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Gentoo's Bugzilla – Attachment 365208 Details for
Bug 481596
www-plugins/pipelight - use Silverlight apps in browser using Wine
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metadata.xml
metadata.xml (text/xml), 2.64 KB, created by
Patrick McMunn
on 2013-12-13 04:13:34 UTC
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Description:
metadata.xml
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Creator:
Patrick McMunn
Created:
2013-12-13 04:13:34 UTC
Size:
2.64 KB
patch
obsolete
><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> ><!DOCTYPE pkgmetadata SYSTEM "http://www.gentoo.org/dtd/metadata.dtd"> > ><pkgmetadata> ><herd>no-herd</herd> ><maintainer> > <email>doctorwhoguy@gmail.com</email> > <name>Patrick McMunn</name> ></maintainer> ><longdescription> >Today we want to present you our latest project Pipelight, which allows to run >your favorite Silverlight application directly inside your Linux browser. The >project combines the effort by Erich E. Hoover with a new browser plugin that >embeds Silverlight directly in any Linux browser supporting the Netscape Plugin >API (Firefox, Chrome / Chromium, Midori, Opera, â¦). He worked on a set of Wine >patches to get Playready DRM protected content working inside Wine and >afterwards created an Ubuntu package called Netflix Desktop. This package >allows one to use Silverlight inside a Windows version of Firefox, which works >as a temporary solution but is not really user-friendly and moreover requires >Wine to translate all API calls of the browser. To solve this problem we >created Pipelight. > >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. As a user you will not notice anything >from that "magic" and you can simply use Silverlight the same way as on Windows. ></longdescription> ><use> > <flag name="binary-pluginloader">If enabled, use the upstream binary pluginloader.exe. > If disabled, compile your own binary; this requires a cross compiler.</flag> > <flag name="flash">Enable Flash plugin by default.</flag> > <flag name="installation-dialogs">If enabled, you will be presented with the installation > dialogs of the browser plugins when they are downloaded. If disabled, Pipelight > will install them automatically without user intervention.</flag> > <flag name="shockwave">Enable Shockwave plugin by default.</flag> > <flag name="silverlight">Enable Silverlight plugin by default.</flag> > <flag name="static">Compile a statically linked pluginloader.exe. This has no effect if > using the upstream binary.</flag> > <flag name="unity3d">Enable the Unity3D plugin by default.</flag> ></use> ></pkgmetadata>
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