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  6. Getting Started (jpm)

Getting Started (jpm)

In This Article
  1. Prerequisites
  2. Initializing an empty add-on
  3. Implementing the add-on
  4. Packaging the add-on
  5. Summary
  6. What's next?

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 Add-on SDK includes a command-line tool that you use to initialize, run, test, and package add-ons. The current tool is called jpm, and is based on Node.js. It replaces the old cfx tool.

You can use jpm from Firefox 38 onwards.

This article describes how to develop using jpm.

This tutorial walks through creating a simple add-on using the SDK.

Prerequisites

To create add-ons for Firefox using the SDK, you'll need:

  • Firefox version 38 or later. If you need to work with earlier versions of Firefox, you'll need to use the old cfx tool. See instructions for getting started with cfx.
  • the command-line jpm tool. See the instructions for installing jpm. Once you've done that, you'll be looking at a command prompt.
  • Install Firefox Developer Version for testing your add-on.

Initializing an empty add-on

In the command prompt, create a new directory. Navigate to it, type jpm init, and hit enter:

mkdir my-addon
cd my-addon
jpm init

You'll then be asked to supply some information about your add-on: this will be used to create your add-on's package.json file. For now, just press Enter to accept the default for each property. For more information on jpm init, see the jpm command reference.

Once you've supplied a value or accepted the default for these properties, you'll be shown the complete contents of "package.json" and asked to accept it.

Implementing the add-on

Now you can write the add-on's code. Unless you've changed the value of "entry point" ("main" in package.json), this goes in "index.js" file in the root of your add-on. This file was created for you in the previous step. Open it and add the following code:

var buttons = require('sdk/ui/button/action');
var tabs = require("sdk/tabs");
var button = buttons.ActionButton({
  id: "mozilla-link",
  label: "Visit Mozilla",
  icon: {
    "16": "./icon-16.png",
    "32": "./icon-32.png",
    "64": "./icon-64.png"
  },
  onClick: handleClick
});
function handleClick(state) {
  tabs.open("http://www.mozilla.org/");
}

Note that "entry point" defaults to "index.js" in jpm, meaning that your main file is "index.js", and it is found directly in your add-on's root.

In cfx, the entry point defaults to "main.js", and is located in the "lib" directory under the add-on's root.

Save the file.

Next, create a directory called "data" in your add-on's root,

mkdir data

and save these three icon files to the "data" directory:

icon-16.png
icon-32.png
icon-64.png

Back at the command prompt, type:

jpm run

This is the jpm command to run a new instance of Firefox with your add-on installed.

If Firefox can not be located, or you have installed Firefox Developer as an alternate browser, you may need to provide the path to it. For example, in Ubuntu:

jpm run -b /usr/bin/firefox

When Firefox launches, in the top-right corner of the browser you'll see an icon with the Firefox logo. Click the icon, and a new tab will open with http://www.mozilla.org/ loaded into it.

That's all this add-on does. It uses two SDK modules: the action button module, which enables you to add buttons to the browser, and the tabs module, which enables you to perform basic operations with tabs. In this case, we've created a button whose icon is the Firefox icon, and added a click handler that loads the Mozilla home page in a new tab.

Try editing this file. For example, we could change the page that gets loaded:

var buttons = require('sdk/ui/button/action');
var tabs = require("sdk/tabs");
var button = buttons.ActionButton({
  id: "mozilla-link",
  label: "Visit Mozilla",
  icon: {
    "16": "./icon-16.png",
    "32": "./icon-32.png",
    "64": "./icon-64.png"
  },
  onClick: handleClick
});
function handleClick(state) {
  tabs.open("https://developer.mozilla.org/");
}

At the command prompt, execute jpm run again. This time clicking it takes you to https://developer.mozilla.org/.

Packaging the add-on

When you've finished the add-on and are ready to distribute it, you'll need to package it as an XPI file. This is the installable file format for Firefox add-ons. You can distribute XPI files yourself or publish them to https://addons.mozilla.org so other users can download and install them.

To build an XPI, just execute the command jpm xpi from the add-on's directory:

jpm xpi

You should see a message like:

JPM info Successfully created xpi at /path/to/my-addon/@my-addon-0.0.1.xpi

To test that this worked, try installing the XPI file in your own Firefox installation. You can do this by pressing the Ctrl+O key combination (Cmd+O on Mac) from within Firefox, or selecting the "Open" item from Firefox's "File" menu. This will bring up a file selection dialog: navigate to the "@my-addon.xpi" file, open it and follow the prompts to install the add-on.

Note that Firefox by default requires add-ons, even locally developed ones, to be signed. After installation they'll show up disabled in the list of installed add-ons, noting the missing signature. During development, or if you don't plan to distribute, you can open about:config and set xpinstall.signatures.required to false to run it unsigned. This setting applies to any add-on, so take extra care to not accidently install a malicious one from elsewhere.

To distribute your add-on, submit the XPI file to addons.mozilla.org or run jpm sign if you wish to distribute the add-on on your own server.

Summary

In this tutorial we've built and packaged an add-on using three commands:

  • jpm init to initialize an empty add-on template
  • jpm run to run a new instance of Firefox with the add-on installed, so we can try it out
  • jpm xpi to package the add-on into an XPI file for distribution

These are the three main commands you'll use when developing SDK add-ons. There's comprehensive reference documentation covering all the commands you can use and all the options they take.

The add-on code itself uses two SDK modules, action button and tabs. There's reference documentation for all the high-level and low-level APIs in the SDK.

What's next?

To get a feel for some of the things you can do with the SDK APIs, try working through some of the tutorials.

Document Tags and Contributors

Tags: 
  • Add-on SDK
  • JPM
 Contributors to this page: bunnybooboo, wbamberg, fvas-elearning, Gabriel.Sroka, Traumflug, diorahman, kumar303, Hinzhausen, evold
 Last updated by: bunnybooboo, Apr 16, 2017, 1:07:56 PM
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. devtools.inspectedWindow
    11. devtools.panels
    12. downloads
    13. events
    14. extension
    15. extensionTypes
    16. history
    17. i18n
    18. identity
    19. idle
    20. management
    21. notifications
    22. omnibox
    23. pageAction
    24. runtime
    25. sessions
    26. sidebarAction
    27. storage
    28. tabs
    29. topSites
    30. webNavigation
    31. webRequest
    32. 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. devtools_page
    13. homepage_url
    14. icons
    15. manifest_version
    16. name
    17. omnibox
    18. options_ui
    19. page_action
    20. permissions
    21. short_name
    22. sidebar_action
    23. version
    24. 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