I'm in the process of writing an chrome extension & I'm having issues using 'BrowserRouter' for my extension. The weird thing is when I use 'HashRouter' instead it works and loads the '/' route which just renders my Home component.

Note that the non-Blink parts of the media router will be implemented only in desktop Chrome and ChromeOS. Presentation API functionality will be implemented in Chrome for Android using analogous platform components such as the Android Media Route Provider framework.


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The Chrome Media Router is a browser service exposed in-process via C++ API and is exposed to other processes via a set of two Mojo interfaces: the Presentation interface and the Media Router API interface. Its job is to field requests from clients for media sink availability, media route construction/destruction, and media route control via messaging. It also controls the Media Router Dialog and delegates many functions to the Media Router component extension.

TODO: update The Media Router extension is an external component extension responsible for direct interaction with media sinks. The component extension will initially support use of Cast and DIAL devices with more types of sinks to be added over time. The component extension interacts with the Chrome Media Router via the Media Router API Mojo service, and uses some chrome.* platform APIs, such as chrome.dial, chrome.cast.channel, and chrome.mdns to implement network level interaction with Cast and DIAL devices.

Request routing of media for that source, which will show the user the media router dialog to select a compatible sink. If the user selects a sink, the media route is returned to the application to allow it to control media playback.

The Chrome Media Router, itself, does not directly interact with media sinks. TODO: update Instead it delegates these requests and responses to a media route provider in the component extension. The Chrome Media Router will contain bookkeeping of established routes, pending route requests, and other related resources, so it does not have to request this information from the route provider each time.

The component extension manages discovery of and network interaction with individual media sinks. For the purposes of this discussion a sink is a LAN-connected device that speaks the Cast or DIAL protocol, but in theory it could be any other type of endpoint that supports media rendering and two-way messaging. The extension consists of three types of components:

Mirroring Service: If a media source is requested that represents the tab or desktop contents, this service acts on the behalf of the application to initiate the mirroring session. This is handled internally to the component extension and is not exposed to the rest of the browser, it appears to be just another media route.

The component extension is written in JavaScript and includes code for multiple media route providers. Initially Media Route Providers will be implemented for Cast and DIAL devices with others to follow. Over time media route providers that do not rely on proprietary protocols will be implemented in the Chromium repository.

As an external component, the extension is installed on the initial run of the browser. It is built around an event page so it registers itself with the Media Router, registers itself with discovery APIs to be notified of display availability, and then suspends. The component extension will only be active when there are applications with pending sink availability requests or media routes, or when there is active network traffic between the extension and a media sink.

There are several modules to the extension that are loaded on-demand. The main event page bundles are a few hundred kb. The extension is updated on the Chrome release cycle with a branch made a week or two after the Chrome branch point.

Tab and desktop mirroring will request routing of a media source with URN like urn:google:tab:3 representing tab contents. When the component extension receives a request to route this source, the media route provider manager will query route providers to enumerate sinks that can render streamed tab contents. Once a sink is selected by the user, the mirroring service will create the appropriate MediaStream using the chrome.tabCapture extension API. The MediaStream will then be passed to a Cast Streaming or WebRTC session depending on the preferred protocol of the selected sink. When the media route is terminated, the associated streaming session and media capture are also terminated. A similar approach will be used for desktop mirroring but using chrome.desktopCapture instead.

Casting Brave browser is similar to casting Google Chrome. The only difference is we have to enable the extension that does the job. Follow the given steps to enable Media Router in Brave that lets a user Cast to a different device.

I have the netgear orbi mesh network. I now find that I just cannot access the router homepage. I get insecure sight warnings and internal server error 500 if I try to push through so I can follow any instructions about security certs because I just cant access the router. I cant be the only one so is thee a way to fix this on chrome or safari or any other browser?

What Firmware version is currently loaded?

What is the Mfr and model# of the Internet Service Providers modem/ONT the NG router is connected too? 

Be sure your using a good quality LAN cable between the modem and router. CAT6 is recommended.

Has a factory reset and setup from scratch been performed since last FW update? A complete pull of the power adapters for a period of time after the factory reset then walk thru the setup wizard and setup from scratch with a wired PC and web browser. Recommend setting the default DHCP IP address pool range to the following after applying and a factory reset: 192.168.#.100 to 192.168.#.200.

 -do-I-specify-the-pool-of-IP-addresses-assigned-by-my-Nighthawk-rout...

I would power OFF the ISP modem for 1 minute. Factory reset the Orbi router and power it off. Power ON the ISP modem and let it sync. Then power ON the Orbi router and walk thru the setup wizard again using a wired PC and a web browser.

Press the back reset button for 15 seconds then release. 

 -do-I-reset-my-Orbi-system-to-factory-default-settings

 -do-I-erase-the-configuration-settings-on-my-Orbi-WiFi-System

Did all this and it works to the point where I can access the router admin page again, but still getting security warnings. I tried the advice on installing a certificate but there is an error on that saying the signature algorithm is wrong. If I set web services management to use https i still get the warnings.

Try using Edge. I reset my system a couple of weeks ago and needed to load the firmware on each satellite and no matter what I did, it would not log into the satellite via Firefox, Chrome, Safari. I tried for over an hour and finally gave up and then I figured, why not try Edge, and sure enough that silly browser that I use for absolutely nothing was able to log into each satellite without any issues. I don't know what weird deal Netgear made with MS but I've never seen this happen before and I've always used one of the other 3 browsers to access the router and satellites.

You can also stop trying to use HTTPS to access orbilogin.com, just use It's routing to your local Orbi router, not a secure website, so it won't have a secure certificate unique to your Orbi. The security warnings are expected if you try to use https and cannot be avoided.

The first workaround to try is to rename the problematic extension folder:

i.e. %LocalAppData%\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions\fmbfiodledfjldlhiemaadmgppoeklbn

Then close and relaunch Chrome, also check the Systray to ensure Chrome is not running in the background, if it is then disable that option.

If that does not work then rename the %LocalAppData%\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions folder to reset the Chrome extensions.

This should snap it back in place the next time Chrome re-launches.


As a last resort, if the above does not work you can rename the %LocalAppData%\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default folder to reset Chrome and then close and relaunch Chrome.

Below is the ID list from Chrome. If you need to, you can force-install an Extension ID via ADMX or PolicyPak Application Manager Pak using this article:

 -policypak-browser-router-removes-other-chrome-force-installed-extensions-how-can-i-work-around-this/

Note that PolicyPak does not guarantee that the version you are using is definitely in the chrome store. We are only allowed to publish 20 items, as such, the oldest items will be removed when the newest items are published.

Every so often Ext:Chrome Media Router shows up on the list for Chrome's task manager. It will either disappear and reappear on its own or I will end its task but it reappears moments later; I do not believe it's causing me any problems that I know but I am concerned it may be something intrusive. I do not use chromecast or any other device like that and have google searched this topic without much success. I took a screenshot if anyone could answer my question. Thanks!

(it is important to note that these steps rely on your connection to the Internet working; ensure your access point/router is connected to the Internet by checking its status [blinking lights/directly connecting to the connectivity device and viewing its status page])

I read here, that the problem could be caused by privacy extensions for IPv6, which would disallow you to change your global IPv6 address. You can check the thread there for how to configure those settings and see if that resolves your issues. 2351a5e196

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