Shockwave flash keeps crashing
I've tried disabling hardware acceleration and other suggestions which show up on a google search. Nothing seems to help. Updated flash player today. Same crash abouts 2mins after restarting Firefox. My last few (submitted) Firefox crash reports are
bp-f7ccef6b-bdc4-4977-80e8-fa07c0170904 04/09/2017 10:26 bp-5aaa7f57-58bf-4ac0-96a5-fca940170904 04/09/2017 00:21 bp-da912d7a-4954-4b3d-9905-59d110170904 04/09/2017 00:04 bp-1796e2ee-4200-420f-b167-959350170904 03/09/2017 23:02 bp-90293871-fbb2-4f31-baae-42cdc0170904 31/08/2017 22:28 bp-8ada55b3-58c1-4112-b1ee-4a2030170904 29/08/2017 12:20
All of them show that the crash was down to shockwave flash. I don't understand much/any of the contents of these crash reports. The only thing I find odd is that there are couple of references to "amd64": I have an Intel i7-3770K
All Replies (15)
The crash report shows a problem with Kaspersky. Update the program. If the problem continues, disable it.
Interestimg suggestion which hadn't occurred to me.
Been using Kaspersky for years and haven't had any issues.
Obviously I now have to rattle Kaspersky's cage. I can find a few references to Kaspersky in the bug reports I posted, but nothing which really identifies Kaspersky as a problem. Assuming I have to point the Kaspersky guys to something specific, how did you diagnose a Kaspersky issue? Which part of these bug reports should I bring to their attention?
I just really don't want to get into this loop where,
Adobe says it's a Firefox/Kaspersky problem Mozilla says it's a Kaspersky/Adobe problem Kaspersky says it's a Mozilla/Adode problem
so any ammunition you provide would be helpful
FredMcD said
The crash report shows a problem with Kaspersky. Update the program. If the problem continues, disable it.
If there is still a problem, then it may be something else. Be sure to post any new crash reports.
See also:
Start Firefox in Safe Mode to check if one of the extensions ("3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Extensions) or if hardware acceleration is causing the problem.
- switch to the DEFAULT theme: "3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Appearance
- do NOT click the "Refresh Firefox" button on the Safe Mode start window
- https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/troubleshoot-firefox-issues-using-safe-mode
- https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/troubleshoot-extensions-themes-to-fix-problems
You can try to modify multi-process settings to see if this has effect.
- set dom.ipc.processCount to 1 if it is currently set to a higher value (4)
- disable multi-process windows in Firefox
You can disable multi-process windows in Firefox by setting these prefs to false on the about:config page.
- browser.tabs.remote.autostart = false
- browser.tabs.remote.autostart.2 = false
You can open the about:config page via the location/address bar. You can accept the warning and click "I'll be careful" to continue.
FredMcD said
FredMcD saidThe crash report shows a problem with Kaspersky. Update the program. If the problem continues, disable it.If there is still a problem, then it may be something else. Be sure to post any new crash reports.
I have submitted a bug notice to Kaspersky, and am waiting for them to get back to me
In the meantime, I tried disabling Kaspersky, and restarting Firefox. Shockwave flash still crashed after about 2mins, with crash report
bp-0d0217d0-4085-440b-9581-24da10170905 05/09/2017 11:06
I can still find references to Kaspersky in this report, even although it is *supposed* to be disabled. Not sure how significant that is
cor-el said
See also: Start Firefox in Safe Mode to check if one of the extensions ("3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Extensions) or if hardware acceleration is causing the problem.
- switch to the DEFAULT theme: "3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Appearance
- do NOT click the "Refresh Firefox" button on the Safe Mode start window
You can try to modify multi-process settings to see if this has effect.
- https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/troubleshoot-firefox-issues-using-safe-mode
- https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/troubleshoot-extensions-themes-to-fix-problems
You can disable multi-process windows in Firefox by setting these prefs to false on the about:config page.
- set dom.ipc.processCount to 1 if it is currently set to a higher value (4)
- disable multi-process windows in Firefox
You can open the about:config page via the location/address bar. You can accept the warning and click "I'll be careful" to continue.
- browser.tabs.remote.autostart = false
- browser.tabs.remote.autostart.2 = false
####################################################
Firefox and Adobe are both up-to-date. I have tried the suggestions in
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/keep-flash-up-to-date-and-troubleshoot-problems
None of them seem to change the Shockwave flash crash
Tried firefox in safe mode - this disables the shockwave flash plugin - so obviously this plug-in can't crash. Not sure what else this proves.
Went back to "normal" mode
The dom.ipc.processCount is set to 1 (I have never changed this)
browser.tabs.remote.autostart is set to false, but browser.tabs.remote.autostart.2 is set to true??? Not sure why because I have never (knowingly) changed this. Reluctant to reset this without some idea of what it is going to do???
cor-el modificouno o
Okay, let's totally remove Kaspersky. You can always reinstall it again later.
browser.tabs.remote.autostart is the master switch for multi-process and is false during the implementation of this feature. Numbered browser.tabs.remote.autostart.2 are special multi-process opt-in prefs and are used to enable multi-process, so you can try to toggle this pref to false with a double-click and close and restart Firefox.
FredMcD said
Okay, let's totally remove Kaspersky. You can always reinstall it again later.
Kasperksy Tech support gave me a list of things to try, none of these had any effect. Their last resource was also "uninstall" itt. So I did. Then rebooted, and restarted Firefox. The adobe plug-in crashed after about a minute
I would upload this new crash report here, but about:crashes has this crash report as 'pending' (normal for my setup) and nothing I do will change its status to "submitted" with the "BP-" on the front. I just get a spinnning blue disc for about 3mins, and then nothing happens.
Since the plug-in crash happens with their software uninstalled, Kaspersky are off the hook and I have closed my support request with their tech support
cor-el said
browser.tabs.remote.autostart is the master switch for multi-process and is false during the implementation of this feature. Numbered browser.tabs.remote.autostart.2 are special multi-process opt-in prefs and are used to enable multi-process, so you can try to toggle this pref to false with a double-click and close and restart Firefox.
With Kaspersky uninstalled, I used about:config to set
browser.tabs.remote.autostart.2 to false
closed firefox, checked my prefs.js file, and this setting is definitely false.
Restarted firefox, checked about:config, and browser.tabs.remote.autostart.2
is still set to false.
The shockwave flash plugin still crashed after about 1min :-(
So I'm setting this config entry back to true (mainly because, as far as I know), this is whhat the setting has always been
Were you able to get a crash report number?
FredMcD said
Were you able to get a crash report number?
I'm afraid I went a bit nuclear
I had Kaspersky uninstalled and seemed unable to submit any Mozilla crash reports, which got me really annoyed with Firefox. So I decided to uninstall Firefox, and Adobe Flash, then just reinstall Firefox/Flash/Kaspersky from scratch
The bad news is that I decided to clear out all unsubmitted Firefox crash reports as part of the uninstall - after all I can't submit them, so what use are they?
The good news is that since I have reinstalled everything (so far as I am aware I have exactly the same installation as before) the adobe flash plugin no longer crashes. But I have absolutely no idea why
I will continue to monitor, but for the moment, this problem *seems* to have gone away
It could have been a corrupt file that was overwritten.
FredMcD said
It could have been a corrupt file that was overwritten.
Possibly - I have no idea. I'm just going to monitor from this point on.
One thing that bothers me is that if you type something like "problem with firefox and flash" into your favourite search engine, you will get *so* many responses. And most of the suggested solutions are completely useless. (I know because I've tried most of them)
I mean if the actual answer is do a f******g reinstall, why doesn't anyone just make the simple admission - we have no idea what is causing the problem, but if you reinstall everything, your problem will (probably) go away??? Is this hard to admit?
Sometimes a standard answer solves the problem. Other times we need to experiment to find the answer.