Re: Firefox 133 test package for ppc64
It's definitely a major step forward for PowerPC browsers... I just wanted to put forth a few things people might try if they have any trouble getting going.
Perhaps others will have a much simpler experience and not see any hiccups -- there are a lot of variations in machines, video cards, video memory, and such that will probably play a role in something as resource-intensive as a current browser.
Likely more observations will come forward over time to nail this down.
Thanks again for getting it working!
Ken
> On May 11, 2025, at 11:20 PM, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz <glaubitz@physik.fu-berlin.de> wrote:
>
> Hello Kevin,
>
> On Sun, 2025-05-11 at 17:48 -0700, Ken Cunningham wrote:
>> Some feedback for others who might try this...
>>
>> I started off by upgrading to firefox 138, which is the current default
>> when you install or upgrade firefox, on my DualG5 with 3.5G Ram.
>>
>> It opened, but there was no content in the windows, and none of the
>> firefox menus would respond after a long time.
>
> Did you check on the CPU activity?
>
>> I uninstalled it, purged it, and reinstalled it, and same outcome.
>>
>> So I purged that, and installed the recently-fixed version of firefox 133
>> from the latest snapshot.
>>
>> That opened, and then when I clicked on the interface anywhere (menus, etc)
>> the system hard crashed and needed to be power cycled. That happened twice
>> further, after rebooting each time..
>>
>> Then I rebooted and launched X with MATE instead of my usual LXDE, for no
>> particular reason. Whether that had anything to do with anything, firefox
>> 133 then opened, and so far is working (albeit slowly) without crashing or
>> bringing down the system.
>>
>> I'll leave it like this for a while, and then eventually will try firefox 138
>> again. I don't have any explanation for the above observations as yet, just
>> observations.
>>
>> As far as I can tell, all the other applications I have installed (cherrytree,
>> many others) are working normally.
>
> Can you run Firefox from the command line and observe the output?
>
> FWIW, I tested it remotely and it worked for me. I ran it on a ppc64 machine
> with the X output forwarded to my local machine and Firefox worked normally,
> I could browse the web without any problems.
>
> Adrian
>
> --
> .''`. John Paul Adrian Glaubitz
> : :' : Debian Developer
> `. `' Physicist
> `- GPG: 62FF 8A75 84E0 2956 9546 0006 7426 3B37 F5B5 F913
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