Fedora 18
I have installed ;
Icedtea-web java-1.7.0-openjdk
But http://gopro.com can't see any java installed. In Firefox plugins you can see the Icedtea plugin.
On Fri, 07 Jun 2013 17:26:59 -0400 Jim binarynut@comcast.net wrote:
But http://gopro.com can't see any java installed. In Firefox plugins you can see the Icedtea plugin.
Where does it need the Java?
On 06/07/2013 05:40 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
On Fri, 07 Jun 2013 17:26:59 -0400 Jim binarynut@comcast.net wrote:
But http://gopro.com can't see any java installed. In Firefox plugins you can see the Icedtea plugin.
Where does it need the Java?
http://gopro.com/support/product-registration/hd-hero3-cameras
On Fri, 07 Jun 2013 17:43:39 -0400 Jim binarynut@comcast.net wrote:
But http://gopro.com can't see any java installed. In Firefox plugins you can see the Icedtea plugin.
Where does it need the Java?
http://gopro.com/support/product-registration/hd-hero3-cameras
Works fine here, if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
Jim ha scritto / said the following il giorno/on 07/06/2013 23:53:
On 06/07/2013 05:46 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
Popup Where ??
I suppose that Frank has Selinux disabled/permissive... as I get exactle same behaviour as Jim, if Selinux is enforcing no Java is detected, but when Selinux is permissive, I get the popup. Please confirm
On Fri, 07 Jun 2013 23:56:20 +0200 antonio antonio.montagnani@gmail.com wrote:
Jim ha scritto / said the following il giorno/on 07/06/2013 23:53:
On 06/07/2013 05:46 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
Popup Where ??
I suppose that Frank has Selinux disabled/permissive... as I get exactle same behaviour as Jim, if Selinux is enforcing no Java is detected, but when Selinux is permissive, I get the popup. Please confirm
me too - Selinux denial
On 06/07/2013 07:04 PM, Fred Erickson wrote:
On Fri, 07 Jun 2013 23:56:20 +0200 antonio antonio.montagnani@gmail.com wrote:
Jim ha scritto / said the following il giorno/on 07/06/2013 23:53:
On 06/07/2013 05:46 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
Popup Where ??
I suppose that Frank has Selinux disabled/permissive... as I get exactle same behaviour as Jim, if Selinux is enforcing no Java is detected, but when Selinux is permissive, I get the popup. Please confirm
me too - Selinux denial
It generates an AVC denial and doesn't detect Java in my Fedora 18:
"SELinux is preventing /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.7.0-openjdk-1.7.0.19.x86_64/jre/bin/java from create access on the directory ."
On 06/08/13 05:56, antonio wrote:
Jim ha scritto / said the following il giorno/on 07/06/2013 23:53:
On 06/07/2013 05:46 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
Popup Where ??
I suppose that Frank has Selinux disabled/permissive... as I get exactle same behaviour as Jim, if Selinux is enforcing no Java is detected, but when Selinux is permissive, I get the popup. Please confirm
F18-64, Chrome Version 27.0.1453.110 (64 bit), icedtea-web-1.4-0.fc18.x86_64.
NO selinux AVC's. First, java detection "fails". Chrome puts up a bar below the menu bar asking for permission for Iced Tea to run. Click "OK". Refresh Page. Java popup asking to proceed. Click OK.
All is well....
With FF, I get the AVC's but everything appears to continue to run normally.
FWIW, the link provided seems to be a process to upgrade the camera's firmware. Not sure how well that will work under Linux anyway.... :-)
Allegedly, on or about 08 June 2013, Ed Greshko sent:
FWIW, the link provided seems to be a process to upgrade the camera's firmware. Not sure how well that will work under Linux anyway.... :-)
Unless they've changed their technique, the firmware update was done by putting a file onto a SD memory card, then inserting that into the camera. At least that was how I upgraded a gopro camera quite some time ago.
On 06/08/13 08:57, Tim wrote:
Allegedly, on or about 08 June 2013, Ed Greshko sent:
FWIW, the link provided seems to be a process to upgrade the camera's firmware. Not sure how well that will work under Linux anyway.... :-)
Unless they've changed their technique, the firmware update was done by putting a file onto a SD memory card, then inserting that into the camera. At least that was how I upgraded a gopro camera quite some time ago.
Well, if you look at the link you'd see that step 6 is to connect the camera to the USB. So, it seems, the process is doing the job of putting the file on the SD card. The question is would that work under Linux.
FWIW, my Gamin GPS is updated in much the same way. The process works fine under Windows but fails under Linux even if the SD card in the Garmin is mounted and available.
Allegedly, on or about 08 June 2013, Ed Greshko sent:
Well, if you look at the link you'd see that step 6 is to connect the camera to the USB. So, it seems, the process is doing the job of putting the file on the SD card. The question is would that work under Linux.
Just briefly cruising around their website, I find this in a product update page:
Your browser is not supported Chrome does not support Java 7. Java 7 runs only on 64-bit browsers and Chrome is a 32-bit browser. (yet I'm apparently running a 64-bit browser: google-chrome-stable-27.0.1453.110-202711.x86_64)
To update your camera, we recommend using the latest version of Safari, Firefox, or Internet Explorer.
Or manually update your camera.
Manually Update Camera (this phrase is a weblink)
------------next page---------------
Are you sure you want to manually update? 1. Java will automatically detect your camera's information. This means you won't have to manually enter your camera's serial number. 2. Java will automatically download firmware updates to your camera.
Continue Manual Update (again, this is a weblink)
------- next page -----------
Which leads to a set of instructions like I previously described, asks for some user details which I don't have so I can't proceed, but suggests that the prior method is available (Java being used to let the website find out what your camera is, rather than you having to manually enter model and serial numbers). I kind of get the impression that being plugged into the USB port is to ensure that there's power.
So, if the original poster is stuck, it might be worth having a further fumble around their website.
As much as people seem to love their products, I found the camera to be a right pain to use, with just two buttons and everything being a cryptic combination of button presses and bizarre icons.
On Fri, 07 Jun 2013 17:53:59 -0400 Jim binarynut@comcast.net wrote:
On 06/07/2013 05:46 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
Popup Where ??
Sorry was late here, have this: setsebool unconfined_mozilla_plugin_transition 0
On 08.06.2013 10:55, Frank Murphy wrote:
On Fri, 07 Jun 2013 17:53:59 -0400 Jim binarynut@comcast.net wrote:
On 06/07/2013 05:46 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
if you click proceed to "unsigned certificate" in a popup.
Popup Where ??
Sorry was late here, have this: setsebool unconfined_mozilla_plugin_transition 0
Don't take it for granted, even though 'sealert' suggests it. ;) You probably want, setsebool -P unconfined_mozilla_plugin_transition off
man 8 setsebool - "-P option"
or even better, semanage boolean [-m] --off unconfined_mozilla_plugin_transition so you don't have to worry whether the boolean value sits permanently, and check it with, semanage boolean -l [-C] | grep unconfined_[mozilla]_plugin_transition Take note of the output - the two types of boolean value, <OBJECT> ("transient" , "persistent")
man 8 semanage - boolean
poma