Just put FC2 on a second machine at home. It's great. Kudoes to the developers and testers.
For days, I've had firefox installed and running fine. I had used apt and synaptic to get/install the package. Firefox was made the default gnome browser. All good. Very good.
Today I decided to load some plugins. I added about eight search plugins and the mouse gestures plugin. All as a regular user (i.e. not root). There was one error message that popped to the screen during the mouse gestures install which I think had to do with not being able to write or create to a file. I didn't note the error, thinking the install would just be aborted. The next popup indicated the install had completed successfully. So, wondering if it had or had not installed properly, I closed my firefox program and tried to start it back up.
But it won't start. The symptom, when typing firefox in a shell, is that after a few seconds, it ends. Nothing writen to stdout or stderr. Nothing pops up. No new process created. If I try to start it from the gnome panel, a see a "Starting Web browser" window being created, but after a few seconds it disappears.
I've uninstalled firefox, and reinstalled it, to no avail. I searched for a ~/.firefox directory. One didn't exist. I've moved the ~/.mozilla directory out of the way and the ~/.phoenix directory out of the way, still no good. I uninstalled firefox again, and moved the /usr/lib/firefox directory out of the way. And reinstalled firefox. Still no good. I moved /usr/lib/mozilla out of the way, and still firefox just returns immediately.
I have not tried rebooting, but as this isn't Windows, I wouldn't expect that to help.
What file/directory am I missing? Or what package dependancy have I broken by uninstalling firefox and reinstalling (all via synaptic)? I may have made the problem worse during this debugging because firefox won't start under my root login any longer either. But admittedly I had installed the mouse gesture plugin there too, but at least saw it work once as root. That install didn't cause a file/directory failure message to be printed. I did not install the search plugins as root though. Now after the uninstall/reinstall. Even root can't get firefox to do anything.
-stuck
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Strange, does mozilla work? Try running locate to find out where the mouse gestures plugin was installed. There may also be a /usr/lib/mozilla-1.6/ directory and maybe even a /usr/lib/mouse-gestures or something like that.
On Sun, 30 May 2004 17:44:19 -0700 (PDT), Frank Rehwinkel redback_frank@yahoo.com wrote:
Just put FC2 on a second machine at home. It's great. Kudoes to the developers and testers.
For days, I've had firefox installed and running fine. I had used apt and synaptic to get/install the package. Firefox was made the default gnome browser. All good. Very good.
Today I decided to load some plugins. I added about eight search plugins and the mouse gestures plugin. All as a regular user (i.e. not root). There was one error message that popped to the screen during the mouse gestures install which I think had to do with not being able to write or create to a file. I didn't note the error, thinking the install would just be aborted. The next popup indicated the install had completed successfully. So, wondering if it had or had not installed properly, I closed my firefox program and tried to start it back up.
But it won't start. The symptom, when typing firefox in a shell, is that after a few seconds, it ends. Nothing writen to stdout or stderr. Nothing pops up. No new process created. If I try to start it from the gnome panel, a see a "Starting Web browser" window being created, but after a few seconds it disappears.
I've uninstalled firefox, and reinstalled it, to no avail. I searched for a ~/.firefox directory. One didn't exist. I've moved the ~/.mozilla directory out of the way and the ~/.phoenix directory out of the way, still no good. I uninstalled firefox again, and moved the /usr/lib/firefox directory out of the way. And reinstalled firefox. Still no good. I moved /usr/lib/mozilla out of the way, and still firefox just returns immediately.
I have not tried rebooting, but as this isn't Windows, I wouldn't expect that to help.
What file/directory am I missing? Or what package dependancy have I broken by uninstalling firefox and reinstalling (all via synaptic)? I may have made the problem worse during this debugging because firefox won't start under my root login any longer either. But admittedly I had installed the mouse gesture plugin there too, but at least saw it work once as root. That install didn't cause a file/directory failure message to be printed. I did not install the search plugins as root though. Now after the uninstall/reinstall. Even root can't get firefox to do anything.
-stuck
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On Sun, 30 May 2004 17:44:19 -0700 (PDT), Frank Rehwinkel wrote:
But it won't start. The symptom, when typing firefox in a shell, is that after a few seconds, it ends. Nothing writen to stdout or stderr. Nothing pops up. No new process created. If I try to start it from the gnome panel, a see a "Starting Web browser" window being created, but after a few seconds it disappears.
I've uninstalled firefox, and reinstalled it, to no avail. I searched for a ~/.firefox directory. One didn't exist. I've moved the ~/.mozilla directory out of the way and the ~/.phoenix directory out of the way, still no good. I uninstalled firefox again, and moved the /usr/lib/firefox directory out of the way. And reinstalled firefox. Still no good. I moved /usr/lib/mozilla out of the way, and still firefox just returns immediately.
I have not tried rebooting, but as this isn't Windows, I wouldn't expect that to help.
Well, if lock files are involved and you can't seem to track them down, rebooting is a quick way to fix that.
Just to add an additional test, have you tried starting firefox in a fresh user account?
If that doesn't work either, repeat your removal/reinstallation attempts. But before doing so, enter run-level 1 and make sure you really kill any firefox processes and remove /usr/lib/firefox* before you re-install something. [Yes, I saw that you had tried that already, try again ;)]. Also try removing everything from /tmp, which might be a source of errors.
I encountered a similar while reviewing firefox 0.8 packages recently. At one point the only way I could reproduce the symptom was when I forgot to remove /usr/lib/firefox prior to upgrading firefox.