Pipelight is project that brings Silverlight to any Linux browser that supports the Netscape Plugin API. Using it, you can use services that require Silverlight, such as Netflix, in native Linux web browsers like Firefox, Chrome or Midori.

Pipelight combines the effort by Erich E. Hoover (the Netflix Desktop developer) with a new browser plugin which - unlike Netflix Desktop which requires a Windows version of Firefox to run under Wine -, lets you access services that require Microsoft Silverlight using native Linux web browsers.





This solution isn't Wine-free because the browser plugin continues to use Wine however, this shouldn't have a big impact on performance:

"Pipelight consists out of two parts: A Linux library which is loaded into the browser and a Windows program started in Wine. The Windows program, called pluginloader.exe, simply simulates a browser and loads the Silverlight DLLs. When you open a page with a Silverlight application the library will send all commands from the browser through a pipe to the Windows process and act like a bridge between your browser and Silverlight. The used pipes do not have any big impact on the speed of the rendered video since all the video and audio data is not send through the pipe. Only the initialization parameters and (sometimes) the network traffic is send through them."

the plugin has been confirmed to work "almost perfectly" using Microsoft Silverlight 5 for the following websites: Maxdome, Netflix and Sumo 2. According to the Pipelight website,





I've tested Pipelight with Netflix, under Chrome (Ubuntu 13.10) and I can confirm it works (and the playback was smooth!), as you can see in the screenshots in this article. Update: I've also tested it with Firefox and it works, but sometimes the browser freezes, something which doesn't happen with Chrome so I recommend using Chrome / Chromium with Pipelight.

Install Pipelight in Ubuntu

Important update: starting with version 35, Google Chrome no longer supports NPAPI plugins so Pipelight won't work in Chrome!

Before proceeding, it's strongly recommended to close your web browser. Without doing this, the plugin may fail to install or crash the browser (you can copy the instructions below to a text editor).

1. If you've installed the old Pipelight version, remove it before proceeding:

sudo apt-get remove pipelight

To add the Pipelight stable and Compholio PPAs and install Pipelight in Ubuntu, use the following commands:

sudo apt-add-repository ppa:pipelight/stable sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install --install-recommends pipelight-multi sudo pipelight-plugin --update

sudo pipelight-plugin --enable silverlight

pipelight-plugin --enable silverlight

By default, this will install Silverlight 5.1, but you can install a different version, for instane 5.0, by using this command instead (don't use "sudo" if you don't want to install it system-wide):

sudo pipelight-plugin --disable silverlight --enable silverlight5.0

Once installed, start your browser and try THIS test Silverlight applet. If it doesn't work, check if Silverlight is available in your browser plugin list (e.g.: you can type "about:plugins" in the address bar).





Update 1: Pipelight now also supports installing the Windows version of Adobe Flash. To install the Windows version of Adobe Flash, use this command:

sudo pipelight-plugin --enable flash

pipelight-plugin --enable flash

Update 2: Pipelight now supports Widevine. To enable Widevine, use the command below:

sudo pipelight-plugin --enable widevine

pipelight-plugin --enable widevine

If you didn't close the browser before proceeding with the installation and Silverlight doesn't work, run the following command:

rm -rf ~/.wine-pipelight/

sudo pipelight-plugin --enable viewright-caiway

pipelight-plugin --enable viewright-caiway

sudo pipelight-plugin --enable vizzedrgr

pipelight-plugin --enable vizzedrgr

sudo pipelight-plugin --enable unity3d

pipelight-plugin --enable unity3d

2. We're not done yet. Silverlight should be working now, but some websites such as Netflix check the browser user agent and won't allow you to play any videos since Linux isn't supported. A work-around for this is to use a browser user agent switcher:

Firefox: install UAControl or User Agent Overrider extensions and use one of the following user agents:

Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:15.0) Gecko/20120427 Firefox/15.0a1



Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:22.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/22.0



Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; rv:23.0) Gecko/20131011 Firefox/23.0

Chrome: install User Agent Switcher extension and select Windows Firefox 15 from the extension preferences.

That's it! If video playback is slow or laggy, try THIS work-around.

Update 5: Pipelight can now check your system for common issues which could prevent it from working. To run the Pipelight system check tool, use this command:

pipelight-plugin --system-check

Installing other Pipelight plugins

Pipelight is constantly getting support for new plugins. To see a complete list of plugins supported by Pipelight, run the following command:

pipelight-plugin --help

sudo pipelight-plugin --enable pluginname

Some of these plugins need to be "unlocked" first (this will create some extra file consuming some disk space) - for such plugins, an error will be displayed, telling you to run the following command:

sudo pipelight-plugin --unlock pluginname

For more information, Arch Linux installation instructions, source files and so on, visit Pipelight installation page.

via Daniel Foré @ G+

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