I start an X session as root, and chromium is started as user: sudo xinit -e "su user chromium-browser"Īnd yet the browser opens with borders at the top and bottom as before.
The file is then displayed as belonging to root and user can only read and execute. OPEN Is it possible to get a full screen with Firefox in Xmonad Post by eesau » Fri 12:07 pm Very specific, and not the most important stuff again, but Firefox doesnt go 100 full screen in Xmonad. The problem is, Chromium changes the file back to its original contents! I have tried setting root to owner with sudo chown root Preferences Then running sudo chmod -R 755 Preferences. beacon wrote: It has been suggested on many of the contributions I have read that firefox remembers the state of the last screen opened, but that is not true in my case. Starting in Firefox 32, plugins are set to 'Ask to Activate' by default, but for some reason the activation prompt is never displayed for the Citrix Receiver plugin, so the plugin will not work unless it is set to. Which one The latest news and developments on Firefox and Mozilla, a global non-profit that strives to promote openness, innovation and opportunity on the web. In Firefox, go to Tools -> Add-ons -> Plugins, and make sure the 'Citrix Receiver for Linux' plugin is set to 'Always Activate'.
I have tried editing ~/.config/chromium/Preferences as described, for example in an answer to this thread: How to open Chromium in full screen kiosk mode in minimal windows manager environment Start Firefox in Fullscreen (like you pressed F11) Is that possible Yes it should be possible by using a command line argument in the launcher. I need to open chromium full screen from the terminal.