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  6. Chrome Authority

Chrome Authority

In This Article
  1. Using Chrome Authority
  2. Manifest Generation

Add-ons using the techniques described in this document are considered a legacy technology in Firefox. Don't use these techniques to develop new add-ons. Use WebExtensions instead. If you maintain an add-on which uses the techniques described here, consider migrating it to use WebExtensions.

From Firefox 53 onwards, no new legacy add-ons will be accepted on addons.mozilla.org (AMO).

From Firefox 57 onwards, WebExtensions will be the only supported extension type, and Firefox will not load other types.

Even before Firefox 57, changes coming up in the Firefox platform will break many legacy extensions. These changes include multiprocess Firefox (e10s), sandboxing, and multiple content processes. Legacy extensions that are affected by these changes should migrate to WebExtensions if they can. See the "Compatibility Milestones" document for more.

A wiki page containing resources, migration paths, office hours, and more, is available to help developers transition to the new technologies.

The API used to gain Chrome access is currently an experimental feature of the SDK, and may change in future releases.

Using Chrome Authority

The most powerful low-level modules are run with "chrome privileges", which gives them access to the infamous Components object, which grants unfettered access to the host system. From this, the module can do pretty much anything the browser is capable of. To obtain these privileges, the module must declare its intent with a statement like the following:

var {Cc, Ci} = require("chrome");

The "chrome" built-in pseudo module is provided by the "toolkit/loader" module.

The object returned by require("chrome"), when unpacked with the destructuring assignment feature available in the Mozilla JS environment, will provide the usual Components.* aliases:

Cc

An alias for Components.classes.

Ci

An alias for Components.interfaces.

Cu

An alias for Components.utils.

Cr

An alias for Components.results.

Cm

An alias for Components.manager.

components

An alias for Components itself (note the lower-case). From this you can access less-frequently-used properties like Components.stack and Components.isSuccessCode.

Note: the require("chrome") statement is the only way to access chrome functionality and the Components API. The Components object should not be accessed from modules. The SDK tools will emit a warning if it sees module code which references Components directly.

Your modules should refrain from using chrome privileges unless they are absolutely necessary. Chrome-authority-using modules must receive extra security review, and most bugs in these modules are security-critical.

Manifest Generation

The manifest is a list, included in the generated XPI, which specifies which modules have requested require() access to which other modules. It also records which modules have requested chrome access. This list is generated by scanning all included modules for require(XYZ) statements and recording the particular "XYZ" strings that they reference.

When the manifest implementation is complete the runtime loader will actually prevent modules from require()ing modules that are not listed in the manifest. Likewise, it will prevent modules from getting chrome authority unless the manifest indicates that they have asked for it. This will ensure that reviewers see the same authority restrictions that are enforced upon the running code, increasing the effectiveness of the time spent reviewing the add-on. (until this work is complete, modules may be able to sneak around these restrictions).

The manifest is built with a simple regexp-based scanner, not a full Javascript parser. Developers should stick to simple require statements, with a single static string, one per line of code. If the scanner fails to see a require entry, the manifest will not include that entry, and (once the implementation is complete) the runtime code will get an exception.

For example, none of the following code will be matched by the manifest scanner, leading to exceptions at runtime, when the require() call is prohibited from importing the named modules:

// all of these will fail!
var xhr = require("x"+"hr");
var modname = "xpcom";
var xpcom = require(modname);
var one = require("one"); var two = require("two");

The intention is that developers use require() statements for two purposes: to declare (to security reviewers) what sorts of powers the module wants to use, and to control how those powers are mapped into the module's local namespace. Their statements must therefore be clear and easy to parse. A future manifest format may move the declaration portion out to a separate file, to allow for more fine-grained expression of authority.

Commands that build a manifest, like "jpm xpi" or "jpm run", will scan all included modules for use of Cc/Ci aliases (or the expanded Components.classes forms). It will emit a warning if it sees the expanded forms, or if it sees a use of e.g. "Cc" without a corresponding entry in the require("chrome") statement. These warnings will serve to guide developers to use the correct pattern. All module developers should heed the warnings and correct their code until the warnings go away.

Document Tags and Contributors

 Contributors to this page: wbamberg, maybe, Delapouite, zombie
 Last updated by: wbamberg, Dec 1, 2016, 10:52:20 AM
See also
  1. WebExtensions
  2. Getting started
    1. What are WebExtensions?
    2. Your first WebExtension
    3. Your second WebExtension
    4. Anatomy of a WebExtension
    5. Example WebExtensions
  3. How to
    1. Intercept HTTP requests
    2. Modify a web page
    3. Add a button to the toolbar
    4. Implement a settings page
  4. Concepts
    1. Using the JavaScript APIs
    2. User interface components
    3. Content scripts
    4. Match patterns
    5. Internationalization
    6. Content Security Policy
    7. Native messaging
  5. Porting
    1. Porting a Google Chrome extension
    2. Porting a legacy Firefox add-on
    3. Embedded WebExtensions
    4. Comparison with the Add-on SDK
    5. Comparison with XUL/XPCOM extensions
    6. Chrome incompatibilities
  6. Firefox workflow
    1. Temporary Installation in Firefox
    2. Debugging
    3. Getting started with web-ext
    4. web-ext command reference
    5. WebExtensions and the Add-on ID
    6. Publishing your WebExtension
  7. JavaScript APIs
    1. Browser support for JavaScript APIs
    2. alarms
    3. bookmarks
    4. browserAction
    5. browsingData
    6. commands
    7. contextMenus
    8. contextualIdentities
    9. cookies
    10. downloads
    11. events
    12. extension
    13. extensionTypes
    14. history
    15. i18n
    16. identity
    17. idle
    18. management
    19. notifications
    20. omnibox
    21. pageAction
    22. runtime
    23. sessions
    24. sidebarAction
    25. storage
    26. tabs
    27. topSites
    28. webNavigation
    29. webRequest
    30. windows
  8. Manifest keys
    1. applications
    2. author
    3. background
    4. browser_action
    5. chrome_url_overrides
    6. commands
    7. content_scripts
    8. content_security_policy
    9. default_locale
    10. description
    11. developer
    12. homepage_url
    13. icons
    14. manifest_version
    15. name
    16. omnibox
    17. options_ui
    18. page_action
    19. permissions
    20. short_name
    21. sidebar_action
    22. version
    23. web_accessible_resources
  9. Add-on SDK
  10. Getting started
    1. Installation
    2. Getting started
    3. Troubleshooting
  11. High-Level APIs
    1. addon-page
    2. base64
    3. clipboard
    4. context-menu
    5. hotkeys
    6. indexed-db
    7. l10n
    8. notifications
    9. page-mod
    10. page-worker
    11. panel
    12. passwords
    13. private-browsing
    14. querystring
    15. request
    16. selection
    17. self
    18. simple-prefs
    19. simple-storage
    20. system
    21. tabs
    22. timers
    23. ui
    24. url
    25. webextension
    26. widget
    27. windows
  12. Low-Level APIs
    1. /loader
    2. chrome
    3. console/plain-text
    4. console/traceback
    5. content/content
    6. content/loader
    7. content/mod
    8. content/symbiont
    9. content/worker
    10. core/heritage
    11. core/namespace
    12. core/promise
    13. dev/panel
    14. event/core
    15. event/target
    16. frame/hidden-frame
    17. frame/utils
    18. fs/path
    19. io/byte-streams
    20. io/file
    21. io/text-streams
    22. lang/functional
    23. lang/type
    24. loader/cuddlefish
    25. loader/sandbox
    26. net/url
    27. net/xhr
    28. places/bookmarks
    29. places/favicon
    30. places/history
    31. platform/xpcom
    32. preferences/event-target
    33. preferences/service
    34. remote/child
    35. remote/parent
    36. stylesheet/style
    37. stylesheet/utils
    38. system/child_process
    39. system/environment
    40. system/events
    41. system/runtime
    42. system/unload
    43. system/xul-app
    44. tabs/utils
    45. test/assert
    46. test/harness
    47. test/httpd
    48. test/runner
    49. test/utils
    50. ui/button/action
    51. ui/button/toggle
    52. ui/frame
    53. ui/id
    54. ui/sidebar
    55. ui/toolbar
    56. util/array
    57. util/collection
    58. util/deprecate
    59. util/list
    60. util/match-pattern
    61. util/object
    62. util/uuid
    63. window/utils
  13. Firefox for Android
  14. Getting started
    1. Walkthrough
    2. Debugging
    3. Code snippets
  15. APIs
    1. Accounts.jsm
    2. BrowserApp
    3. HelperApps.jsm
    4. Home.jsm
    5. HomeProvider.jsm
    6. JavaAddonManager.jsm
    7. NativeWindow
    8. Notifications.jsm
    9. PageActions.jsm
    10. Prompt.jsm
    11. RuntimePermissions.jsm
    12. Snackbars.jsm
    13. Sound.jsm
    14. Tab
  16. Legacy
  17. Restartless extensions
    1. Overview
  18. Overlay extensions
    1. Overview
  19. Themes
  20. Lightweight themes
    1. Overview
  21. Complete themes
    1. Overview
  22. Publishing add-ons
  23. Guides
    1. Signing and distribution overview
    2. Submit an add-on
    3. Review policies
    4. Developer agreement
    5. Featured add-ons
    6. Contact addons.mozilla.org
  24. Community and support
  25. Channels
    1. Add-ons blog
    2. Add-on forums
    3. Stack Overflow
    4. Development newsgroup
    5. IRC Channel