This is only required in some rare cases (if you want to use Microsft Lync or a service requiring NTLM authentication via HTTP) and will break some more common use cases like Amazon Instant or other VOD services.
Don’t do this until you know how to revert back.
Moreover, you will also be told that you can optionally accept the license for wininet by creating a special file.
You will be asked to accept the licenses required to install Silverlight and its dependencies which is necessary in order to continue. delete from your profile directory pluginreg.datĪfter you re-open your browser, test Silverlight with Bubblemark.Go to about:support and open your profile directory.Do the following to refresh the plugin database, since at least in my experience, Silverlight does not show in Firefox right away If all went well, you should see some prompts about Wine downloading and installing Silverlight 5.1. Pipelight-plugin -create-mozilla-plugins #In case you don't see the Wine dialogs sudo pipelight-plugin -enable silverlight #Agree to licensing, but DO NOT touch wininit Seems simple so far, right? But after all of that, you’ll need to enable use of Silverlight. Sudo apt-get install -install-recommends pipelight-multi To install Pipelight, perform the following sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pipelight/stable Also, since Google Chrome has ceased NPAPI support, you’ll need to use Firefox if you want to view any content that still relies on Silverlight. Since Moonlight has, no pun intended, went into the dark, Pipelight is the only way to use anything that relies on version 5.x of Silverlight. Until then, there have been two workarounds for Linux users Moonlight by Mono, and Pipelight by FDS-Team. You would think web admins would get the message by now but not everybody has. Despite how awesome Silverlight has been, due to the advent of HTML5 and lack of developer interest Silverlight has been a depreciated standard since 2012, with major development ceased in 2013, and EOL in 2021. Silverlight is a web application framework similar to Flash that allows developers to create multimedia experiences for different websites. But they’re there, and if you’re a Linux user who needs to access Silverlight content, then this guide may help you to access that content. If you do not wish to use Silverlight in this way, then this method is probably not for you.Ī whole whacktonne of websites still use Silverlight. The Silverlight object then picks up the height (and width) that is defined in the Silverlight object, whether it is percentage or pixel based.This method relies on the use of an independent session of Wine, running concurrently with Firefox when any Silverlight media is used. Style="position:fixed left:0 top:0 height:100% width:100%"Īn even easier option was to add the following style to the SilverlightContainer DIV tag: I did find a solution that does work, and it is in a previous comment.Īny resolution to this issue? I am having the same problems.
Silverlight script overrides what would typically work. Joe Chung made that clear in one of his comments. It appears that the Silverlight script overrides default HTML OBJECT processing, DTD or not. Setting the object's CSS display to block works if you don't set the DOCTYPE as shown in your screenshots. change element height to window height in firefox I added the following to my javascript to get height percentage to work in Firefox:
Your advice did put me on track to the solution. Setting the object css display attribute did not work. Nothing I see sets a height, so, therefor, the relative height you have set for the object has nothing to be relative to. In this case, you have an object inside a div, inside a div, inside the body. Thats because the object element's ancestors do not have a height set. To work around this, set the CSS display attribute for your OBJECT to block (display: block). It has to do with the way Firefox handles HTML OBJECT layout.