Hi Bernard, Thanks for your email. Here is the usage info below for
acroread 7. I got acroread 7 from

deb ftp://ftp.nerim.net/debian-marillat/ unstable main

which is the mplayer debian site. Acroread 7 was around on the adobe
site for awhile for linux but they took it off. It appeared on the
site above recently so I installed it. Maybe I'm ahead of things; if
so sorry about that; I can wait for things to catch up. 

Yes my mozpluggerrc file is unmodified.

I did play around a bit with mozpluggerrc but I don't understand it
well enough to figure out wahat is happening in the time I had last
night. If I remove the +useFrontEndProgram option then acroread will
start up but not in the firefox window. Yet the old mozpluggerrc has
that option and acroread does not object. I have the acroread plugin
too but I couldn't figure out how to get mozplugger to let the plugin
handle pdfs. Sorry but I don't know enough about mozplugger to go
further. I hope the above is helpful. I can try some things out if you
have ideas to sugegst. 

Thanks again, Bruce


Usage: /usr/bin/acroread [options] [list of files]

Options:
    --display=<DISPLAY>
        This option specifies the host and display to use.
    --screen=<SCREEN>
        X screen to use. Use this options to override the 
        screen part of the DISPLAY environment variable.
    --sync
        Make X calls synchronous. This slows down the program considerably.
    -geometry [<width>x<height>][{+|-}<x offset>{+|-}<y offset>]
        Size and/or location of the document windows.
        Note: this option is position dependent, and can be
        specified multiple times. The geometry specified only
        affects the list of files following it.
    -help
        Prints the common command-line options.
    -iconic
        Launches in an iconic state on the desktop.
    -setenv <var>=<value>
        Tells the main application to perform the equivalent of
        C-shell setenv <var> <value>.
    -tempFile
        Indicates files listed on the command line are temporary files
        and should not be put in the recent file list.  The document
        title will be the title in the pdf document, instead of the
        filename.
    -tempFileTitle <title>
        Same as -tempFile, except the title is specified.
    -toPostScript [options] pdf_file ... [ps_dir]
    -toPostScript [options] -pairs pdf_file_1 ps_file_1 ...
    -toPostScript [options]
        Converts the given pdf_files to PostScript.

        In the first form, if the last file specified is a directory,
        then all preceding files will be converted to PostScript
        and the generated PostScript files will be placed into ps_dir.
        If a directory is not specified, then the PostScript files
        will be placed in the same directory as the original file.

        In the second form, the file list contains pairs, each
        consisting of a PDF filename and a corresponding PostScript
        filename.

        The third form specifies a filter, reading a PDF file from
        standard input and writing the PostScript file to standard
        output.

        Note: When using -toPostScript it must be the first argument
        passed in on the command line.

        The following are valid options for the conversion of PDF to
        PostScript:

        -binary - emit binary PostScript where possible
        -start <int> - identify the first page in the document to be
           converted (default is the first page of the document)
        -end <int> - identify the last page in the document to be
           converted (default is the last page of the document)
        -optimizeForSpeed - emit PostScript such that all fonts are
           emitted once at the beginning of the document.  This
           results in faster transmission times and smaller
           PostScript documents but requires more PostScript printer
           virtual memory.
        -landscape - rotate the pages to print landscape
        -reverse - reverse the page order of the output
        -odd - emit only odd-numbered pages
        -even - emit only even-numbered pages
        -commentsOff - don't print comments
        -annotsOff - don't print annots
        -level2 - emit Level 2 PostScript  (level1 is not supported)
        -level3 - emit Level 3 PostScript 
        -printerhalftones - use the printer default halftones.
        -saveVM - download fonts as needed to preserve printer memory
        -size - Paper size (letter,tabloid,ledger,legal,a3,a4,a5,b4,b5)
        -scale <int> - scale the pages according to the scale factor
           (default is 100 percent)
        -shrink - shrink the pages to fit the page size
        -expand - expand the pages to fit the page size
        -size <pagesize> - set the page size.  The following page sizes
           are recognized:
              letter - letter size paper
              tabloid - tabloid size paper
              ledger - ledger size paper
              legal - legal size paper
              executive - executive size paper
              a3 - ISO standard A3 size
              a4 - ISO standard A4 size
              a5 - ISO standard A5 size
              b4 - ISO standard B4 size
              b5 - ISO standard B5 size
              wxh - custom size paper where w is the integer width
                 in points and h is the integer height in points
        -transQuality level - set the transparency flattening level 
           Value from 1-5, where 1 means rasterize everything, 5 means
           rasterize as little as possible, default is 3.
    -openInNewWindow
        The application starts normally without checking if it
        is already running.
    -version
        Print version information and quit.
    -visual <visual class> [depth=<depth>]
    -visual id=<visual id>
    -visual best
    -visual default
        Specifies a visual.

        In the first form, the visual class (specified by either
        its name or number) with an option depth determine the
        visual to use.

        In the second form, the visual id is specified. The prefix
        0x must be used for hexadecimal numbers.

        The third form uses an internal algorithm based on depth
        and visual class.

        The fourth form simply uses the default visual.

        Note that PseudoColor visuals of depth greater than 8,
        and DirectColor visuals are not supported.


On Tue, Apr 05, 2005 at 10:21:28PM +0800, Bernard Blackham wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 05, 2005 at 11:02:45PM +1200, Bruce MacDonald wrote:
> > Package: mozplugger
> > Version: 1.7.1-1
> > Severity: normal
> > 
> > 
> > PDFs come up blank in firefox. Starting firefox and viewing a pdf file:
> > 
> > $ firefox
> > 
> > Usage: /usr/bin/acroread [options] [list of files]
> > 
> > .... (usage info is printed here)
> 
> Could you send the usage info? Where does one get Acroread 7?  The
> latest I can find for Linux from Adobe is 5.0.10.
> 
> > So acroread seems to object to the invocation. Downgrading to the
> > previous version of mozplugger, 1.6.0-3 removes the problem.
> 
> That's curious, because the change in invoking acroread involved
> removing command-line options, not adding. (I'm assuming your
> /etc/mozpluggerrc files are unmodified from the defaults).
> 
> Bernard.
> 
> -- 
>  Bernard Blackham <bernard at blackham dot com dot au>


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