onde estão as configurações do flash armazenadas localmente no Ubuntu

4

É possível alterar as configurações do flash no seu computador neste URL:

link

No entanto, dado que a Macromedia não tem problemas para configurar cookies LSO no seu disco rígido que você não consegue encontrar, estou um pouco cético quanto ao fato de que as configurações que eu modifiquei lá serão salvas. Então, eu gostaria de poder olhar localmente no meu PC e verificar as configurações.

Onde posso encontrar as configurações do Flash localmente? Certamente o plugin não pode estar indo para a própria Macromedia para eles (isso é um futuro muito sombrio para se contemplar).

Estou executando o Ubuntu 10.04.

Obrigado Joe

    
por Joseph Mastey 03.03.2011 / 18:04

2 respostas

2

Parece que as configurações são armazenadas em ~/.macromedia/Flash_Player . Jogando com o applet de configuração, você vinculou os arquivos alterados em ~/.macromedia/Flash_Player/macromedia.com/support/flashplayer/sys .

    
por 03.03.2011 / 19:20
1

Você pode definir (algumas?) configurações em /etc/adobe/mms.cfg .

Aqui está um arquivo de amostra:

#
# /etc/adobe/mms.cfg: Adobe Flash privacy and security settings
#
# For more details on the meaning of most of these options, please visit:
# http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flashplayer/articles/flash_player_admin_guide.html
#

# Lets you prevent users from designating any files on the local file system as
# trusted
#  0 = Not Allowed, 1 = Allowed (default)
#AllowUserLocalTrust = 1

# Lets you specify a hard limit on the amount of local storage that Flash Player
# uses for the storage of common Flash components
#  Size in megabytes (default is 20), 0 = Component storage disabled
#AssetCacheSize = 20

# Lets you prevent Flash Player from automatically checkingfor and installing
# updated versions
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
AutoUpdateDisable = 1

# Lets you specify how often to check for an updated version of Flash Player
#  Number of days, 0 = Every startup
# There is no default value, which falls back to the user's setting (30 days by
# default)
#AutoUpdateInterval =

# Lets you prevent SWF files from accessing webcams or microphones
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
#AVHardwareDisable = 0

# Lets you prevent information on installed fonts from being displayed
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
#DisableDeviceFontEnumeration = 0

# Lets you prevent networking or file system access if any kind
#  Set to the executable filename, default is empty
#DisableNetworkAndFilesystemInHostApp = 

# Lets you prevent native code applications that are digitally signed and
# delivered by Adobe from being downloaded
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
#DisableProductDownload = 0

# Lets you enable or disable the use of the Socket.connect() and
# XMLSocket.connect() methods
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
#DisableSockets = 0

# Lets you create a whitelist of servers to which socket connections are allowed
#  Set to hostname or IP address.  This can be specified multiple times in this
#  file to allow more than one host, and only takes effect if DisableSockets
#  (above) is set to 1.
#EnableSocketsTo = localhost.localdomain
#EnableSocketsTo = 127.0.0.1

# Lets you prevent the ActionScript FileReference API from performing file
# downloads
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
#FileDownloadDisable = 0

# Lets you prevent the ActionScript FileReference API from prerforming file
# uploads
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
#FileUploadDisable = 0

# Lets you disable SWF files playing via a browser plug-in from being displayed
# in full-screen mode
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
#FullScreenDisable = 0

# Lets you specify whether SWF files produced for Flash Player 6 and earlier can
# execute an operation that has been restricted in a newer version of Flash
# Player
#  0 = Deny, 1 = Allow
# There is no default value, which falls back to the user's setting (Defaults to
# "Ask"
#LegacyDomainMatching =

# Lets you specify how Flash Player should determine whether to execute certain
# local SWF files that were originally produced for Flash Player 7 and earlier
#  0 = Deny, 1 = Allow
# There is no default value, which falls back to the user's setting
#LocalFileLegacyAction =

# Lets you prevent local SWF files from having read access to files on local
# drive
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
#LocalFileReadDisable = 0

# Lets you specify a hard limit on the amout of local storage that Flash Player
# uses (per domain) for persistent shared objects
#  1 = no storage, 2 = 10KB, 3 = 100KB, 4 = 1MB, 5 = 10MB, 
#  6 = User specified (default)
# If the user does not specify a limit, the default is 100KB.
#LocalStorageLimit = 6

# Lets you override GPU validation checks to force hardware acceleration
# Warning: This may make your player (more) unstable!
#  0 = Check GPU (default), 1 = Skip checks
# More details:
# http://blogs.adobe.com/penguin.swf/2008/08/secrets_of_the_mmscfg_file_1.html
#OverrideGPUValidation = 0

# Lets you specify whether third-party SWF files can read and write locally
# persistent shared objects
#  0 = disabled, 1 = enabled
# There is no default value, which falls back to the user's setting
#ThirdPartyStorage = 

# Lets you disable "Windowless" mode, which may cause crashes in firefox
# version 3.01 and earlier.
#  0 = Not Disabled (default), 1 = Disabled
# More details:
# http://blogs.adobe.com/penguin.swf/2008/08/windowless_mode_fix.html
#WindowlessDisable = 0
    
por 04.11.2011 / 08:58

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