There are two types of browser plugins, based on the plugin API they use:

Netscape plugin API (NPAPI): these plugins work in most smaller browsers (Firefox supports only the Flash Player plugin, Chromium and Opera do not support these plugins).

support these plugins). Pepper plugin API (PPAPI): these plugins work in Chromium (and Chrome), Opera and Vivaldi.

Most plugins on this page are NPAPI-only, unless noted otherwise.

Flash players

Adobe Flash Player

Installation

The package you will need to install depends on the browser you use.

The NPAPI version can be installed with the package.

The PPAPI version can be installed with the package.

Standalone version can be installed with the AUR package.

Note: Some Flash apps may require the AUR package in order to properly render text.

package in order to properly render text. The AUR package provides an experimental adapter to use with NPAPI based browsers like Firefox. It can be configured (e.g. for enabling HW-acceleration) by copying /usr/share/freshplayerplugin/freshwrapper.conf.example to ~/.config/freshwrapper.conf .

Upgrade

If you are using Firefox, please make sure to follow this instruction first.

Configuration

To change the preferences (privacy settings, resource usage, etc.) of Flash Player, right click on any embedded Flash content (for instance adobe's flash home) and choose Settings from the menu.

You can also use the Flash settings file /etc/adobe/mms.cfg . Gentoo has an extensively commented example mms.cfg.

To enable video decoding with hardware video acceleration (NPAPI-only), add/uncomment the following line:

EnableLinuxHWVideoDecode = 1

It might also be required to add/uncomment the following line:

OverrideGPUValidation = 1

Multiple monitor full-screen fix

When using a multiple monitor setup, or swapping between virtual desktops, it is possible to lose focus on a fullscreen flash window. In such a case, the adobe flash-plugin will automatically exit full-screen mode. This may not be to your liking.

Unfortunately, this behavior is hard coded into the binary. In order to change this behavior it is necessary to alter the binary.

Fixing this issue only works for the NPAPI plugin and this issue can be fixed via 2 ways.

Using the AUR [broken link: package not found].

After the package has been installed, backup libflashplayer.so : # cp /usr/lib/mozilla/plugins/libflashplayer.so /usr/lib/mozilla/plugins/libflashplayer.so.backup

Then, you will need to alter that file using a hex editor like . You must open it with root privileges obviously. # ghex /usr/lib/mozilla/plugins/libflashplayer.so

Using the hex editor find the string _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW . In ghex the readable string is on the right hand side of the window, and the hex is on the left, you are trying to locate the readable string. It should be easy to find using a search function.

Upon finding _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW rewrite the line, but do not change the length of the line, for example _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW becomes _XET_ACTIVE_WINDOW .

Save the binary, and restart any processes using the plugin (as this will crash any instance of the plugin in use.)

Playing DRM-protected content

See Flash DRM content.

Gnash

Gnash is a free (libre) alternative to Adobe Flash Player. It is available both as a standalone player for desktop computers and embedded devices, as well as a browser plugin, and supports the SWF format up to version 7 (with versions 8 and 9 under development) and about 80% of ActionScript 2.0.

Gnash can be installed with the AUR package.

Lightspark

Lightspark is another attempt to provide a free alternative to Adobe Flash aimed at supporting newer Flash formats. Lightspark has the ability to fall back on Gnash for old content, which enables users to install both and enjoy wider coverage. Although it is still very much in development, it supports some popular sites[dead link 2020-02-23].

Lightspark can be installed with the AUR package.

PDF viewer

PDF.js

PDF.js is a PDF renderer created by Mozilla and built using HTML5 technologies.

It is included in Firefox.

For Chromium and Google Chrome it is available as extension in the Chrome Web Store.

External PDF viewers

To use an external PDF viewer you need #MozPlugger.

If you want to use MozPlugger with Evince, for example, you have to find the lines containing pdf in the /etc/mozpluggerrc file and modify the corresponding line after GV() as below:

repeat noisy swallow(evince) fill: evince "$file"

(replace evince with something else if it is not your viewer of choice).

When using Firefox, you may need to change 2 values in about:config :

Change pdfjs.disabled 's value to true ;

's value to ; Change plugin.disable_full_page_plugin_for_types 's value to an empty value.

Then restart Firefox to use the plugin.

Citrix

See Citrix.

Java (IcedTea)

Note: Both Java plugins are NPAPI-only and thus do not work in Chromium, Opera and Firefox.

To enable Java support in your browser, you have two options: the open-source OpenJDK (recommended) or Oracle's proprietary version. For details about why OpenJDK is recommended see [1].

To use OpenJDK, you have to install the IcedTea browser plugin, .

If you want to use Oracle's JRE, install the AUR package.

Pipelight

See Pipelight.

Multimedia playback

Many browsers support the GStreamer framework to play multimedia inside HTML5 <audio> and <video> elements. Check the optional dependencies of the browser package (or of the web engine, e.g. or ) to see if GStreamer is supported. See GStreamer#Installation for the description of each plugin.

For media formats that are not natively supported by your browser (e.g. most browsers don't play .mkv files), the following plugins are available:

Rosa Media Player Plugin — Qt-based NPAPI plugin that uses MPlayer as backend.

VLC Plugin — NPAPI plugin that uses VLC as backend.

MozPlugger

MozPlugger can be installed with the AUR package.

MozPlugger is a Mozilla plugin which can show many types of multimedia inside your browser. To accomplish this, it uses external programs such as MPlayer, xine, Evince, OpenOffice, TiMidity, etc. To modify or add applications to be used by MozPlugger just modify the /etc/mozpluggerrc file.

For example, MozPlugger uses OpenOffice by default to open doc files. To change it to use LibreOffice instead, look for the OpenOffice section:

/etc/mozpluggerrc

... ### OpenOffice define([OO],[swallow(VCLSalFrame) fill: ooffice2.0 -nologo -norestore -view $1 "$file" swallow(VCLSalFrame) fill: ooffice -nologo -norestore -view $1 "$file" swallow(VCLSalFrame) fill: soffice -nologo $1 "$file"]) ...

and add LibreOffice at the beginning of the list:

/etc/mozpluggerrc

... ### LibreOffice/OpenOffice define([OO],[swallow(VCLSalFrame) fill: libreoffice --nologo --norestore --view $1 "$file" swallow(VCLSalFrame) fill: ooffice2.0 -nologo -norestore -view $1 "$file" swallow(VCLSalFrame) fill: ooffice -nologo -norestore -view $1 "$file" swallow(VCLSalFrame) fill: soffice -nologo $1 "$file"]) ...

Note: Be sure to also choose LibreOffice as your preferred application to open doc files.

As another simple example, if you want to open cpp files with your favorite text editor (we will use Kate) to get syntax highlighting, just add a new section to your mozpluggerrc file:

/etc/mozpluggerrc

text/x-c++:cpp:C++ Source File text/x-c++:hpp:C++ Header File repeat noisy swallow(kate) fill: kate -b "$file"

To change the default of MPlayer so that mpv is used instead, change the appropriate lines such that:

/etc/mozpluggerrc

... ### MPlayer #define(MP_CMD,[mplayer -really-quiet -nojoystick -nofs -zoom -vo xv,x11 -ao esd,alsa,oss,arts,null -osdlevel 0 $1 </dev/null]) define(MP_CMD,[mpv -really-quiet $1 </dev/null]) #define(MP_EMBED,[embed noisy ignore_errors: MP_CMD(-xy $width -wid $window $1)]) define(MP_EMBED,[embed noisy ignore_errors: MP_CMD(--autofit=$width -wid $window $1)]) #define(MP_NOEMBED,[noembed noisy ignore_errors maxaspect swallow(MPlayer): MP_CMD($1)]) define(MP_NOEMBED,[noembed noisy ignore_errors maxaspect swallow(mpv): MP_CMD($1)]) ... #define(MP_AUDIO,[mplayer -quiet -nojoystick $1 </dev/null]) define(MP_AUDIO,[mpv -really-quiet $1 </dev/null]) #define(MP_AUDIO_STREAM,[controls stream noisy ignore_errors: mplayer -quiet -nojoystick $1 "$file" </dev/null]) define(MP_AUDIO_STREAM,[controls stream noisy ignore_errors: mpv -really-quiet $1 "$file" </dev/null]) ...

For a more complete list of MozPlugger options see .

Troubleshooting

Flash Player: no sound

Flash Player outputs its sound only through the default ALSA device, which is number 0. If you have multiple sound devices (a very common example is having a sound card and HDMI output in the video card), then your preferred device may have a different number.

For a list of available devices with their respective numbers, run:

$ aplay -l

**** List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices **** card 0: Generic [HD-Audio Generic], device 3: HDMI 0 [HDMI 0] Subdevices: 1/1 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0 card 1: DX [Xonar DX], device 0: Multichannel [Multichannel] Subdevices: 0/1 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0 card 1: DX [Xonar DX], device 1: Digital [Digital] Subdevices: 1/1 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0

In this case, the HDMI output is card 0 and the sound card is card 1 . To make your sound card the default for ALSA, create the file .asoundrc in your home directory, with the following content:

~/.asoundrc

pcm.!default { type hw card 1 } ctl.!default { type hw card 1 }

Flash Player: blocking sound for other applications or delayed playback

If sound is delayed within Flash videos or Flash stops sound from any other application, then make sure you do not have snd_pcm_oss module loaded:

$ lsmod | grep snd_pcm_oss

You can unload it:

# rmmod snd_pcm_oss

and restart the browser to see if it helps.

Flash Player: performance

Adobe's Flash plugin has some serious performance issues, especially when CPU frequency scaling is used. There seems to be a policy not to use the whole CPU workload, so the frequency scaling governor does not clock the CPU any higher. To work around this issue, see CPU frequency scaling#Switching threshold

Flash Player: black bars in full screen playback on multi-headed setups

The Flash plugin has a known bug where the full screen mode does not really work when you have a multi-monitor setup. Apparently, it incorrectly determines the full screen resolution, so the full screen Flash Player fills the correct monitor but gets scaled as if the monitor had the resolution of the total display area.

To fix this, you can use the "hack" described here. Simply download the source from the link given on the page, and follow the instructions in the README.

Note: While the author mentions using NVDIA's TwinView, the hack should work for any multi-monitor setup.

Firefox: old Flash Player version shown after upgrade

Solution for Firefox: delete file "pluginreg.dat" in user's profile directory.

Close firefox

Go to /home/ <username> /.mozilla/firefox/ <profile_folder> /

Delete file "pluginreg.dat"

Firefox will automatically rebuild this file once it is started again. Make sure to substitute <username> and <profile_folder> with the appropriate information.

Firefox: plugins are installed but not working

A common problem is that the plugin path is unset. This typically occurs on a new install, when the user has not re-logged in before running Firefox after the installation. Test if the path is unset:

$ printenv MOZ_PLUGIN_PATH

If unset, then either re-login, or source /etc/profile.d/mozilla-common.sh and start Firefox from the same shell:

$ source /etc/profile.d/mozilla-common.sh && firefox