Configuring Build Options

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This document details how to configure Firefox builds. Most of the time a mozconfig file is not required. The default options are the most well-supported, so it is preferable to add as few options as possible. Please read the following directions carefully before building, and follow them in order. Skipping any step may cause the build to fail, or the built software to be unusable. Build options, including options not usable from the command-line, may appear in “confvars.sh” files in the source tree.

Using a mozconfig configuration file

The choice of which Mozilla application to build and other configuration options can be configured in a mozconfig file. (It is possible to manually call configure with command-line options, but this is not recommended). The mozconfig file should be in your source directory (that is, /mozilla-central/mozconfig).

Create a blank mozconfig file:

echo "# My first mozilla config" > mozconfig

If your mozconfig isn’t in your source directory, you can also use the MOZCONFIG environment variable to specify the path to your mozconfig. The path you specify must be an absolute path or else client.mk will not find it. This is useful if you choose to have multiple mozconfig files for different applications or configurations (see below for a full example). Note that in the export example below the filename was not mozconfig. Regardless of the name of the actual file you use, we refer to this file as the mozconfig file in the examples below.

Setting the mozconfig path:

export MOZCONFIG=$HOME/mozilla/mozconfig-firefox

Note

Calling the file .mozconfig (with a leading dot) is also supported, but this is not recommended because it may make the file harder to find. This will also help when troubleshooting because people will want to know which build options you have selected and will assume that you have put them in your mozconfig file.

mozconfig contains two types of options:

  • Options prefixed with mk_add_options are passed to client.mk. The most important of these is MOZ_OBJDIR, which controls where your application gets built (also known as the object directory).

  • Options prefixed with ac_add_options are passed to configure, and affect the build process.

Building with an objdir

This means that the source code and object files are not intermingled in your directory system and you can build multiple applications (e.g., Firefox and Thunderbird) from the same source tree. If you do not specify a MOZ_OBJDIR, it will be automatically set to @TOPSRCDIR@/obj-@CONFIG_GUESS@.

If you need to re-run configure, the easiest way to do it is using ./mach configure; running configure manually is strongly discouraged.

Adding the following line to your mozconfig allows you to change the objdir:

mk_add_options MOZ_OBJDIR=@TOPSRCDIR@/obj-@CONFIG_GUESS@

It is a good idea to have your objdir name start with obj so that Mercurial ignores it.

Sometimes it can be useful to build multiple versions of the source (such as with and without diagnostic asserts). To avoid the time it takes to do a full rebuild, you can create multiple mozconfig files which specify different objdirs. For example, a mozconfig-dbg:

mk_add_options MOZ_OBJDIR=@TOPSRCDIR@/obj-ff-dbg
ac_add_options --enable-debug

and a mozconfig-rel-opt:

mk_add_options MOZ_OBJDIR=@TOPSRCDIR@/obj-ff-rel-opt
ac_add_options --disable-debug
ac_add_options --enable-optimize

allow for building both versions by specifying the configuration via the MOZCONFIG environment variable:

$ env MOZCONFIG=/path/to/mozconfig-dbg ./mach build
$ env MOZCONFIG=/path/to/mozconfig-rel-opt ./mach build

Don’t forget to set the MOZCONFIG environment variable for the mach run command as well.

Be aware that changing your mozconfig will require the configure process to be rerun and therefore the build will take considerably longer, so if you find yourself changing the same options regularly, it may be worth having a separate mozconfig for each. The main downside of this is that each objdir will take up a significant amount of space on disk.

Parallel compilation

Note

Note: The build system automatically makes an intelligent guess for how many CPU cores to use when building. The option below is typically not needed.

Most modern systems have multiple cores or CPUs, and they can be optionally used concurrently to make the build faster. The -j flag controls how many parallel builds will run concurrently. You will see (diminishing) returns up to a value approximately 1.5× to 2.0× the number of cores on your system.

mk_add_options MOZ_PARALLEL_BUILD=4

If your machine is overheating, you might want to try a lower value.

Choose an application

The --enable-application=application flag is used to select an application to build. Firefox is the default.

Choose one of the following options to add to your mozconfig file:

Browser (Firefox)
ac_add_options --enable-application=browser

Note

Note: This is the default

Mail (Thunderbird)
ac_add_options --enable-application=comm/mail
Mozilla Suite (SeaMonkey)
ac_add_options --enable-application=suite
Calendar (Lightning Extension, uses Thunderbird)
ac_add_options --enable-application=comm/mail
ac_add_options --enable-calendar

Selecting build options

The build options you choose depends on what application you are building and what you will be using the build for. If you want to use the build regularly, you will want a release build without extra debugging information; if you are a developer who wants to hack the source code, you probably want a non-optimized build with extra debugging macros.

There are many options recognized by the configure script which are special-purpose options intended for embedders or other special situations, and should not be used to build the full suite/XUL applications. The full list of options can be obtained by running ./configure --help.

Warning

Do not use a configure option unless you know what it does. The default values are usually the right ones. Each additional option you add to your mozconfig file reduces the chance that your build will compile and run correctly.

The following build options are very common:

sccache

SCCache allows speeding up subsequent C / C++ builds by caching compilation results. Unlike ccache, it also allows caching Rust artifacts, and supports distributed compilation.

In order to enable sccache for Firefox builds, you can use ac_add_options --with-ccache=sccache.

Optimization

ac_add_options --enable-optimize

Enables the default compiler optimization options

Note

Note: This is enabled by default

ac_add_options --enable-optimize=-O2

Chooses particular compiler optimization options. In most cases, this will not give the desired results, unless you know the Mozilla codebase very well; note, however, that if you are building with the Microsoft compilers, you probably do want this as -O1 will optimize for size, unlike GCC.

ac_add_options --enable-debug

Enables assertions in C++ and JavaScript, plus other debug-only code. This can significantly slow a build, but it is invaluable when writing patches. People developing patches (especially in C++) should generally use this option.

ac_add_options --disable-optimize

Disables compiler optimization. This makes it much easier to step through code in a debugger.

ac_add_options --enable-release

Enables more conservative, release engineering-oriented options. This may slow down builds. This also turns on full optimizations for Rust. Note this is the default when building release/beta/esr.

ac_add_options --enable-debug-js-modules

Enable only JavaScript assertions. This is useful when working locally on JavaScript-powered components like the DevTools. This will help catch any errors introduced into the JS code, with less of a performance impact compared to the --enable-debug option.

export RUSTC_OPT_LEVEL=2

Enable full optimizations for Rust code.

You can make an optimized build with debugging symbols. See Building with Debug Symbols.

Extensions

ac_add_options --enable-extensions=default|all|ext1,ext2,-skipext3

There are many optional pieces of code that live in {{ Source(“extensions/”) }}. Many of these extensions are now considered an integral part of the browsing experience. There is a default list of extensions for the suite, and each app-specific mozconfig specifies a different default set. Some extensions are not compatible with all apps, for example:

  • cookie is not compatible with thunderbird

  • typeaheadfind is not compatible with any toolkit app (Firefox,

    Thunderbird)

Unless you know which extensions are compatible with which apps, do not use the --enable-extensions option; the build system will automatically select the proper default set of extensions.

Tests

ac_add_options --disable-tests

By default, many auxiliary test applications are built, which can help debug and patch the mozilla source. Disabling these tests can speed build time and reduce disk space considerably. Developers should generally not use this option.

Localization

mk_add_options MOZ_CO_LOCALES=ISOcode

TBD.

ac_add_options --enable-ui-locale=ISOcode

TBD.

ac_add_options --with-l10n-base=/path/to/base/dir

TBD.

Other Options

mk_add_options AUTOCLOBBER=1

If a clobber would be required before a build, this will cause mach to clobber and continue with the build instead of asking the user to manually clobber and exiting.

ac_add_options --enable-crashreporter

This enables the machinery that allows Firefox to write out a minidump files when crashing as well as the tools to process and submit crash reports to Mozilla. After enabling the crash reporter in your local build, you will need to run mach with the –enable-crash-reporter (note the extra dash) to enable it at runtime, like so: ./mach run --enable-crash-reporter

ac_add_options --enable-warnings-as-errors

This makes compiler warnings into errors which fail the build. This can be useful since certain warnings coincide with reviewbot lints which must be fixed before merging.

Example mozconfig Files

Mozilla’s official builds use mozconfig files from the appropriate directory within each repository.

Warning

These mozconfig files are taken from production builds and are provided as examples only. It is recommended to use the default build options, and only change the properties from the list above as needed. The production builds aren’t really appropriate for local builds.”

Building multiple applications from the same source tree

It is possible to build multiple applications from the same source tree, as long as you use a different objdir for each application.

You need to create multiple mozconfig files.

As an example, the following steps can be used to build Firefox and Thunderbird. You should first create three mozconfig files.

mozconfig-common:

# add common options here, such as making an optimized release build
mk_add_options MOZ_PARALLEL_BUILD=4
ac_add_options --enable-optimize --disable-debug

mozconfig-firefox:

# include the common mozconfig
. ./mozconfig-common

# Build Firefox
mk_add_options MOZ_OBJDIR=@TOPSRCDIR@/obj-firefox
ac_add_options --enable-application=browser

mozconfig-thunderbird:

# include the common mozconfig
. ./mozconfig-common

# Build Thunderbird
mk_add_options MOZ_OBJDIR=@TOPSRCDIR@/obj-thunderbird
ac_add_options --enable-application=comm/mail

To build Firefox, run the following commands:

export MOZCONFIG=/path/to/mozilla/mozconfig-firefox
./mach build

To build Thunderbird, run the following commands:

export MOZCONFIG=/path/to/mozilla/mozconfig-thunderbird
./mach build

Using mozconfigwrapper

Mozconfigwrapper is similar to using multiple mozconfig files except that it abstracts and hides them so you don’t have to worry about where they live or which ones you’ve created. It also saves you from having to export the MOZCONFIG variable each time. For information on installing and configuring mozconfigwrapper, see https://github.com/ahal/mozconfigwrapper.