![]() Windows and OS X have this binary packaged with the plugin and yet, here’s the Linux version, clearly missing these binaries. So, I did manage to get vSphere Web to work in Firefox, combination of the plugin, pepper flash and fresh player plugin. So low in fact, that my company’s web client asks for at least 11.5 of flash. ![]() Sure it gets security updates once in a while, but it’s stuck on an extremely low version. I ran into this before and was aware that Flash is no longer supported on the Linux platform. This basically made the vSphere Client Integration Plugin useless to me. So I knew ahead of time of the web client stopped working because Google did the right thing and disabled NPAPI for good on Linux. ![]() I don’t use Windows at work (or try not to) and just a few months ago, all machines at my desk are now Fedora Linux. This is fine, assuming you are running Windows or OS X, but not so fine when under Linux. ![]() Because of this, I have to be able to login to a client and manage the virtual machines that my team owns. I work in a place that uses a heavy amount of VMware. If you’re not interested in this, jump down a few paragraphs to “The Problem”. Before I get into showing you how to get the vSphere web client to work, I need to give a quick back story.
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