New Chromium browser for you!
The release earlier this week of Chromium 76 came with a total of 43 security fixes but this new major version of course also sports some real usability changes.
Most notably: Flash is now disabled by default. It’s no longer sufficient to click an “allow Flash on this page” popup but you need to go into the Chromium settings and override the default. And click in on the Flash element to make it start playing. Even then, the changes you make will not survive the restart of the browser. Google is apparently stepping up its efforts in convincing website developers to switch to HTML5 instead. In 2020 Adobe will stop with Flash anyway, so remaining Flash-powered sites will not survive long.
Another big behavioral change is that it is no longer possible for web sites to detect that you are browsing in ‘anonymous mode‘. This will make it a lot harder for sites with a ‘pay-wall‘ to block you from accessing their paid content though trial subscriptions.
And another positive change is that hitting the ‘Esc‘ key to stop a page from loading, is no longer treated as user activation. Meaning that malicious web sites will have more trouble messing with your browser because your ‘Esc‘ keypress is no longer passed to the remote web site.
I uploaded packages for the new Chromium 76.0.3809.87 today. That should have happened days earlier, but unfortunately I had to spend several nights to track down the cause of an inability to compile a 32bit package for the new version.
You may (or may not) know that my chromium.SlackBuild downloads and compiles a custom version of the clang compiler which is then used to compile Chromium. Compiling Chromium with gcc is not fully supported by Google, and Slackware’s own version of clang is too old to be used for Chromium.
So what happened…. some developer determined that no one should run 32bit Linux software anymore and hard-coded a 64bit architecture in the clang build script that is part of the Chromium source. Attempts at compiling a 64bit clang on 32bit Slackware results in weird errors, and of course compiling the Chromium sources was out of the question then. That fuck-up took me a while to find dammit!
After I wrote a patch to fix this for my Slackware package, I inspected the Chromium source repository and was happy to find that this ‘improvement’ had been applied nine weeks ago and that other people had already felt the resulting pain – and that the offending commit has already been reverted.
The next release of Chromium should again compile without issues… fingers crossed.
Wait no more and grab that package (for Slackware 14.2 and -current) from my site or any mirror.
Enjoy! Eric
So what happened…. some developer determined that no one should run 32bit Linux software anymore and hard-coded a 64bit architecture in the clang build script that is part of the Chromium source
It really annoys me when devs do that. I get that they might not have time to maintain something, but let it be forked. Don’t just rip it out and go “oh well.” (Kind of like the bitmap fonts change with libcairo.)
I agree.
Or at least make it *extremely* clear that you’re not supporting 32 bits anymore, instead of giving a weird error.
Like the Unix mantra of “fail early and loudly”.
Thank you Eric!
Eric, thanks for the very detailed release notes. It’s impressive the amount of time you devote to research and QA for your packages. This is why I am confident downloading and running your binaries.
Hello , thanks for packages.
I have a question , i have one system running as root , and need to use the parameter
–no-sandbox , other versions no have problem , but this new branch 76 , makes a information alert . saying no sandbox is not suported , but , chromium are running.
Can i disable this alert ? . now no parameter to disable infovars , –noinfovars , are removed.
Thanks again.
I am a long time Slackware user and have recently been making small contributions back to the community. I have been visiting your site for a few years and I have a profound appreciation for the heavy lifting that you have done over the years and continue to make. I Just wanted to say thanks for all the work you do Eric, it is extremely appreciated !
Amazing work, many thanks.