In Finnish a bat is ”lepakko”, which means ”a bat”.
In Finnish a bat is ”lepakko”, which means ”a bat”.
JK, actually the meaning is something like ”the flutterer”. But no rodents in the name.
In Finnish a bat is ”lepakko”, which means ”a bat”.
JK, actually the meaning is something like ”the flutterer”. But no rodents in the name.
So I did a little more digging, and found that this actually first cropped up in Ubuntu 17.10.
I then ran mozregression (back on 18.04, my main desktop) and here’s what it found:
7:12.48 INFO: Last good revision: 64bab5cbb9b63808d04babfbcfba3175fd99f69d (2017-10-25)
7:12.48 INFO: First bad revision: aa958b29c149a67fce772f8473e9586e71fbdb46 (2017-10-26)
7:12.48 INFO: Pushlog:
https://hg.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/pushloghtml?fromchange=64bab5cbb9b63808d04babfbcfba3175fd99f69d&tochange=aa958b29c149a67fce772f8473e9586e71fbdb46
After that ”There are no build artifacts on inbound for these changesets (they are probably too old).”
As this was my first time ever using mozregression, I have no idea how useful that was, but if there’s some way I can narrow this down further, I’d be happy to.
Adrian: Thanks for taking a look! I’m using Ubuntu 18.04, and that appears to be crucial here: I created a 16.04 VM, installed all in-release updates (including Firefox 63), and just as you, was unable to reproduce the issue. I then upgraded the VM to 18.04 and the bug immediately manifested again.
Thanks Olivier, I’ve now added the link to my upstream report.
I first reported this against 62 in Launchpad: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/firefox/+bug/1798103
Firefox was since updated to 63 in Ubuntu and the issue remains.
User Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux x86_64; rv:63.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/63.0
Steps to reproduce:
1. Open `about:config`, find `layout.css.devPixelsPerPx` and change the value from default (-1.0) to 1.2.
2. Open a view-source view with long lines: `view-source:https://www.youtube.com/user/10asti10`
3. hit Ctrl+f, search for rss
4. using the LMB, try selecting some text, then copy and paste it somewhere
Actual results:
After step 3, the highlighted text on the page is not ”rss”. The highlight doesn’t even adhere to letter widths (screenshot 1).
After step 4, the pasted text is not even close to what you’ve selected to copy.
Expected results:
For the search to hightlight an occurence of ”rss”, and for the pasted text to correspond to what I’ve selected from the view-source view.
Last week, after receiving the ”Important updates to your Flickr account” notification email I deleted my Flickr account, associated with my Yahoo account. Today I received two new copies of the ”Important updates to your Flickr account” email. I tried to access the old Flickr account to make sure it has been deleted, but logging in with my Yahoo account only creates a new Flickr account, which is not what I want.
What I want is to have no more email messages sent to me from Flickr.
I also tried logging in using my Gmail address (which also appears to have a Yahoo account associated with it), but opening flickr.com after that also just creates a new Flickr account every time. I keep deleting these accounts, only to be handed a new one every time I go back to flickr.com.
Back in April-May, I received altogether 5 separate messages informing me about the SmugMug ownership business, so something’s clearly not right with your emailing system, or with the records you have of me.
Your email messages should follow the semi-standard practice of including a footer with a clear explanation of why exactly am I receiving the email and what I should do if I wish to stop receiving them. The ToS and Community Guidelines links (currently in the footer) are all but useless in this context.
Kiitos selonteosta, ihmettelinkin tätä. Näytti koskevan myös tv-sisältöjen syötteitä, niistäkin tuli tänään uusintoja.
My test blog is running WP 5.0-beta3-43867 with Gutenberg 4.3.0-alpha-0841246 (from Daniel Bachhuber’s nightly), and the theme I’m using is Cover2 (Github here), which also appears to exhibit this in single post view.
I’ve narrowed it down to this function (called from header.php), where the gutenberg_parse_blocks()
call triggers the issue.
I’m not saying I’m 100 % sure it’s Gutenberg and not the theme(s) at fault here, but I just thought I’d post this just in case it helps to find out either way.
LO 1:6.0.6-0ubuntu0.18.04.1 in Bionic is likewise affected, and the workaround also works here.