linux-f10-flashplugin
Jeremy Chadwick
freebsd at jdc.parodius.com
Thu Sep 29 20:05:43 UTC 2011
On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 12:50:01PM -0700, Ted Faber wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 02:41:39PM -0400, Michael Butler wrote:
> > On 09/29/11 13:57, Norbert Augenstein wrote:
> > > On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 10:08:25PM +0400, S.N.Grigoriev wrote:
> > >> 28.09.2011, 21:10, "Conrad J. Sabatier"<conrads at cox.net>:
> > >>> On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 11:50:08 -0500
> > >>> "Conrad J. Sabatier"<conrads at cox.net> wrote:
> >
> > [ .. snip .. ]
> >
> > >>>
> > >>> Actually, now that I think of it, I think the way I did it was this:
> > >>>
> > >>> cd /home/conrads/.mozilla/plugins
> > >>>
> > >>> /usr/local/lib/nspluginwrapper/x86_64/freebsd/npconfig
> > >>> -i /usr/local/lib/npapi/linux-f10-flashplugin/libflashplayer.so
> > >>>
> > >>> And npwrapper.libflashplayer.so was created
> > >>> under /home/conrads/.mozilla/plugins.
> > >>>
> > >>> Hope this helps.
> > >>
> > >> I've done it. No results.
> > >
> > > ... same problem here, but the last i did yesterday was a
> > > 'freebsd-update' to 8.2-RELEASEp3
> > >
> > > after 'freebsd-update rollback' flash is working again.
> > > can someone look at this?
> >
> > Another data-point; when it fails, it records ..
> >
> > (npviewer.bin:62652): Gtk-WARNING **: cannot open display: :0
> > *** NSPlugin Wrapper *** ERROR: failed to initialize plugin-side RPC
> > client connection
> > NOTE: child process received `Goodbye', closing down
> >
> > .. in .xsession-errors :-(
>
> I see that as well as:
>
> (process:5430): Gtk-WARNING **: Locale not supported by C library.
> Using the fallback 'C' locale.
This would indicate you're messing with LANG, LC_*, or similar
environment variables and that the locale you've chosen isn't valid.
"env" in your shell should show them all, unless you're doing
environment setting changes in X-related dotfiles (if that's possible; I
do not jack squat about X, Gtk, etc.)
> (npviewer.bin:5430): GLib-WARNING **: getpwuid_r(): failed due
> to unknown user id (2139)
> ...
> I haven't explored the getpwuid_r thing.
Running "id 2139" should return something other than "no such user". If
not, your environment is looking up something that has such ownership.
I don't know if it's a file or a piece of C code that is intentionally
looking for UID 2139. This UID is not defined in /usr/ports/UIDs so
it's not coming from a port using the existing USERS/GROUPS ports
framework. If it's a file it's keying off of, meaning file ownership,
then possibly "find / -user 2139 -ls" might turn up something.
--
| Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com |
| Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ |
| UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, US |
| Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP 4BD6C0CB |
More information about the freebsd-stable
mailing list