a long-time FreeBSD user and I'm not making any statements
 for Adobe.]
 
  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jona Joachim
  Sent: Saturday, June 07, 2008 4:58 PM
  To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
  Subject: Re: Flashplugin
  
  Flash is a big pain IMO.
  The Flash question has been asked *a lot* of times on this list.
  The answer usually boils down to use www/nspluginwrapper or use
  linux-firefox. Both solutions are far from optimal.
  My solution is to simply ignore Flash content. It makes your 
  online experience
  much more enjoyable. This is my personal choice of course.
 
 ...
 
 That's simply wrong. The Flash format byte-code is *not* proprietary. If
 you want to, you can go ahead and create your own Flash Player. The
 specifications for the format are freely available at:
 http://www.adobe.com/openscreenproject/developers/

This is encouraging.   Is that info really enough to create a player
such as Flash 9?

I hope some folks will take a good shot at it.  It is really beyond me.

 
 And Gnash (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/), which was started before
 the spec was available, will certainly benefit from this. 
 
 And to address a previous message: if your bank requires you to use the
 Flash Player to make a transaction, then you will need to get in touch
 with your bank and not blame it on the non-existence of the Flash Player
 on your platform. A disabled person with a text-only browser or a
 screen-reader will certainly have the same issues. 

Companies who insist on their front pages and their functional things
such as sales using flash or some other gimmick are inflicted with 
persons who are more interested in supplanting their egos than 
making the online product work for the company.

But, if the web page has all its business in normal html and only
uses flash and other such stuff as extra attraction and advertising
then, no problem.   A little eye candy on the side is not the issue.
It is when the essentials are all blocked and made non-functional 
by the eye candy that the company and/or web designer is way off base.

 
 My offer stands: if anybody can provide the numbers above, I'm going to
 forward them to the right people and work things from my end. 

The numbers come out each month (BSD Stats), but unfortunately they really 
represent only a fraction of the actual number of BSD systems in use.  They 
also do not distinguish between server and desktop use -- which is sometimes 
impossible anyway since many systems, such as the one I am typing on right 
now, are used for both.

jerry


 
 Don't beat me up, I'm for the support - even if I'm not using FreeBSD as
 a desktop OS. 
 
 Thanks and happy weekend - Tobias
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread sergio lenzi
Well...

Here I am in a project of notebooks for schools
machines with 13 120gb  of disk turion 64...
All of them running FreeBSD 7.0  it is about 7000 notebooks
in the first year... 

With a total of 35000 notebooks in 3 years... and counting...
may be a total of 100,000 notebooks in 5 years...

Because of special taxes applied in the notebooks,
the user must use FreeBSD or Linux.  If the user formats
the computer and install other non open source OS,
the user must pay the taxes difference to the project...
a value of about US$200. and will not be able to access
the university data. 

Well.. about the flashplugin...  it is a problem... for sure...
they work with flashplugin 7

The wireless is a problem too, for that we choose intel or atheros
chip...

Tell the flashplugin team about... please

Sergio


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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread Derek Graham
on Sunday 08 June 2008Sunday 08 June 2008 sergio lenzi sergio lenzi 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Well...

 Here I am in a project of notebooks for schools
 machines with 13 120gb  of disk turion 64...
 All of them running FreeBSD 7.0  it is about 7000 notebooks
 in the first year...

 With a total of 35000 notebooks in 3 years... and counting...
 may be a total of 100,000 notebooks in 5 years...

 Because of special taxes applied in the notebooks,
 the user must use FreeBSD or Linux.  If the user formats
 the computer and install other non open source OS,
 the user must pay the taxes difference to the project...
 a value of about US$200. and will not be able to access
 the university data.

 Well.. about the flashplugin...  it is a problem... for sure...
 they work with flashplugin 7

 The wireless is a problem too, for that we choose intel or atheros
 chip...

 Tell the flashplugin team about... please

 Sergio


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Adobe,
There are some numbers,
7,000 now and 30,000 in 3 yrs from one school
14,692 pcbsd
6,320 reported freebsd
about almost 30,000 bsd desktops reported, im sure there are alot of people 
who do not report their stats,  but id imagine we got alot more then 30,000 
bsd desktop users. Theyd probably use an intern to do most of the work, and 
we all know interns are unpaid, they earn knowledge and experience. Throw 
their butts on coding a BSD Flashplayer version. I am sure if you throw in a 
few pizzas everyday, some trashy sluts, and a lot of caffiene they could work 
them around the clock and have something working in a couple months. Motivate 
them with food, girls and hope :)

Sincerely,
Derek A. Graham
President
D and M Computers, Inc.
Exceeding your expectations everyday!
http://www.dandmcomputers.co.cc/
(847) 305-1954 ext 101

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread Gonzalo Nemmi
On Saturday 07 June 2008 23:16:34 Jerry McAllister wrote:
 On Sun, Jun 08, 2008 at 12:03:50AM +0200, Dick Hoogendijk wrote:
  On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:33:26 -0500
 
  Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
   plugin
 
  People choosing FreeBSD shouldn't be forced to run windowish
  solution. The OS is not supported. That's a major problem in these
  modern times, although lots of fbsd people tend to say it is not.
  That's not everyday's live however. FreeBSD does not make the web.

 OK.   So get busy anc contribute a flash9 plugin that works in FreeBSD.
 See if you can get the necessary information out of Adobe.

 jerry

I don't know to what extent this might come in handy .. but in case anyone 
wants to pick up that gauntlet, you can find quite a lot to start with in 
here :

http://www.adobe.com/devnet/swf/
http://www.adobe.com/devnet/swf/pdf/swf_file_format_spec_v9.pdf

http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flv/
http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flv/pdf/video_file_format_spec_v9.pdf

http://www.adobe.com/openscreenproject/


Blessings
-- 
Gonzalo Nemmi

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread Sam Fourman Jr.
for what it is worth, between 3 companies that I do consulting for, there
are about 250 workstations that currently use, Windows ME, or Windows
2000.Flash and Microsoft Outlook remain the only 2 reasons we can not use
PC-BSD. Wine is making some GREAT Progress, and very shortly if not already,
Outlook will run in wine, and the lack of a current flash player will remain
the only thing standing in the way of 250 more PC-BSD stations.

Sam Fourman Jr.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread Lars Eighner

On Sat, 7 Jun 2008, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:


use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
plugin


That worked like a charm, but Adobe Reader 8.12 not only crashes the
browser, but also wine and X.  So now I have wine firefox which can handle
Flash 9, but crashes on pdfs and linux-firefox which handles pdfs, but
crashes on Flash.

This seems somehow suboptimal.

--
Lars Eighner
http://www.larseighner.com/index.html
8800 N IH35 APT 1191 AUSTIN TX 78753-5266

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread dick hoogendijk

On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 22:16:34 -0400
Jerry McAllister [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sun, Jun 08, 2008 at 12:03:50AM +0200, Dick Hoogendijk wrote:

  On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:33:26 -0500
  Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
   use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash
9 plugin
 
  People choosing FreeBSD shouldn't be forced to run windowish
solution. The OS is not supported. That's a major problem in these
modern times, although lots of fbsd people tend to say it is not.
That's not everyday's live however. FreeBSD does not make the web.

 OK.   So get busy anc contribute a flash9 plugin that works in
 FreeBSD. See if you can get the necessary information out of Adobe.

As Tobias Hoelrich stated:

That's simply wrong. The Flash format byte-code is *not* proprietary. If
you want to, you can go ahead and create your own Flash Player. The
specifications for the format are freely available at:
http://www.adobe.com/openscreenproject/developers/

So, the infromation -is- there.

-- 
Dick Hoogendijk -- PGP/GnuPG key: F86289CE
++ http://nagual.nl/ | SunOS 10u5 05/08 ++

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread Jerry McAllister
On Sun, Jun 08, 2008 at 03:01:36AM -0300, sergio lenzi wrote:

 Well...
 
 Here I am in a project of notebooks for schools
 machines with 13 120gb  of disk turion 64...
 All of them running FreeBSD 7.0  it is about 7000 notebooks
 in the first year... 
 
 With a total of 35000 notebooks in 3 years... and counting...
 may be a total of 100,000 notebooks in 5 years...

Sounds like you should also install the BSD Stats utility on those
machines so they will report their existence to the stats.  It would
significantly update the numbers.

jerry



 
 Because of special taxes applied in the notebooks,
 the user must use FreeBSD or Linux.  If the user formats
 the computer and install other non open source OS,
 the user must pay the taxes difference to the project...
 a value of about US$200. and will not be able to access
 the university data. 
 
 Well.. about the flashplugin...  it is a problem... for sure...
 they work with flashplugin 7
 
 The wireless is a problem too, for that we choose intel or atheros
 chip...
 
 Tell the flashplugin team about... please
 
 Sergio
 
 
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread Chris Whitehouse

Jerry McAllister wrote:

On Sun, Jun 08, 2008 at 03:01:36AM -0300, sergio lenzi wrote:


Well...

Here I am in a project of notebooks for schools
machines with 13 120gb  of disk turion 64...
All of them running FreeBSD 7.0  it is about 7000 notebooks
in the first year... 


With a total of 35000 notebooks in 3 years... and counting...
may be a total of 100,000 notebooks in 5 years...


Sounds like you should also install the BSD Stats utility on those
machines so they will report their existence to the stats.  It would
significantly update the numbers.

jerry



What is the project? An article about it would be great for FreeBSD news...

Chris






Because of special taxes applied in the notebooks,
the user must use FreeBSD or Linux.  If the user formats
the computer and install other non open source OS,
the user must pay the taxes difference to the project...
a value of about US$200. and will not be able to access
the university data. 


Well.. about the flashplugin...  it is a problem... for sure...
they work with flashplugin 7

The wireless is a problem too, for that we choose intel or atheros
chip...

Tell the flashplugin team about... please

Sergio


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The Freebsd notebook project... was Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread sergio lenzi
Em Dom, 2008-06-08 às 14:37 +0100, Chris Whitehouse escreveu:

 Jerry McAllister wrote:



The idea behind the FreebSD nobebook project is rather simple:

Here in my country a person must (or should) pay a lot of taxes to
the govern...  for every notebook sold, there is about 70% of taxes plus
about 6% month of fincancial costs... so a small notebook sells for
about U$1400.  
in this $1400 there are almost $800 of taxes... without count the
financial costs of about 6%/month (at best) .

But not everything is lost...  the govern invest much money in
education,
and health... (I know that a lot of money is lost... but it does not
count, lost is lost)...

For educacional pourposes,  the taxes are very low (about 10%)... so a
good notebook
sells for US800. (final cost)..  the notbook is turion 64 (preferable
not dual core)... 120gb hd
wireless 13... without operating system.. and bought in chunks of 1000.

Because they will use open source, and the operating system must be
built from  ground zero within the university...
serialized, with a software key code that is able to trace the
machine...
(there is no debian, mandriva, gentoo,microsoft) no comercial brand
should apply... 
finance with the State bank in 36 months it will cost about US$20/month
with insurance...

The student sign a contract that will take care of the machine and if
tampered (other no open source
OS installed)... all the taxes should be payed  by him... 

The notbooks runs Gnome 2.22 and with wireless in the campus, everybody
can access the multimedia
files stored in the FreBSD servers (about 20T)... Using a modified divx
codec, the media is protected from
being seen or used by non authorized persons (ok I know that the
protection is not hard) but is enough
for dayly used (all media is marked with a water mark (thanks mencoder
team...)).

The Evolution (email client...) is linked with the open exchange server
and ldap... so a person can email and
receive information form the university staff and others using the ldap
servers... 

Telephony is done using Ekiga (low rates apply to PSTN)... and if you
have fast internet connection, the builtin camera can be used
for video on Ekiga... 

Gatekeepers (using gnugk) links directly to the PSTN, ekiga talks h323..
so no problem with it too.

For office is used openoffice 3.0 (now beta).. 

Media is produced or convertd using ffmpeg mplayer...can be seen on
the standard gnome media
player, using libxine backend... 

it just works

Hope will start installing the servers till end of this month...

Ok... and the users that already have the vista boxes??? (about 2%)
No problem... for a small   they can install a program
that identifyes the notebook to the servers. About the media...
well they can always convert the media... (some more cost is
involved...)
no virus protection is installed in the network. so windows users
are advised to not link their computers at any point of the network
(use at own risk signs are all around...)

Included in the project, there is  for training the users to use
gnome...
(well in fact... make the users forget words and methods. (excell,
outlook, word,
anti-virus, codec, media player...))
Why not KDE   too powerfull.. excelent, consumes more resources,
must get an written permission for QT (the lawers said...). Too
complicated for the users
the users just want to ckick and go... 

That is the project... it was 2 years of negotiation... of course THEY
tried to do the same...
but after 2 years... the project specification remains the same... 

Another good candidate is Arch Linux...   but have some problems with
the media play...
(totem xine zoom does not work, and the openoffice in native language
have some problems,
kernel version and internals change too soon... the kernel schedule does
not compare to FreeBSD7_ULE...
so sometimes the media play chokes  at heavy load...  but is a good
candidade)...

With the   earn in the project... some of them will be inject in
FreeBSD to make some things work (flash player,
buggy bios...).  Must have $$$ to teach people to program in
gnome/gtk... 
this will generate JOBS.. if one in 100 produce something in some time
we will have a new softwre company...
The first buyer???  the govern...

The ideia is to theach the children for no need to punish the men...


Thanks for reading

Sergio
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread Sam Fourman Jr.
 That worked like a charm, but Adobe Reader 8.12 not only crashes the
 browser, but also wine and X.  So now I have wine firefox which can handle
 Flash 9, but crashes on pdfs and linux-firefox which handles pdfs, but
 crashes on Flash.


What version of wine are you using? I believe they fixed that in wine
recently

Sam Fourman Jr.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-08 Thread Lars Eighner

On Sun, 8 Jun 2008, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:


That worked like a charm, but Adobe Reader 8.12 not only crashes the
browser, but also wine and X.  So now I have wine firefox which can handle
Flash 9, but crashes on pdfs and linux-firefox which handles pdfs, but
crashes on Flash.



What version of wine are you using? I believe they fixed that in wine
recently


The current port which is 1.0-rc3 according to the (port) Makefile.

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http://www.larseighner.com/index.html
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Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Derek Graham
Hey all,

I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to work too 
well at least with firefox. 
One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and 
Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is freeze

I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted status. 
Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have heard gnash 
doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works halfway?

Derek
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Sam Fourman Jr.
On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hey all,

 I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to work
 too
 well at least with firefox.
 One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and
 Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is freeze

 I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted
 status.
 Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have heard gnash
 doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works halfway?

 Derek


use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
plugin

Sam Fourman Jr.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Derek Graham
on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Sam Fourman Jr. Sam Fourman 
Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hey all,
 
  I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to work
  too
  well at least with firefox.
  One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and
  Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is
  freeze
 
  I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted
  status.
  Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have heard gnash
  doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works halfway?
 
  Derek

 use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
 plugin

 Sam Fourman Jr.
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yeah i got that installed but its a pain to run wine ver of firefox for flash 
stuff and native firefox for normal usage. Do you recommend using wine 
firefox for normal use?

Sincerely,
Derek A. Graham
President
D and M Computers, Inc.
Exceeding your expectations everyday!
http://www.dandmcomputers.co.cc/
(847) 305-1954 ext 101

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Sam Fourman Jr.
On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:40 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Sam Fourman Jr. Sam Fourman
 Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
   Hey all,
  
   I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to
 work
   too
   well at least with firefox.
   One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and
   Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is
   freeze
  
   I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted
   status.
   Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have heard
 gnash
   doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works halfway?
  
   Derek
 
  use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
  plugin
 
  Sam Fourman Jr.
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 yeah i got that installed but its a pain to run wine ver of firefox for
 flash
 stuff and native firefox for normal usage. Do you recommend using wine
 firefox for normal use?

 I don't know, not really I have never been able to get the fonts to look
right in wine firefox

Sam Fourman Jr.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Derek Graham
on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Sam Fourman Jr. Sam Fourman 
Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:40 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Sam Fourman Jr. Sam
  Fourman
 
  Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  wrote:
Hey all,
   
I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to
 
  work
 
too
well at least with firefox.
One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly
and Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does
is freeze
   
I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted
status.
Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have heard
 
  gnash
 
doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works halfway?
   
Derek
  
   use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
   plugin
  
   Sam Fourman Jr.
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  yeah i got that installed but its a pain to run wine ver of firefox for
  flash
  stuff and native firefox for normal usage. Do you recommend using wine
  firefox for normal use?
 
  I don't know, not really I have never been able to get the fonts to look

 right in wine firefox

 Sam Fourman Jr.


I was just going to ask you about that, it all looks like crud with the fonts 
not right, anyone know how to setup the fonts for wine?
Sincerely,
Derek A. Graham
President
D and M Computers, Inc.
Exceeding your expectations everyday!
http://www.dandmcomputers.co.cc/
(847) 305-1954 ext 101

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Dick Hoogendijk
On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:33:26 -0500
Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
 plugin

People choosing FreeBSD shouldn't be forced to run windowish
solution. The OS is not supported. That's a major problem in these
modern times, although lots of fbsd people tend to say it is not.
That's not everyday's live however. FreeBSD does not make the web.

-- 
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++ http://nagual.nl/ + SunOS sxde 01/08 ++
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Sam Fourman Jr.
 People choosing FreeBSD shouldn't be forced to run windowish
 solution. The OS is not supported. That's a major problem in these
 modern times, although lots of fbsd people tend to say it is not.
 That's not everyday's live however. FreeBSD does not make the web.


I agree, I made a comment, last week when I noticed  I could not even Pay my
credit card bill
at a major US bank,on FreeBSD because of the lack of flash9. To me I find it
kind of a oxy moron
to have to load a Windows Application in wine, in order to complete a secure
financial transaction.
I wish there was a way for the FreeBSD community to let Adobe know that we
are out here.
I know there are online petitions and I have signed them.

I know the topic of flash 9 gets brought up every week on this list, or so
it seems.
but does anyone know if someone is working on getting Flash9 to work in
FreeBSD?
if there is someone working on it, maybe there should be a wiki page since
Flash9 is such a popular port.

I can say that I have saw a report from someone last week saying that the
new linux 2.6x emulation
in 8 -current  still does not make the flash9 port work in a stable manner.

Sam Fourman Jr.
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Jona Joachim
On 2008-06-07, Dick Hoogendijk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:33:26 -0500
 Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
 plugin

 People choosing FreeBSD shouldn't be forced to run windowish
 solution. The OS is not supported. That's a major problem in these
 modern times, although lots of fbsd people tend to say it is not.
 That's not everyday's live however. FreeBSD does not make the web.

Flash is a big pain IMO.
The Flash question has been asked *a lot* of times on this list.
The answer usually boils down to use www/nspluginwrapper or use
linux-firefox. Both solutions are far from optimal.
My solution is to simply ignore Flash content. It makes your online experience
much more enjoyable. This is my personal choice of course.
I think it is rather reducing when you have to beg unkind vendors to eventually
consider that you exist.
I don't think proprietary binary formats have their place on the web. The WWW is
an information exchange platform, why would you want to diffuse information
around the globe when you know that a lot of people will not be able to decipher
it? It's a bit arrogant I think.

Jona

-- 
Pond-erosa Puff wouldn't take no guff
Water oughta be clean and free
So he fought the fight and he set things right
With his OpenBSD

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread LtCdData
On Saturday 07 June 2008, Derek Graham wrote:
 Hey all,

 I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to work
 too well at least with firefox.
 One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly and
 Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it does is freeze

 I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the restricted
 status. Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have heard
 gnash doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works halfway?

 Derek
 
Yep, I have to say it too, firefox for windows under wine is now my main 
firefox browser on freebsd, as the other solutions just don not work well 
enough, or just do not work  
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Alastair Hogge
On Sun, 8 Jun 2008 06:47:56 Derek Graham wrote:
 on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Sam Fourman Jr. Sam Fourman

 Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:40 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Sam Fourman Jr. Sam
   Fourman
  
   Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
   wrote:
 Hey all,

 I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem to
  
   work
  
 too
 well at least with firefox.
 One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads automaticly
 and Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video but all it
 does is freeze

 I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the
 restricted status.
 Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have heard
  
   gnash
  
 doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works halfway?

 Derek
   
use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash
9 plugin
   
Sam Fourman Jr.
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   yeah i got that installed but its a pain to run wine ver of firefox for
   flash
   stuff and native firefox for normal usage. Do you recommend using wine
   firefox for normal use?
  
   I don't know, not really I have never been able to get the fonts to
   look
 
  right in wine firefox
 
  Sam Fourman Jr.

 I was just going to ask you about that, it all looks like crud with the
 fonts not right, anyone know how to setup the fonts for wine?
Search for winetricks, it's a shell script that can download and install 
MS-Windows fonts(amoung other things) for you.

Also PC-BSD has a PBI for installing MS-Windows fonts for wine, maybe check 
that out?

 Sincerely,
 Derek A. Graham
-Alastair

 President
 D and M Computers, Inc.
 Exceeding your expectations everyday!
 http://www.dandmcomputers.co.cc/
 (847) 305-1954 ext 101

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RE: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Tobias Hoellrich
[Disclaimer: I work for Adobe Systems. I have nothing to do with the
Flash Player. I'm a grunt who works on other stuff. This is my personal
opinion as a long-time FreeBSD user and I'm not making any statements
for Adobe.]

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jona Joachim
 Sent: Saturday, June 07, 2008 4:58 PM
 To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
 Subject: Re: Flashplugin
 
 Flash is a big pain IMO.
 The Flash question has been asked *a lot* of times on this list.
 The answer usually boils down to use www/nspluginwrapper or use
 linux-firefox. Both solutions are far from optimal.
 My solution is to simply ignore Flash content. It makes your 
 online experience
 much more enjoyable. This is my personal choice of course.

I'm afraid that's the age-old question of demand. If there was enough
demand out there, I'm sure that any software manufacturer would consider
FreeBSD a platform that needs to be supported. 
Providing support for the Flash Player on FreeBSD is not a one-shot
thing. You don't have some summer intern create a port of the current
version of the player, release it and then be done with it. If a
platform is officially supported it means dedication of a lot of
resources: engineering and especially testing. Once a platform is
adopted it needs to be rev'ed whenever the other platforms are updated,
otherwise you end up again in a situation where a certain application
that requires new Flash Player features does not work for you. This all
means time and money. Adobe as any other public company has to justify
its actions to its shareholders. If anybody scrutinizes the books and
sees a substantial amount of engineering and QA resources being
dedicated to a platform that has very little desktop market penetration
and because of that some other important high-reach features were
dropped, I'm sure that public company would have to answer some
questions about it. 

Since the last discussion I actually contacted the Flash Player team and
asked what it would take to get an official port for Flash Player on
FreeBSD. I was asked to provide numbers that would indicate how many
*desktop* FreeBSD systems are out there and how many of them are used on
a *regular* basis. So, if anybody on this list can provide those
answers, I'd be more than happy to do my part and relay the answers back
to those people who can actually influence decisions in this area.
Again, I'm not speaking for Adobe, I'm just offering to help as much as
I can as a happy FreeBSD user (well, if it wasn't for
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=123735 on 8.0-CURRENT). 

 I think it is rather reducing when you have to beg unkind 
 vendors to eventually
 consider that you exist.
 I don't think proprietary binary formats have their place on 
 the web. The WWW is
 an information exchange platform, why would you want to 
 diffuse information
 around the globe when you know that a lot of people will not 
 be able to decipher
 it? It's a bit arrogant I think.

That's simply wrong. The Flash format byte-code is *not* proprietary. If
you want to, you can go ahead and create your own Flash Player. The
specifications for the format are freely available at:
http://www.adobe.com/openscreenproject/developers/

And Gnash (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/), which was started before
the spec was available, will certainly benefit from this. 

And to address a previous message: if your bank requires you to use the
Flash Player to make a transaction, then you will need to get in touch
with your bank and not blame it on the non-existence of the Flash Player
on your platform. A disabled person with a text-only browser or a
screen-reader will certainly have the same issues. 

My offer stands: if anybody can provide the numbers above, I'm going to
forward them to the right people and work things from my end. 

Don't beat me up, I'm for the support - even if I'm not using FreeBSD as
a desktop OS. 

Thanks and happy weekend - Tobias
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Jerry McAllister
On Sun, Jun 08, 2008 at 12:03:50AM +0200, Dick Hoogendijk wrote:

 On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:33:26 -0500
 Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
  plugin
 
 People choosing FreeBSD shouldn't be forced to run windowish
 solution. The OS is not supported. That's a major problem in these
 modern times, although lots of fbsd people tend to say it is not.
 That's not everyday's live however. FreeBSD does not make the web.

OK.   So get busy anc contribute a flash9 plugin that works in FreeBSD.
See if you can get the necessary information out of Adobe.

jerry


 
 -- 
 Dick Hoogendijk -- PGP/GnuPG key: 01D2433D
 ++ http://nagual.nl/ + SunOS sxde 01/08 ++
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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Derek Graham
on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Alastair Hogge Alastair Hogge 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sun, 8 Jun 2008 06:47:56 Derek Graham wrote:
  on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Sam Fourman Jr. Sam
  Fourman
 
  Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:40 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:
on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Sam Fourman Jr. Sam
Fourman
   
Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Derek Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   
wrote:
  Hey all,
 
  I have tried using swfdec-plugin to do flash, but it doesnt seem
  to
   
work
   
  too
  well at least with firefox.
  One ... I prefer being able to select what flash loads
  automaticly and Two ... I like to be able to see the flash video
  but all it does is freeze
 
  I can't seem to get linux-flashplugin7 anymore due to the
  restricted status.
  Flashplugin9 locks up also, which we all know already. I have
  heard
   
gnash
   
  doesnt do much better... Anyone have a solution that works
  halfway?
 
  Derek

 use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows
 Flash 9 plugin

 Sam Fourman Jr.
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yeah i got that installed but its a pain to run wine ver of firefox
for flash
stuff and native firefox for normal usage. Do you recommend using
wine firefox for normal use?
   
I don't know, not really I have never been able to get the fonts to
look
  
   right in wine firefox
  
   Sam Fourman Jr.
 
  I was just going to ask you about that, it all looks like crud with the
  fonts not right, anyone know how to setup the fonts for wine?

 Search for winetricks, it's a shell script that can download and install
 MS-Windows fonts(amoung other things) for you.

 Also PC-BSD has a PBI for installing MS-Windows fonts for wine, maybe check
 that out?

  Sincerely,
  Derek A. Graham

 -Alastair

  President
  D and M Computers, Inc.
  Exceeding your expectations everyday!
  http://www.dandmcomputers.co.cc/
  (847) 305-1954 ext 101
 
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can you install PBI's on FreeBSD? thought they were only for PC-BSD
Sincerely,
Derek A. Graham
President
D and M Computers, Inc.
Exceeding your expectations everyday!
http://www.dandmcomputers.co.cc/
(847) 305-1954 ext 101

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Derek Graham
on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Jona Joachim Jona Joachim 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On 2008-06-07, Dick Hoogendijk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Sat, 7 Jun 2008 15:33:26 -0500
 
  Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  use Firefox for Windows and use wine, then install the windows Flash 9
  plugin
 
  People choosing FreeBSD shouldn't be forced to run windowish
  solution. The OS is not supported. That's a major problem in these
  modern times, although lots of fbsd people tend to say it is not.
  That's not everyday's live however. FreeBSD does not make the web.

 Flash is a big pain IMO.
 The Flash question has been asked *a lot* of times on this list.
 The answer usually boils down to use www/nspluginwrapper or use
 linux-firefox. Both solutions are far from optimal.
 My solution is to simply ignore Flash content. It makes your online
 experience much more enjoyable. This is my personal choice of course.
 I think it is rather reducing when you have to beg unkind vendors to
 eventually consider that you exist.
 I don't think proprietary binary formats have their place on the web. The
 WWW is an information exchange platform, why would you want to diffuse
 information around the globe when you know that a lot of people will not be
 able to decipher it? It's a bit arrogant I think.

 Jona


Yeah I understand where you are going with that, but at the same time every 
interface is flash, java, or silverlight. Fortunately my current banking 
choice greendot doesnt use flash, but there are alot of web apps that require 
it to work and require using the latest version. There is where we need 
flash. We need these companies to realise that if majority of the websites on 
the planet use it, then they need to support every operating system with the 
means of accessing  the web via a current maintained gui browser. Java, 
Flash, Silverlight and all applications that are used heavily in todays 
websites need to be made standardly ready and available to Windows, 
Macintosh, Unix(including linux and freebsd and all 'nix os)

I do not want to have to use wine to get to a important secure login for a 
bank or similar site when I am running something better then windows

My $0.02
Sincerely,
Derek A. Graham
President
D and M Computers, Inc.
Exceeding your expectations everyday!
http://www.dandmcomputers.co.cc/
(847) 305-1954 ext 101

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Derek Graham
on Saturday 07 June 2008Saturday 07 June 2008 Tobias Hoellrich Tobias 
Hoellrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 [Disclaimer: I work for Adobe Systems. I have nothing to do with the
 Flash Player. I'm a grunt who works on other stuff. This is my personal
 opinion as a long-time FreeBSD user and I'm not making any statements
 for Adobe.]

  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jona Joachim
  Sent: Saturday, June 07, 2008 4:58 PM
  To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
  Subject: Re: Flashplugin
 
  Flash is a big pain IMO.
  The Flash question has been asked *a lot* of times on this list.
  The answer usually boils down to use www/nspluginwrapper or use
  linux-firefox. Both solutions are far from optimal.
  My solution is to simply ignore Flash content. It makes your
  online experience
  much more enjoyable. This is my personal choice of course.

 I'm afraid that's the age-old question of demand. If there was enough
 demand out there, I'm sure that any software manufacturer would consider
 FreeBSD a platform that needs to be supported.
 Providing support for the Flash Player on FreeBSD is not a one-shot
 thing. You don't have some summer intern create a port of the current
 version of the player, release it and then be done with it. If a
 platform is officially supported it means dedication of a lot of
 resources: engineering and especially testing. Once a platform is
 adopted it needs to be rev'ed whenever the other platforms are updated,
 otherwise you end up again in a situation where a certain application
 that requires new Flash Player features does not work for you. This all
 means time and money. Adobe as any other public company has to justify
 its actions to its shareholders. If anybody scrutinizes the books and
 sees a substantial amount of engineering and QA resources being
 dedicated to a platform that has very little desktop market penetration
 and because of that some other important high-reach features were
 dropped, I'm sure that public company would have to answer some
 questions about it.

 Since the last discussion I actually contacted the Flash Player team and
 asked what it would take to get an official port for Flash Player on
 FreeBSD. I was asked to provide numbers that would indicate how many
 *desktop* FreeBSD systems are out there and how many of them are used on
 a *regular* basis. So, if anybody on this list can provide those
 answers, I'd be more than happy to do my part and relay the answers back
 to those people who can actually influence decisions in this area.
 Again, I'm not speaking for Adobe, I'm just offering to help as much as
 I can as a happy FreeBSD user (well, if it wasn't for
 http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=123735 on 8.0-CURRENT).

  I think it is rather reducing when you have to beg unkind
  vendors to eventually
  consider that you exist.
  I don't think proprietary binary formats have their place on
  the web. The WWW is
  an information exchange platform, why would you want to
  diffuse information
  around the globe when you know that a lot of people will not
  be able to decipher
  it? It's a bit arrogant I think.

 That's simply wrong. The Flash format byte-code is *not* proprietary. If
 you want to, you can go ahead and create your own Flash Player. The
 specifications for the format are freely available at:
 http://www.adobe.com/openscreenproject/developers/

 And Gnash (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/), which was started before
 the spec was available, will certainly benefit from this.

 And to address a previous message: if your bank requires you to use the
 Flash Player to make a transaction, then you will need to get in touch
 with your bank and not blame it on the non-existence of the Flash Player
 on your platform. A disabled person with a text-only browser or a
 screen-reader will certainly have the same issues.

 My offer stands: if anybody can provide the numbers above, I'm going to
 forward them to the right people and work things from my end.

 Don't beat me up, I'm for the support - even if I'm not using FreeBSD as
 a desktop OS.

 Thanks and happy weekend - Tobias
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FreeBSD is my one and only desktop, I run a small business and do not tend to 
like to switch back and forth from os's mainly cause i use sql-ledger and it 
is my main server to keep up with my bookkeeping. My wifes pc was using 
pc-bsd but lack of flash made her goto kubuntu
Sincerely,
Derek A. Graham
President
D and M Computers, Inc.
Exceeding your expectations everyday!
http://www.dandmcomputers.co.cc/
(847) 305-1954 ext 101

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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Camilo Reyes
Well, there is a site that does BSD usage statistics (they recently did a
post on this list). I recommend people use their script to raise the stats.
http://www.bsdstats.org/
 Camilo
Bono Vince Malum


 Date: Sat, 7 Jun 2008 17:09:08 -0700
 From: Tobias Hoellrich 
 Subject: RE: Flashplugin
 To: 
 Message-ID:
     
 Content-Type: text/plain;    charset=us-ascii
 
 My offer stands: if anybody can provide the numbers above, I'm going to
 forward them to the right people and work things from my end. 
 
 Don't beat me up, I'm for the support - even if I'm not using FreeBSD as
 a desktop OS. 
 
 Thanks and happy weekend - Tobias



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Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Matthew Seaman

Tobias Hoellrich wrote:


Since the last discussion I actually contacted the Flash Player team and
asked what it would take to get an official port for Flash Player on
FreeBSD. I was asked to provide numbers that would indicate how many
*desktop* FreeBSD systems are out there and how many of them are used on
a *regular* basis. So, if anybody on this list can provide those
answers, I'd be more than happy to do my part and relay the answers back
to those people who can actually influence decisions in this area.
Again, I'm not speaking for Adobe, I'm just offering to help as much as
I can as a happy FreeBSD user (well, if it wasn't for
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=123735 on 8.0-CURRENT). 


Well, if you consider PC-BSD as FreeBSD -- which it is for
programmatic purposes, then at least 15,000 users are prepared
to voluntarily self-report themselves as such.  PC-BSD by it's
nature implies desktop usage.

Note that PC-BSD invites users to register with BSD Stats at install
time.  Other BSD variants require the user to have heard about and then
gone and installed the reporting software, so the uptake is a lower
proportion of the user base.

Regular usage is a hard one.  BSD stats requires a monthly report
from each server, so the figures they have don't include any significant
amount of historical cruft.  Reports are also generated when the
system reboots, but as far as I know, the BSD Stats project hasn't
analysed its data to extract any information about how often people
reboot their systems.

http://www.bsdstats.org/

Cheers,

Matthew
--
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil.   7 Priory Courtyard
 Flat 3
PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate
 Kent, CT11 9PW



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Matthew Seaman

Tobias Hoellrich wrote:


Since the last discussion I actually contacted the Flash Player team and
asked what it would take to get an official port for Flash Player on
FreeBSD. I was asked to provide numbers that would indicate how many
*desktop* FreeBSD systems are out there and how many of them are used on
a *regular* basis. So, if anybody on this list can provide those
answers, I'd be more than happy to do my part and relay the answers back
to those people who can actually influence decisions in this area.
Again, I'm not speaking for Adobe, I'm just offering to help as much as
I can as a happy FreeBSD user (well, if it wasn't for
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=123735 on 8.0-CURRENT). 


Well, if you consider PC-BSD as FreeBSD -- which it is for
programmatic purposes, then at least 15,000 users are prepared
to voluntarily self-report themselves as such.  PC-BSD by it's
nature implies desktop usage.

Note that PC-BSD invites users to register with BSD Stats at install
time.  Other BSD variants require the user to have heard about and then
gone and installed the reporting software, so the uptake is a lower
proportion of the user base.

Regular usage is a hard one.  BSD stats requires a monthly report
from each server, so the figures they have don't include any significant
amount of historical cruft.  Reports are also generated when the
system reboots, but as far as I know, the BSD Stats project hasn't
analysed its data to extract any information about how often people
reboot their systems.

http://www.bsdstats.org/

Cheers,

Matthew
--
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil.   7 Priory Courtyard
 Flat 3
PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate
 Kent, CT11 9PW



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


Re: Flashplugin

2008-06-07 Thread Matthew Seaman

Tobias Hoellrich wrote:


Since the last discussion I actually contacted the Flash Player team and
asked what it would take to get an official port for Flash Player on
FreeBSD. I was asked to provide numbers that would indicate how many
*desktop* FreeBSD systems are out there and how many of them are used on
a *regular* basis. So, if anybody on this list can provide those
answers, I'd be more than happy to do my part and relay the answers back
to those people who can actually influence decisions in this area.
Again, I'm not speaking for Adobe, I'm just offering to help as much as
I can as a happy FreeBSD user (well, if it wasn't for
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=123735 on 8.0-CURRENT). 


Well, if you consider PC-BSD as FreeBSD -- which it is for
programmatic purposes, then at least 15,000 users are prepared
to voluntarily self-report themselves as such.  PC-BSD by it's
nature implies desktop usage.

Note that PC-BSD invites users to register with BSD Stats at install
time.  Other BSD variants require the user to have heard about and then
gone and installed the reporting software, so the uptake is a lower
proportion of the user base.

Regular usage is a hard one.  BSD stats requires a monthly report
from each server, so the figures they have don't include any significant
amount of historical cruft.  Reports are also generated when the
system reboots, but as far as I know, the BSD Stats project hasn't
analysed its data to extract any information about how often people
reboot their systems.

http://www.bsdstats.org/

Cheers,

Matthew
--
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil.   7 Priory Courtyard
 Flat 3
PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate
 Kent, CT11 9PW



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


linux-flashplugin-7.0 freezes firefox - weird fix included

2008-04-08 Thread Markus Hoenicka
Robert Huff writes:
linuxpluginwrapper-20051113_8
  
   There's a reason the latest version of this available in ports
  is dated over two years ago: it's no longer the correct tool.
   Instead, use www/nspluginwrapper.  (Pay attention to the
  post-install messages.)
  

I see, I must have missed that message. After removing
linuxpluginwrapper and running nspluginwrapper everything seems to run
just fine.

Thanks a lot
Markus

-- 
Markus Hoenicka
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Spam-protected email: replace the quadrupeds with mhoenicka)
http://www.mhoenicka.de
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linux-flashplugin-7.0 freezes firefox - weird fix included

2008-04-07 Thread Markus Hoenicka
Hi,

I hardly dare to report this problem as it, let alone the fix, seems
quite ridiculous to me. Before filing a bug report I'd like to ask if
anyone can reproduce the problem (I see it on two computers running
FreeBSD) or tell me what I'm doing wrong. Nevertheless the problem
seems reproducible, so here goes.

System information:
FreeBSD yeti.mininet 6.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE #1: Mon Aug 28 22:24:48 
CEST 2006 [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/i386/compile/YETI  i386

All packages were rebuilt from the ports about a week ago due to an
upgrade of xorg from 6.9 to 7.3 (however, the problem was present
before the upgrade as well). The relevant port versions are:

firefox-2.0.0.12_1.1
linux-flashplugin-7.0r73
linuxpluginwrapper-20051113_8

The browser plugins directory looks like this after upgrading:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# ls -al /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins
total 2202
drwxr-xr-x   2 root  wheel  512 Apr  7 23:09 .
drwxr-xr-x  86 root  wheel40960 Apr  7 22:53 ..
-rw-r--r--   1 root  wheel0 Mar 15 12:20 .firefox.keep
-rw-r--r--   1 root  wheel0 Mar 15 12:58 .mozilla.keep
lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel   54 Apr  7 22:55 flashplayer.xpt - 
/usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin/flashplayer.xpt
lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel   56 Apr  7 23:16 libflashplayer.so - 
/usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin/libflashplayer.so
lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel   60 Mar 15 12:20 libjavaplugin_oji.so - 
/usr/local/jdk1.5.0/jre/plugin/i386/ns7/libjavaplugin_oji.so
lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel   59 Aug 27  2006 nppdf.so - 
/usr/X11R6/Adobe/Acrobat7.0/ENU/Browser/intellinux/nppdf.so

There is one particular site (http://www.heise.de, a German computer
news site) which causes firefox to freeze with this
setup. Unfortunately the problem appears to be caused by ads that they
run, so depending on what ads are scheduled you may not be able to
reproduce the bug immediately (try again a day or two later). I haven't
found a site yet which consistently shows this bug.

Freezing can be suppressed by any of the following manipulations:

1) switch off JavaScript support in the browser settings

2) remove the libflashplayer.so link in the plugins directory

3) and finally the weird one: replace the libflashplayer.so link with
the shared object that the link points to, which makes the
browser_plugins entry look like this:

-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 2181284 Apr 7 23:09 libflashplayer.so

I was under the impression that symbolic links are handled
transparently by the OS, but there seems to be something weird going
on here. Any clues?

regards,
Markus

-- 
Markus Hoenicka
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Spam-protected email: replace the quadrupeds with mhoenicka)
http://www.mhoenicka.de
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linux-flashplugin-7.0 freezes firefox - weird fix included

2008-04-07 Thread Robert Huff

Markus Hoenicka writes:

  I hardly dare to report this problem as it, let alone the fix, seems
  quite ridiculous to me. Before filing a bug report I'd like to ask if
  anyone can reproduce the problem (I see it on two computers running
  FreeBSD) or tell me what I'm doing wrong. Nevertheless the problem
  seems reproducible, so here goes.

  linuxpluginwrapper-20051113_8

There's a reason the latest version of this available in ports
is dated over two years ago: it's no longer the correct tool.
Instead, use www/nspluginwrapper.  (Pay attention to the
post-install messages.)


Robert Huff





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Re: Flashplugin problem after xorg 7.2 upgrade

2007-06-03 Thread Nikola Lecic
On Sun, 03 Jun 2007 03:30:58 +0300
Ozan Enginoglu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Ok, here are my computer properties: evo n800v compaq laptop with 1.8
 ghz and 512 ram. 
 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ nspluginwrapper -a -v -i
 Auto-install plugins from /usr/X11R6/lib/browser_plugins
 Looking for plugins in /usr/X11R6/lib/browser_plugins
 Auto-install plugins from /usr/X11R6/lib/firefox/plugins
 Looking for plugins in /usr/X11R6/lib/firefox/plugins
 Auto-install plugins
 from /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin Looking for plugins
 in /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin Install
 plugin /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-flashplugin/libflashplayer.so
  ... already installed system-wide, skipping
 Auto-install plugins
 from /usr/X11R6/Adobe/Acrobat7.0/ENU/Browser/intellinux
 Looking for plugins
 in /usr/X11R6/Adobe/Acrobat7.0/ENU/Browser/intellinux
 Install
 plugin /usr/X11R6/Adobe/Acrobat7.0/ENU/Browser/intellinux/nppdf.so
 Segmentation fault: 11 (core dumped)
 
 as a user i get the same core dumped error. Now i can play any flash
 in firefox but inspide of that i got pid 4909 (npconfig), uid 1001:
 exited on signal 11 (core dumped) error. I changed the depth from 16
 to 32 but i still got these errors.

As I wrote (scroll down this thread), if you have three files installed
in ~/.mozilla/plugins, and if all plugins work, I guess you don't have
to worry.

 And when i open 3 web sites with flash plugins the cpu usage is
 approx. (and stable) 45%. Is this normal?

It is very hard to say, depends on what sites you opened, etc. Seems ok
to me. I'm aware of cpu issues in version 7 in full screen mode /only/
and of those related to hibernation, all fixed in version 9). You can of
course try www/linux-flashplugin-9.0r31_1 instead (first uninstall
version 7). I personally wasn't very happy with it. Ver. 7 has always
been working flawlessly for me.

If you are not sure and want to pursue the matter, you may start a new
thread about flashplugin cpu usage. You can also consider asking on
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Nikola Lečić
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Re: Flashplugin problem after xorg 7.2 upgrade

2007-06-02 Thread Christopher Hilton

Ozan Enginoglu wrote:

After i upgrated to xorg 7.2 i had firefox core-dump problem. It used to
crast when i enter a site with a lot of flash plugin. And it uses a lot
of CPU power!

I removed  flash plugin libs from /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins and
plugins directory of firefox. Now i can surf without any core-dump
error.

when i try to reinstall flashplugin, firefox cant succedd to run them.

What should i do? Any suggestions?


I had a similar problem and it turned out to be a X color depth setting 
issue. YMMV but it should be quick to check. When I get onto my laptop 
I'll follow up with the color depth that cured the problem for me.


-- Chris

--
  __o  All I was doing was trying to get home from work.
_`\,_   -Rosa Parks
___(*)/_(*)___
Christopher Sean Hiltonchris | at | vindaloo.com
pgp key: D0957A2D/f5 30 0a e1 55 76 9b 1f 47 0b 07 e9 75 0e 14
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Re: Flashplugin problem after xorg 7.2 upgrade

2007-06-02 Thread Christopher Sean Hilton
On Sat, 2007-06-02 at 02:00 +0300, Ozan Enginoglu wrote:
 After i upgrated to xorg 7.2 i had firefox core-dump problem. It used to
 crast when i enter a site with a lot of flash plugin. And it uses a lot
 of CPU power!
 
 I removed  flash plugin libs from /usr/local/lib/browser_plugins and
 plugins directory of firefox. Now i can surf without any core-dump
 error.
 
 when i try to reinstall flashplugin, firefox cant succedd to run them.
 
 What should i do? Any suggestions?

Here's the screen section from my xorg.conf:

Section Screen
Identifier Laptop_Panel
Device ATI Radeon Mobility
MonitorHP nc6230 LCD display
DefaultDepth 24
SubSection Display
Viewport   0 0
Depth 24
Modes   1400x1050
EndSubSection
EndSection

The DefaultDepth 24 is the line that fixed things for me. I think that
DefaultDepth 32 may also work.

-- Chris

-- 
   __o  All I was doing was trying to get home from work.
 _`\,_   -Rosa Parks
___(*)/_(*)___
Christopher Sean Hiltonchris | at | vindaloo.com
 pgp key: D0957A2D/f5 30 0a e1 55 76 9b 1f 47 0b 07 e9 75 0e 14


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Fwd: Flashplugin problem after xorg 7.2 upgrade

2007-06-02 Thread Tsu-Fan Cheng

thank you for your instructions!! this helps a lot, now I can also enjoy
youtube and watch mlb.tv on firefox with mplayer plugin.

I also have coredump when running nspluginwrapper, and while running
firefox, this is what I got on the output:

*** NSPlugin Wrapper *** WARNING: unhandled variable 11 in NPP_GetValue()


regards,

TFC

On 6/2/07, Nikola Lecic  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


On Sat, 2 Jun 2007 04:35:33 +0200
Nikola Lecic  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sat, 02 Jun 2007 04:13:59 +0300
 Ozan Enginoglu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 [...]
  And is there any way to play flash files without using
  nspluginwrapper?

 Only in linux versions (linux-opera, linux-firefox...). There is no
 way to use linux flashplugin in native browsers without a wrapper.

Actually, yes, depends on what you need. You can use graphics/libflash
with www/flashplugin-mozilla (supports flash files up to version 4) and
graphics/gnash (GNU flash player, which is not actually a plugin; AFAIK
still can't handle YouTube, but it will in the near future). At this
moment, if you want to cover the most demanding flash sites, you have
no choice but to use linux-flashplugin (with a wrapper), as described in
the mail I've just sent.

Nikola Lečić
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Re: Fwd: Flashplugin problem after xorg 7.2 upgrade

2007-06-02 Thread Nikola Lecic
On Sat, 2 Jun 2007 09:11:25 -0400
Tsu-Fan Cheng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 thank you for your instructions!! this helps a lot, now I can also
 enjoy youtube and watch mlb.tv on firefox with mplayer plugin.

Glad it was useful.

 I also have coredump when running nspluginwrapper, and while running
 firefox, this is what I got on the output:

Is the output the same as Ozan's? But if your ~/.mozilla/plugins is
populated with something like

  npwrapper.libflashplayer.so
  npwrapper.nppdf.so
  npwrapper.nphelix.so

(55880 bytes each), I think you shouldn't worry about it. Maybe someone
else can confirm. I hadn't experienced such core dumps.

 *** NSPlugin Wrapper *** WARNING: unhandled variable 11 in
 NPP_GetValue()

This is harmless and not linked with the core dumping -- it's a known
warning in this nspluginwrapper version.

Nikola Lečić
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