The add-on bar
Firefox 4 eliminates the status bar from the bottom of the browser window in favor of a new toolbar located at the bottom of the window. This new toolbar, with the ID "addon-bar", is a standard XUL <toolbar>
; add-ons can insert content into it, and the user can drag buttons into it while customizing their toolbars. This is the primary difference between the add-on bar and the old status bar; you can now put any XUL element into it, since it's a standard toolbar.
Note: For the time being, there is a status bar shim included so that add-ons that expect the status bar to be present will still work.
Adding an element to the add-on bar
The add-on bar is an XUL toolbar with the ID "addon-bar". The code below locates the most-recently used window and adds a new item to the add-on bar that displays the text "Hello world!" using an XUL <label>
element.
js
// Find the most recently used window
var mediator = Components.classes[
"@mozilla.org/appshell/window-mediator;1"
].getService(Components.interfaces.nsIWindowMediator);
var doc = mediator.getMostRecentWindow("navigator:browser").document;
// Get the add-on bar for that window
var addonBar = doc.getElementById("addon-bar");
// Construct the new toolbar item
var newItem = doc.createElement("toolbaritem");
var itemLabel = doc.createElement("label");
// Add the item to the toolbar and set its text label
newItem.appendChild(itemLabel);
addonBar.appendChild(newItem);
itemLabel.value = "Hello world!";
To add the button only once, create a bool pref to check if it is the first run. For example:
js
var firstrun = Services.prefs.getBoolPref("extensions.YOUREXT.firstrun");
var curVersion = "0.0.0";
if (firstrun) {
Services.prefs.setBoolPref("extensions.YOUREXT.firstrun", false);
Services.prefs.setCharPref("extensions.YOUREXT.installedVersion", curVersion);
/* Code related to firstrun */
} else {
try {
var installedVersion = Services.prefs.getCharPref(
"extensions.YOUREXT.installedVersion"
);
if (curVersion > installedVersion) {
Services.prefs.setCharPref(
"extensions.YOUREXT.installedVersion",
curVersion
);
/* Code related to upgrade */
}
} catch (ex) {
/* Code related to a reinstall */
}
}
How to use one overlay per Firefox version
Adding support for the add-on bar while staying compatible with Firefox 3.6 and older will require using two overlays. The chrome.manifest file can specify which file is used by which Firefox version by using manifest flags:
overlay chrome://browser/content/browser.xul chrome://myaddon/content/myaddon/overlayold.xul application={ec8030f7-c20a-464f-9b0e-13a3a9e97384} appversion<4.0 overlay chrome://browser/content/browser.xul chrome://myaddon/content/myaddon/overlay.xul application={ec8030f7-c20a-464f-9b0e-13a3a9e97384} appversion>=4.0
Note: the appversion has to be at least 2 digits long or it won't work with versions of Gecko before 1.8.0.13 and 1.8.1.5.
Adding a button by default
Appearance differences
- Since the browser no longer occupies a large percentage of the bar with status information, the entire area is available for add-ons to use.
- The add-on bar is empty and hidden by default; the user must elect to make it visible.
- If a restartless add-on installs itself to the add-on bar directly and the bar is not already visible, the bar becomes visible automatically.
- If uninstalling a restartless add-on makes the number of items in the add-on bar become zero, the bar is hidden automatically.
See also
- The Firefox 4 add-on bar for developers, by Mike Kaply