Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Natao arisiva ity resaka mitohy ity. Mametraha fanontaniana azafady raha mila fanampiana.

HTML 5 sounds are not played, videos are

  • 13 valiny
  • 2 manana an'ity olana ity
  • 1 view
  • Valiny farany nomen'i Znert

more options

Hi everybody,

I just updated my Ubuntu Gnome and hence also Firefox to version 41.0. Now I cannot hear any sounds played via HTML5. Videos are played just fine, however.

I have already tried resetting Firefox, creating a new profile and even going back to 37 via apt-get install firefox=37.0+build2-0ubuntu1

None of this helped at all.

Because sound doesn't even work under 37.0 I do assume that the problem is rooted in some system update, but I still post this here and not the Ubuntu forums because this problem persists ONLY in Firefox playing HTML5 files (as far as I know). As soon as I force YouTube, for example, to use Flash everything is fine (except that it is using flash :D).

As I am not that confident with Linux yet I am not quite sure how to fix this. I don't even know how to best post some sort of debug-log or list of updated programs/files that came with the Ubuntu update. So any help is appreciated!

Thanks in advance :)

Hi everybody, I just updated my Ubuntu Gnome and hence also Firefox to version 41.0. Now I cannot hear any sounds played via HTML5. Videos are played just fine, however. I have already tried resetting Firefox, creating a new profile and even going back to 37 via apt-get install firefox=37.0+build2-0ubuntu1 None of this helped at all. Because sound doesn't even work under 37.0 I do assume that the problem is rooted in some system update, but I still post this here and not the Ubuntu forums because this problem persists ONLY in Firefox playing HTML5 files (as far as I know). As soon as I force YouTube, for example, to use Flash everything is fine (except that it is using flash :D). As I am not that confident with Linux yet I am not quite sure how to fix this. I don't even know how to best post some sort of debug-log or list of updated programs/files that came with the Ubuntu update. So any help is appreciated! Thanks in advance :)

Vahaolana nofidina

Ok I fixed it. And could have long ago if would have read a little more carefully.

So I went back and looked through all the sites I have already read and revisited this site: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=803042#c12

The comment from Steve Fink [:sfink, :s:] describes exactly my problem and I could actually fix it by just plugging in a TV via HDMI and change the output device to internal speakers via the sound settings.

Even when unplugging the TV it works.

I guess the cause of my problem then was just HTML5 still sending Audio to the HDMI although these settings should have changed...

Is this a know bug? How can I best report this if it's not?

Hamaky an'ity valiny ity @ sehatra 👍 0

All Replies (13)

more options

Bump, nobody having a clue or hint? :(

more options

I've called the big guys to help you. Good luck.


check this:

  • see if there are updates for your graphics drive drivers

https://support.mozilla.org/kb/upgrade-graphics-drivers-use-hardware-acceleration

  • disable protected mode in the Flash plugin (Flash 11.3+ on Windows Vista and later)

https://forums.adobe.com/message/4468493#TemporaryWorkaround

  • disable hardware acceleration in the Flash plugin

https://forums.adobe.com/thread/891337 See also:

more options

Do HTML5 audio players pay audio audibly, in other words, is this related to being encoded as part of a video? For example: http://hpr.dogphilosophy.net/test/

more options

On Linux the HTML5 media player depends on GStreamer support, so make sue you have the latest GStreamer updates and have installed all relevant packages. If you have multiple pages for audio components then try to uninstall some older GStreamer (MP3) audio packages.

more options

First thanks for the answers.

Second I am currently trying to upgrade my video drivers, but as Ubuntu only supports version 346.59 things are a little harder. I fail at installing the drivers manually because somehow I can't kill X-Server. sudo apt-get install nvidia-current installs version 302 and nvidia-352 does not exist... Tomorrow I try what else I can do...

I don't think that changing any Flash settings would solve my problems because Flash files play normally.

@jscher2000 None of the files play.

GStreamer should be up to date, as apt-get update doesn't scream for anything new, but I don't know how to verify my version.

Novain'i Znert t@

more options

Znert said

GStreamer should be up to date, as apt-get update doesn't scream for anything new, but I don't know how to verify my version.

The best way to check is download the current full installer.

more options

FredMcD said

The best way to check is download the current full installer.

Well I ran sudo apt-get install gstreamer-tools but no change. However, I'm not sure if this really install/updates what you want...

more options

Znert said

@jscher2000 None of the files play.

I'm not sure what you're seeing/not seeing or not hearing:

  • Is there a player bar in the page?
  • If so, and you click play, to do you get loading progress and a current playback point marker?

Screen shot attached for comparison.

If the audio tag isn't working, hmm, something is broken or disabled.

more options

FredMcD said

The best way to check is download the current full installer.

This is Linux and not Windows that you use.

http://gstreamer.freedesktop.org/download/

Linux Most, if not all, Linux distributions provide packages of GStreamer. You should find these in your distribution's package repository. Note that some distributions split the GStreamer plugins up further than the upstream sources. Additionally, some distributions do not include the gst-plugins-bad, gst-plugins-ugly, and gst-libav packages in their main repository, for legal reasons.
more options

jscher2000 said

I'm not sure what you're seeing/not seeing or not hearing:

Sorry if I was a little too vague.

Basically my problem is best described as muted. Everything just plays fine, loads fine and even looks fine. But I can't hear anything.

And obviously I didn't mute anything either. Not Firefox (otherwise I wouldn't be able to play Flash files just fine) nor the player.

Edit: One thing I forgot to mention is that I don't have option to enable/disable hardware acceleration at all... Could this be the cause of my problem?

Edit#2: I just checked again, suddenly hardware acceleration is there. No idea what changed. The only thing that could be related is that I just switched to the Nouveu drivers to confirm that drivers are not the cause (same results as with Nvidia drivers) and then changed back to Nvidia's drivers to be able to use PRIME.

Novain'i Znert t@

more options

I thought I posted this earlier but I don't see it now...

Some users have reported that they have no audio when Firefox is sending audio output to a device that was previously but is not currently connected such as a headset or bluetooth device. I can't recall the solution if that is the explanation.

more options

Vahaolana Nofidina

Ok I fixed it. And could have long ago if would have read a little more carefully.

So I went back and looked through all the sites I have already read and revisited this site: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=803042#c12

The comment from Steve Fink [:sfink, :s:] describes exactly my problem and I could actually fix it by just plugging in a TV via HDMI and change the output device to internal speakers via the sound settings.

Even when unplugging the TV it works.

I guess the cause of my problem then was just HTML5 still sending Audio to the HDMI although these settings should have changed...

Is this a know bug? How can I best report this if it's not?

more options

Thanks for the tip btw @jscher2000 :)