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[[File:LegacyTag.png|x14px]] — Is a legacy add-on, and can only be used on a Firefox fork that supports legacy add-ons (Waterfox, Pale Moon, SeaMonkey). Can be downloaded using the [https://github.com/JustOff/ca-archive Classic Add-ons Archive].
[[File:LegacyTag.png|x14px]] — Is a legacy add-on, and can only be used on a Firefox fork that supports legacy add-ons (Waterfox, Pale Moon, SeaMonkey). Can be downloaded using the [https://github.com/JustOff/ca-archive Classic Add-ons Archive].


[[File:WebExt.png|x14px]] — Is a WebExtension Add-on. Can be run on any modern Firefox or Firefox fork.
[[File:WebExt.png|x14px]] — Is a WebExtension Add-on. Can be run on any modern Firefox or Firefox fork (Including Waterfox, Pale Moon and SeaMonkey).


=== Notable add-ons ===
=== Notable add-ons ===

Revision as of 13:36, 24 March 2020

Cleanup.png
Cleanup.png
CLEANUP CANDIDATE
Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Reason: Add-ons section really outdated


Note: try to keep this page up-to-date by updating the status of the extensions and patches.
Mozilla Firefox
Firefox.png
Type Free
Layout engine Gecko
Website https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/

Firefox is a free and open source web browser developed and maintained by the Mozilla Foundation. It is known for its high degree of customisability through add-ons and its adherence to Web standards.

Official branches

Unfortunately, the v3.6.x series of Firefox is now unsupported. It will no longer receive security or stability updates.

Mozilla offers five officially compiled branches or channels of Firefox. These are Release, Beta, Dev Edition, Nightly, and ESR.

  • The Release branch of Firefox is geared towards the the average home or office Web user. It receives a major update every six weeks if all goes according to plan, but security and stability patches are issued as needed in the meantime.
  • The Beta branch of Firefox is geared towards home users who want to try new features a few weeks early while contributing to Firefox development. It is generally quite stable with most remaining bugs being specific to certain configurations or drivers. In the course of a typical six week beta run, there are between seven and thirteen builds released.
  • The Developer Edition or alpha branch of Firefox replaced the Aurora branch and is geared towards Web developers and includes extra development tools and a special theme. Some instability and bugs should be expected.
  • The Nightly or pre-alpha branch is intended for testing and debugging purposes. It represents the bleeding edge of Firefox development, so the likelihood of encountering instability, security vulnerabilities, and major bugs is high. As the name implies, Nightly typically receives patches on a day-to-day basis and new features as soon as they become ready. Oddly, it is the only official branch in which native 64-bit builds for Windows are offered.
  • The Extended support release or ESR branch of Firefox is geared towards large organizations who require long-term support for mass deployments, but it is can also be a good option for the technologically illiterate. It remains static for approximately one year after a major release, receiving new code only in the form of security and stability patches.

Regarding experimental features, Mozilla gives you the option to install an extension that allows you to enable them before they come enabled out of the box, if they ever make it to the stable branch. For more information, go to testpilot.com.

Notable forks

Due to the free and open source nature of its code base, Firefox has given rise to several forks.

  • GNU IceCat is a fork maintained by the GNU Project for those who happen to be of one mind with Richard Stallman. In addition to removing and replacing the copyrighted or trademarked parts of Firefox, the maintainer has added a couple of minor privacy and security features.
  • Iceweasel is a fork maintained by the Debian Project. It is designed to allow the project to back-port as it pleased without running afoul of Mozilla's trademarks.
  • Pale Moon is a fork of Firefox ESR dedicated to providing an optimised Firefox with the classic user interface layout of the v3.6.x series. Pale Moon is offered in both 32-bit and 64-bit builds, and uses a fork of the Gecko rendering engine called Goanna. For a complete list of the differences between Pale Moon and Firefox, see this page. Note: it's made by a furry who has a fursona named Moonchild. He has art and has written furry stories. His furry website is here.
  • The Tor Browser Bundle is a package designed specifically to visit Onion sites and to browse the Internet through the Tor network.
  • Librefox Modern FF fork enhanced for privacy.
  • Waterfox Maintains support for legacy addons and aims to be fast.

Add-Ons

Controversy and WebExtension Add-onpocalypse

In 2014, Brendan Eich the then CEO of the Mozilla Corporation (the for-profit entity that develops the Firefox browser), had been found to have donated $1000 to a proposition around banning same-sex marriage in California. Some employees of the Mozilla Foundation (the non-profit entity that decides the changes around the Firefox browser, which ironically Brendan Eich helped create) were upset with this, and did what they normally do; blog posts, activism and calling for Brendan to resign. That same year, Brendan did resign, but not without saying that he stands by his donation to ban same-sex marriage.

Since then, Firefox has been heading downhill fast. Current development of Firefox involves pushing it to become as much of a Google Chrome clone as possible. Performance has gotten worse, bloat has been added, the theme has become closer to chrome and the ability to rice it to autistic levels has been threatened. Trackers have been added, including screen recording software and for some reason it now also has its own instant message chat built into the browser. However probably the worst of them all was the WebExtension Add-onpocalypse.

The drop of support for legacy add-ons made every single add-on that had been developed, incomparable with Firefox. This was obviously controversial, but it wasn't enough. They also dropped every legacy add-on's page, so even if you made a way to support legacy add-ons, you wouldn't be able to find any.

Some browsers such as Pale moon, Waterfox and SeaMonkey however, preserve the support for these legacy add-ons. And lucky the Pale Moon and Waterfox Team have a working archive of (almost) all the legacy add-ons, which you can install and use as an add-on in the mentioned browsers.

As for what Brendan Eich is doing; he decided he wasn't done with the browser game, and is now the CEO of a company that is developing a browser called Brave, which is basically just a browser with cypto attached to it.

Tags

LegacyTag.png — Is a legacy add-on, and can only be used on a Firefox fork that supports legacy add-ons (Waterfox, Pale Moon, SeaMonkey). Can be downloaded using the Classic Add-ons Archive.

WebExt.png — Is a WebExtension Add-on. Can be run on any modern Firefox or Firefox fork (Including Waterfox, Pale Moon and SeaMonkey).

Notable add-ons

Note: some of these listed add-ons may overlap slightly. They are both listed for modularity. Some people like one thing, and some like the other or a third. Pick your poison.
Warning: With Firefox having a new addon engine with Version 55 and above, many of these addons no longer work!

Adblocking, privacy, and security

Betterprivacy.png BetterPrivacy LegacyTag.png

BetterPrivacy manages and auto-destroys flash cookies, aka super cookies. If you don't have flash (which is likely unless you love newgrounds or /f/) then you have no need for this addon.

Blender.png Blender LegacyTag.png

Blender automatically spoofs your user agent string to another popular one.

Certificatepatrol.png Certificate Patrol LegacyTag.png WebExt.png

Certificate Patrol discovers when certificates have changed.

Cookiemonster.png Cookie Monster LegacyTag.png

Cookie Monster manages cookies permissions. Its function can be replaced by uMatrix.

Cookie Autodelete WebExt.png

Cookie Autodelete is a webExt replacement for Cookie Monster.

Decentraleyes.png Decentraleyes LegacyTag.png WebExt.png

Decentraleyes loads common CDN resources locally, minimizing your exposure to third-party servers and slightly decreasing page load times, as well as the amount of data transferred.

Httpseverywhere.png HTTPS-Everywhere LegacyTag.png WebExt.png

HTTPS Everywhere encrypts your communications with many major websites, making your browsing more secure. If you can only install a couple of add-ons, this should be one of them.

Httpsfinder.png HTTPS Finder LegacyTag.png

HTTPS Finder detects available https and creates HTTPS Everywhere rules.

Noscript.png NoScript LegacyTag.png WebExt.png

NoScript allows JavaScript, Java and other executable content to run only from trusted domains of your choice.

RAS.png Random Agent Spoofer LegacyTag.png

Random Agent Spoofer spoofs your user-agent string to any value of your choice, with the option to change to popular agent strings randomly. It also includes the ability to spoof various HTTP Referer request values, as well as multiple about:config tweaks.

Chameleon WebExt.png

Random Agent Spoofer is a potential webExt replacement for Random Agent Spoofer

Refcontrol.png RefControl LegacyTag.png

RefControl controls what gets sent as the HTTP Referer on a per-site basis.

Referer Controler WebExt.png

Referer Controler webExt replacement for RefControl.

Priv8.png Priv8 LegacyTag.png

Priv8 is a Firefox addon that uses part of the security model of Firefox OS to create sandboxed tabs and manage them. Updated infrequently and might be incompatible with certain addons.

Multi Account Containers WebExt.png

Multi Account Containers successor to Priv8.

UBlock.png uBlock Origin LegacyTag.png WebExt.png

uBlock Origin is a lightweight and low-resource adblocker. Has many filter lists built in, with EasyList, Peter Lowe’s Ad server list, EasyPrivacy, and Malware domains enabled by default. Can fully replace NoScript in advanced mode and outperform it, whilst offering more features.

  • Not to be confused with 'uBlock', an EXTREMELY outdated fork with some very slight changes to the UI.
  • If you feel bad about blocking advertisements, make a deal with yourself: you'll stop blocking ads when major international internet companies stop serving malware.
  • Supports the WebExtensions API.

UMatrix.png uMatrix LegacyTag.png WebExt.png

uMatrix's fine-grained control

uMatrix, made by the creator of uBlock, is a high performance matrix-based firewall that supports hosts files, capable of blocking a myriad of objects, complete with per-hostname and global toggles, as well as plenty of privacy oriented features. Able to replace NoScript1, policeman, and request policy continued. Can be used with uBlock.

  • 1 - Cannot replace NoScript's surrogate script functionality (which is very, VERY rarely used anyway). uBlock has a similar feature called redirect, whose purpose is to redirect blocked resources to locally-hosted, neutered contents.

Customisability

Tabgroups.png Tab Groups LegacyTag.png

Tab Groups allows you to create tab groups, a feature that was once part of Firefox.

Panorama View WebExt.png

Panorama View is a WebExt replacement for tab groups

Treestyletabs.png Tree Style Tabs LegacyTag.png WebExt.png

Tree Style Tabs shows tabs like a tree.

New Tab Homepage WebExt.png

New Tab Homepage will load your homepage whenever you open a new tab.

Stylus WebExt.png

Stylus lets you customise websites by setting custom CSS for them. It is a replacement for the previously recommended add-on Stylish, which was brought out by a company and is now spyware that steals browsing history and more.

OneLiner LegacyTag.png

OneLiner (also exists as "Liner") puts all the different bars at the top of the page, into a single bar (url, tabs, etc all on the same line). This can also be achieved with css.

Dev tools

Livehttpheaders.png Live HTTP Headers Stalled.png E10s.png

Live HTTP Headers lets you view HTTP headers, and includes a generator and a filter.

Usability

FxIF.png FxIF Stalled.png E10s.png

FxIF is a tool to view EXIF data in image properties.

Greasemonkey.png Greasemonkey Slow.png E10s.png

Greasemonkey manages Userscripts.

  • The Scriptish fork of this add-on that was once popular on /g/ is no longer recommended.

Redirector.png Redirector Stalled.png E10s.png

Redirector automatically redirects to user-defined urls on a per-hyperlink basis.

Singingstallman.png Singing Stallman Stalled.png

Singing Stallman, the Singing Stallman icon bides its time in the toolbar, waiting to be invoked in your time of need.

Vimfx.png VimFx Active.png E10s.png

VimFx offers Vim bindings without changes in the UI.

Youtubecenter.png YouTube Center Stalled.png E10s.png

YouTube Center enhances YouTube. It is recommended that you use the developer version, as per their wiki.

Notable patches

Bugs are explicitly stated.

OpenSUSE-KDE Active.png

This patchset makes trivial changes to Firefox to improve its aesthetic and functionality.

  • Adds KDE integration to Firefox.
  • Changes your general.useragent.locale to chrome://global/locale/intl.properties.
  • Adds higher resolution icons.

PGO Stalled.png

This simple patch enables Profile-Guided Optimization techniques for the GCC build. PGO builds consist of two passes: the first one builds instrumented binaries, and the second one to rebuild optimized binaries. It might result in a slight performance increase of roughly ~5%, for double the compilation time.

As it stands, the clang-pgo.patch may not be working.

Bugs

  • The Makefile.in file might not have the compile rule called pgo-profile-run1.
    • Solution: add the pgo-profile-run rule to the Makefile.in.

Privacy Active.png

This patchset aims to disable certain Firefox 'features' that might undermine one's attempt at staying anonymous. In a way, it debloats it.

  • Certain connections to Mozilla are removed.
  • Disables: telemetry, location.services, sponsored tiles, Pocket, Hello, and Reader View.
  • Applies certain privacy conscious settings to about:config by default.
  • Enables tracking protection by default (disable if you use uBlock and/or uMatrix).

DNS over HTTPS and Encrytped SNI

How ESNI makes the internet opaque. Website support may vary.

Newer Firefox versions support DNS over HTTPS and Encrypted SNI. For an introduction to ESNI read this article from the EFF.

Upsides of DoH: Your ISP knows less about you.

Downsides of DoH: Your DNS resolver knows a lot more about you including your browser and operating system, and can set cookies. (Bet you didn't know).

To enable DoH:

  • Set network.trr.mode to 2.

DNS over HTTPS is an ESNI prerequisite.

For ESNI set network.security.esni.enabled to true.

[Test your configuration courtesy of CloudFlare]

Ricing

You can edit Firefox's appearance with CSS (Cascading Style Sheets). To be more general, you can alter ANY web page with CSS. This is achieved with the usage of userstyles. To use and take complete advantage of them, you need a userstyle manager. Stylish is the most common.

The Stylish button that appears after you install it is useful. For instance, to write a userstyle for Firefox, you need to go to:

   chrome://browser/content/browser.xul

And select Write new style -> For this URL, and it'll have a template set up.

The most useful feature in writing userstyles is the Inspector. You pop it up by pressing Ctrl+Shift+C and it'll let you see what elements you can style on the page.

Config

Below are options in about:config worth considering.

  • dom.storage.enabled FALSE - Disable "client-side session and persistent storage" cookies (bad for 8ch - the replies hypelinks next to the post number disappears).
  • geo.enabled FALSE - Disable location data.
  • general.useragent.override - Create as a String value and insert your own useragent.
  • network.dns.disablePrefetch TRUE - Stop Firefox looking up IP addresses of links of the page you haven't/aren't going to.
  • network.http.pipelining TRUE - Possible speedup for some servers (send multiple files through one connection).
  • network.http.pipelining.max-optimistic-requests 8 - Total number of pipelines.
  • network.http.pipelining.ssl TRUE - Pipeline with HTTPS sites.
  • network.http.proxy.pipelining TRUE - Pipleline through proxy connections.
  • network.http.sendRefererHeader - 0 = never (bad for 8ch), 1 = domain only, 2 = full url (default).
  • network.prefetch-next FALSE - Don't download pages linked to the current page unless we click the link.
  • dom.event.clipboardevents.enabled FALSE - Don't allow webpages to mess with the clipboard.
  • dom.disable_window_move_resize TRUE - Don't allow webpages to move or resize the browser window.
  • dom.ipc.plugins.flash.subprocess.crashreporter.enabled FALSE - Don't report flash plugin crashes.
  • media.autoplay.enabled FALSE - Don't autoplay media.
  • media.peerconnection.enabled FALSE - Important for VPN users. Don't allow p2p downloading of media.
  • pdfjs.disabled TRUE - Don't run javascript within the builtin pdf viewer.
  • reader.parse-on-load.enabled FALSE - disable "reader view".
  • browser.pocket.enabled (or extensions.pocket.enabled) FALSE - disable pocket.
  • network.http.speculative-parallel-limit 0 - don't create connections to links you only hover over.
  • dom.push.connection.enabled FALSE - Disable push notifications (FF44+).
  • dom.push.enabled FALSE - (as above).
  • dom.webnotifications.enabled FALSE - (as above).
  • dom.webnotifications.serviceworker.enabled FALSE - (as above).
  • loop.enabled FALSE - Disable loop/conversation calling features.
  • browser.urlbar.unifiedcomplete FALSE - Disables the "Search With" popup when typing into the location bar.
  • media.ffmpeg.enabled FALSE (linux only as of FF44) - Disable mp4 playback through ffmpeg, to stop ffmpeg bugs breaking your firefox.
  • media.eme.apiVisible FALSE - Stops pages from using a JavaScript library for DRM (Digital Rights Management/

Digital Restrictions Management) in html video.

  • media.eme.enabled FALSE - (as above).

For a privacy conscious user.js, study https://github.com/crisbrm/user.js for a user.js that comes with minimal breakage, or https://github.com/pyllyukko/user.js for one with even more emphasis on security (occasionally at the cost of functionality, like when you completely disable DOM storage, for instance), and less emphasis on blending in.

To compare a myriad of privacy-conscious user.js files, use jm42's compare-user.js

External links