Utilities for implementing APIs¶
This page covers some utility classes that are useful for implementing WebExtension APIs:
WindowManager¶
This class manages the mapping between the opaque window identifiers used in the browser.windows API. See the reference docs here.
TabManager¶
This class manages the mapping between the opaque tab identifiers used in the browser.tabs API. See the reference docs here.
ExtensionSettingsStore¶
ExtensionSettingsStore (ESS) is used for storing changes to settings that are requested by extensions, and for finding out what the current value of a setting should be, based on the precedence chain or a specific selection made (typically) by the user.
When multiple extensions request to make a change to a particular setting, the most recently installed extension will be given precedence.
It is also possible to select a specific extension (or no extension, which infers user-set) to control a setting. This will typically only happen via ExtensionPreferencesManager described below. When this happens, precedence control is not used until either a new extension is installed, or the controlling extension is disabled or uninstalled. If user-set is specifically chosen, precedence order will only be returned to by installing a new extension that takes control of the setting.
ESS will manage what has control over a setting through any extension state changes (ie. install, uninstall, enable, disable).
Notifications:¶
“extension-setting-changed”:¶
When a setting changes an event is emitted via the apiManager. It contains the following:
action: one of select, remove, enable, disable
id: the id of the extension for which the setting has changed, may be null if the setting has returned to default or user set.
type: The type of setting altered. This is defined by the module using ESS. If the setting is controlled through the ExtensionPreferencesManager below, the value will be “prefs”.
key: The name of the setting altered.
item: The new value, if any that has taken control of the setting.
ExtensionPreferencesManager¶
ExtensionPreferencesManager (EPM) is used to manage what extensions may control a setting that results in changing a preference. EPM adds additional logic on top of ESS to help manage the preference values based on what is in control of a setting.
Defining a setting in an API¶
A preference setting is defined in an API module by calling EPM.addSetting. addSetting allows the API to use callbacks that can handle setting preferences as needed. Since the setting is defined at runtime, the API module must be loaded as necessary by EPM to properly manage settings.
In the api module definition (e.g. ext-toolkit.json), the api must use “settings”: true so the management code can discover which API modules to load in order to manage a setting. See browserSettings[1] as an example.
Settings that are exposed to the user in about:preferences also require special handling. We typically show that an extension is in control of the preference, and prevent changes to the setting. Some settings may allow the user to choose which extension (or none) has control of the setting.
Preferences behavior¶
To actually set a setting, the module must call EPM.setSetting. This is typically done via an extension API, such as browserSettings.settingName.set({ …value data… }), though it may be done at other times, such as during extension startup or install in a modules onManifest handler.
Preferences are not always changed when an extension uses an API that results in a call to EPM.setSetting. When setSetting is called, the values are stored by ESS (above), and if the extension currently has control, or the setting is controllable by the extension, then the preferences would be updated.
The preferences would also potentially be updated when installing, enabling, disabling or uninstalling an extension, or by a user action in about:preferences (or other UI that allows controlling the preferences). If all extensions that use a preference setting are disabled or uninstalled, the prior user-set or default values would be returned to.
An extension may watch for changes using the onChange api (e.g. browserSettings.settingName.onChange).
ESS vs. EPM¶
An API may use ESS when it needs to allow an extension to store a setting value that affects how Firefox works, but does not result in setting a preference. An example is allowing an extension to change the newTab value in the newTab service.
An API should use EPM when it needs to allow an extension to change a preference.
Using ESS/EPM with experimental APIs¶
Properly managing settings values depends on the ability to load any modules that define a setting. Since experimental APIs are defined inside the extension, there are situations where settings defined in experimental APIs may not be correctly managed. The could result in a preference remaining set by the extension after the extension is disabled or installed, especially when that state is updated during safe mode.
Extensions making use of settings in an experimental API should practice caution, potentially unsetting the values when the extension is shutdown. Values used for the setting could be stored in the extensions locale storage, and restored into EPM when the extension is started again.