Pesquisar no site de suporte

Evite golpes de suporte. Nunca pedimos que você ligue ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone, ou compartilhe informações pessoais. Denuncie atividades suspeitas usando a opção “Denunciar abuso”.

Saiba mais

Esta discussão foi arquivada. Faça uma nova pergunta se precisa de ajuda.

Cannot access websites that use PDF with XFA because I am running Linux

more options

I have to access a government website which makes all government forms electronically available as PDF using XFA so they can be filled in. However I am running Firefox on Linux. When I try to download a form from this site the site checks my browser to see if I have the Adobe PDF plugin installed with a release level that supports XFA. If I do not have such a plugin installed, which I cannot since there is no such plugin for Firefox on Linux, then the web site instead of sending me the PDF document, which I could view with any number of offline PDF viewers which do support XFA, sends me a one-line PDF that demands that I install the Adobe plugin. The government will not remove this check since it is a convenience to the vast majority of their clients who are running Windows. Is there some way I can configure my Firefox browser on Linux so it lies to the web-site and says that I have installed the plugin?

I have to access a government website which makes all government forms electronically available as PDF using XFA so they can be filled in. However I am running Firefox on Linux. When I try to download a form from this site the site checks my browser to see if I have the Adobe PDF plugin installed with a release level that supports XFA. If I do not have such a plugin installed, which I cannot since there is no such plugin for Firefox on Linux, then the web site instead of sending me the PDF document, which I could view with any number of offline PDF viewers which do support XFA, sends me a one-line PDF that demands that I install the Adobe plugin. The government will not remove this check since it is a convenience to the vast majority of their clients who are running Windows. Is there some way I can configure my Firefox browser on Linux so it lies to the web-site and says that I have installed the plugin?

Todas as respostas (1)

more options

Perhaps you can find a fake plugin file somewhere; someone else must have needed it at some point in time.

From the settings perspective, there is an auto-generated file which stores information about your plugins. I suspect Firefox will detect and remove fictitious entries. Perhaps if you make the file read only, Firefox won't be able to "correct" it? Whether this will populate the Add-ons page, Plugins section, or fool Firefox into thinking there really is an Acrobat plugin, I could only guess.

If you want to try it, the file is named pluginreg.dat and is in your profile folder.

For comparison, I have this for the Adobe Acrobat plugin in the [PLUGINS] section:

nppdf32.dll|$
C:\Program Files (x86)\Adobe\Acrobat 11.0\Acrobat\browser\nppdf32.dll|$
11.0.12.18|$
1435585406000|0|0|0|$
Adobe PDF Plug-In For Firefox and Netscape 11.0.12|$
Adobe Acrobat|$
7
0|application/pdf|Acrobat Portable Document Format|pdf|$
1|application/vnd.adobe.pdfxml|Adobe PDF in XML Format|pdfxml|$
2|application/vnd.adobe.x-mars|Adobe PDF in XML Format|mars|$
3|application/vnd.fdf|Acrobat Forms Data Format|fdf|$
4|application/vnd.adobe.xfdf|XML Version of Acrobat Forms Data Format|xfdf|$
5|application/vnd.adobe.xdp+xml| Acrobat XML Data Package|xdp|$
6|application/vnd.adobe.xfd+xml|Adobe FormFlow99 Data File|xfd|$