- View Source
- View Source features
- Link to a line number
- View Selection Source
- View MathML Source
- Limitations of View Source
- Error reporter ≠ validator
- Not all parse errors are reported
- XML syntax highlighting
- View Page Source (Mobile) by David Pacassi Torrico
- Extension Metadata
- Used by
- Report this add-on for abuse
- Firefox android view source
View Source
View Source lets you look at the HTML or XML source for the page you’re viewing. To activate View Source:
- context-click in the page and select View Page Source
- press Ctrl + U on Windows and Linux, or Cmd + U on macOS
The command opens a new tab with the source for the current page.
View Source features
View Source has three additional features, which can be accessed from the context menu in the View Source tab:
Go to Line Scrolls to the specified line. If the number is higher than the lines in a file, you receive an error message. Wrap Long Lines (toggle) Wraps long lines to the width of the page. Syntax Highlighting (toggle) Applies syntax highlighting to the code.When syntax highlighting is on, View Source also highlights parsing errors in red. Hovering your mouse over errors displays a tooltip explaining the error.
This feature is useful when you’re looking for HTML errors.
To access Go to Line from the keyboard, press Control + Option + L on macOS, or Alt + Shift + L on Windows or Linux.
Link to a line number
It is possible to link to a particular line, by adding the #lineNNN anchor to the url the browser will jump to the NNN line.
View Selection Source
If you select part of a web page and context-click, you’ll see a context menu item labeled «View Selection Source», that behaves just like «View Page Source», except you only see the source for the selection.
View MathML Source
If you context-click while the mouse is over some MathML, you’ll see a context menu item labeled «View MathML Source»: click it to see the MathML source.
Limitations of View Source
There are limitations to what View Source does for you that you need to be aware of.
Error reporter ≠ validator
View Source only reports parsing errors, not HTML validity errors. For example, putting a
Not all parse errors are reported
Even though all the reported errors are parse errors according to the HTML specification, not all parse errors are reported by View Source. Among the errors that don’t get reported:
- Bytes that are illegal according to the document’s encoding aren’t marked as errors.
- Forbidden characters aren’t reported as errors.
- Errors related to the end-of-file aren’t reported.
- Tree builder errors relating to text (as opposed to tags, comments, or doctypes) aren’t reported.
- Parse errors related to xmlns attributes aren’t reported.
XML syntax highlighting
View Source uses the HTML tokenizer when highlighting XML source. While the tokenizer has support for processing instructions when highlighting XML source, that’s the only XML-specific capability provided. Because of this, doctypes that have an internal subset are not highlighted correctly, and entity references to custom entities are also not highlighted correctly.
This mishighlighting can be seen by viewing the source of Firefox chrome files (such as XUL documents). However, this shouldn’t be a problem in practice when viewing typical XML files.
Источник
View Page Source (Mobile) by David Pacassi Torrico
Adds the ability to open the page source in a new tab via button (Desktop) or menu (Firefox for Android).
Extension Metadata
Used by
Introduction
This small web extension adds a View Page Source menu item to Firefox for Android as well as an icon on desktop browsers.
While the usage on desktop browsers might be questionable, it is really handy on mobile devices.
Usage
Simply click the icon or menu item to view the page source.
Supported browsers
- Mozilla Firefox (Desktop & Firefox for Android)
- Google Chrome (Desktop)
Why to use this web extension
The code is completely open source, you can also use the unpacked version of this web extension if you prefer.
No data of you will ever be logged and the web extension asks only for needed permissions.
Pull requests are welcome!
Other web extensions
- Disable JavaScript
Support
If you need any assistance or find any bugs, feel free to contact me directly via email or create a new issue on the projects GitHub page.
Report this add-on for abuse
If you think this add-on violates Mozilla’s add-on policies or has security or privacy issues, please report these issues to Mozilla using this form.
Please don’t use this form to report bugs or request add-on features; this report will be sent to Mozilla and not to the add-on developer.
This add-on needs to:
- Access browser tabs
- Access your data for all websites
Источник
Firefox android view source
Firefox for Android
Fenix (internal codename) is the all-new Firefox for Android browser, based on GeckoView and Mozilla Android Components.
Please read the Community Participation Guidelines and the Bugzilla Etiquette guidelines before filing an issue. This is our professional working environment as much as it is our bug tracker, and we want to keep our workspace clean and healthy.
Guide to Contributing (New contributors start here!)
Matrix: #fenix:mozilla.org channel (We’re available Monday-Friday, GMT and PST working hours). Related channels:
Check out the project wiki for more information.
Localization happens on Pontoon. Please get in touch with delphine (at) mozilla (dot) com directly for more information.
Beginners! — Watch out for Issues with the «Good First Issue» label. These are easy bugs that have been left for first timers to have a go, get involved and make a positive contribution to the project!
I want to open a Pull Request!
We encourage you to participate in this open source project. We love Pull Requests, Bug Reports, ideas, (security) code reviews or any other kind of positive contribution.
Since we are a small team, however, we do not have the bandwidth to review unsolicited PRs. Please follow our Pull Request guidelines, or we may close the PR.
To make it easier to review, we have these PR requirements:
- Every PR must have exactly one issue associated with it.
- Write a clear explanation of what the code is doing when opening the pull request, and optionally add comments to the PR.
- Make sure there are tests — or ask for help on how the code should be tested in the Issue!
- Keep PRs small and to the point. For extra code-health changes, either file a separate issue, or make it a separate PR that can be easily reviewed.
- Use micro-commits. This makes it easier and faster to review.
- Add a screenshot for UX changes (this is part of the PR checklist)
As a small team, we have to prioritize our work, and reviewing PRs takes time. We receive lots of PRs every day, so if you can keep your PRs small, it helps our small team review and merge code faster, minimizing stale code.
Keep in mind that the team is very overloaded, so PRs sometimes wait for a very long time. However this is not for lack of interest, but because we find ourselves in a constant need to prioritize certain issues/PRs over others. If you think your issue/PR is very important, try to popularize it by getting other users to comment and share their point of view.
I want to file an issue!
Great! We encourage you to participate in this open source project. We love Pull Requests, Bug Reports, ideas, (security) code reviews or any other kind of positive contribution.
To make it easier to triage, we have these issue requirements:
- Please do your best to search for duplicate issues before filing a new issue so we can keep our issue board clean.
- Every issue should have exactly one bug/feature request described in it. Please do not file meta feedback list tickets as it is difficult to parse them and address their individual points.
- Feature Requests are better when they’re open-ended instead of demanding a specific solution -ie “I want an easier way to do X” instead of “add Y”
- Issues are not the place to go off topic or debate. If you have questions, please join the #fenix:mozilla.org channel.
- Please always remember our Community Participation Guidelines
- Please do not tag specific team members to try to get your issue looked at faster. We have a triage process that will tag and label issues correctly in due time. If you think an issue is very severe, you can ask about it in Matrix.
Please keep in mind that even though a feature you have in mind may seem like a small ask, as a small team, we have to prioritize our planned work and every new feature adds complexity and maintenance and may take up design, research, marketing, product, and engineering time. We appreciate everyone’s passion but we will not be able to incorporate every feature request or even fix every bug. That being said, just because we haven’t replied, doesn’t mean we don’t care about the issue, please be patient with our response times as we’re very busy.
- Android SDK
- To run command line tools, you’ll need to configure Java: see our how-to guide.
- Clone or Download the repository:
- Import the project into Android Studio or build on the command line:
If this errors out, make sure that you have an ANDROID_SDK_ROOT environment variable pointing to the right path.
Make sure to select the correct build variant in Android Studio. See the next section.
Make sure to select «Default APK» under Installation Options inside Run/Debug configuration: see this bug.
For general development, we recommend the debug build variant. Here’s an explanation of each variant:
- debug: the default for developers, similar to most other Android apps. It is debuggable, uses a Nightly GeckoView with debug symbols, adds tools like LeakCanary for troublingshooting, and does not strip unused code.
- nightly: what we ship to the Firefox Nightly channel, using GeckoView Nightly.
- beta: what we ship to the Firefox Beta channel, using GeckoView Beta. It is more stable than nightly.
- release: what we ship as Firefox for Android, using GeckoView Release. It is the most stable.
nightly, beta, and release are unsigned and debuggable=false by default. If you want these variants to be:
Performance Build Variants
For accurate performance measurements, read this section!
To analyze performance during local development build a production variant locally (this could either be the Nightly, beta or release). Otherwise, you could also grab a pre-existing APK if you don’t need to test some local changes. Then, use the Firefox profiler to profile what you need!
For more information on how to use the profiler or how to use the build, refer to this how to measure performance with the build
If you want to run performance tests/benchmarks in automation or locally use a production build since it is much closer in behavior compared to what users see in the wild.
Before you can install any release builds, You will need to sign production build variants: see Automatically signing release builds for details.
Known disabled-by-default features
Some features are disabled by default when Fenix is built locally. This can be problematic at times for checking performance since you might want to know how your code behaves with those features. The known features that are disabled by default are:
- Sentry
- Adjust
- Mozilla Location Services (also known as MLS)
- Firebase Push Services
- Telemetry (only disabled by default in debug builds)
- Nimbus
To reduce review turn-around time, we’d like all pushes to run tests locally. We’d recommend you use our provided pre-push hook in config/pre-push-recommended.sh . Using this hook will guarantee your hook gets updated as the repository changes. This hook tries to run as much as possible without taking too much time.
Before you can run the hook, you’ll need to configure Java properly because it relies on command line tools: see our how-to guide.
To add it on Mac/Linux, run this command from the project root:
or for Windows run this command using the Command Prompt with administrative privileges:
or using PowerShell:
To push without running the pre-push hook (e.g. doc updates):
Note: If while pushing you encounter this error «Could not initialize class org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.InvokerHelper» and are currently on Java14 then downgrading your Java version to Java13 or lower can resolve the issue
Steps to downgrade Java Version on Mac with Brew:
- Install Homebrew (https://brew.sh/)
- run brew update
- To uninstall your current java version, run sudo rm -fr /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/
- run brew tap homebrew/cask-versions
- run brew search java
- If you see java11, then run brew install java11
- Verify java-version by running java -version
You can speed up local development by setting a few helper flags available in local.properties . Some flags will make it easy to work across multiple layers of the dependency stack — specifically, with android-components, geckoview or application-services.
Automatically sign release builds
To sign your release builds with your debug key automatically, add the following to
With this line, release build variants will automatically be signed with your debug key (like debug builds), allowing them to be built and installed directly through Android Studio or the command line.
This is helpful when you’re building release variants frequently, for example to test feature flags and or do performance analyses.
Building debuggable release variants
Nightly, Beta and Release variants are getting published to Google Play and therefore are not debuggable. To locally create debuggable builds of those variants, add the following to
Setting raptor manifest flag
To set the raptor manifest flag in Nightly, Beta and Release variants, add the following to
Auto-publication workflow for android-components and application-services
If you’re making changes to these projects and want to test them in Fenix, auto-publication workflow is the fastest, most reliable way to do that.
In local.properties , specify a relative path to your local android-components and/or application-services checkouts. E.g.:
Once these flags are set, your Fenix builds will include any local modifications present in these projects.
In order to build successfully, you need to check out a commit in the dependency repository that has no breaking changes. The two best ways to do this are:
Using Nimbus servers during local development
If you’re working with the Nimbus experiments platform, by default for local development Fenix configures Nimbus to not use a server.
If you wish to use a Nimbus server during local development, you can add a https:// or file:// endpoint to the local.properties file.
Testing experimental branches should be possible without a server.
Specify a relative path to your local mozilla-central checkout via dependencySubstitutions.geckoviewTopsrcdir , and optional a path to m-c object directory via dependencySubstitutions.geckoviewTopobjdir .
If these are configured, local builds of GeckoView will be used instead of what’s configured in Dependencies.kt. For more details, see https://firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org/mobile/android/geckoview/contributor/geckoview-quick-start.html#include-geckoview-as-a-dependency
See notes on building successfully in the android-components auto-publication section.
Источник