Difference between revisions of "Mozilla Firefox"
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This method works for firefox-beta | This method works for [https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/beta/all/ firefox-beta]and [https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/aurora/all/ firefox-aurora], too. unfortunately, Firefox' own updater does not update to the next major version (e.g. from Firefox 33.0 to Firefox 34.0) for all these pre-stable releases of Firefox. The next major version needs to be downloaded and unpacked/extracted manually every time a new major update of Firefox is released. | ||
Revision as of 11:59, 2 November 2014
Installing Firefox the following way has one advantage: Firefox will update itself automatically as soon as an update is available. This is great for users, who want to get the latest update as soon as possible without waiting for the next Manjaro update. It is also great for systems which need an updated (i.e. secure) web browser but are updated rarely.
1. Find out, whether your Manjaro installation is 32bit or 64bit:
uname -m
If the output is x86_64
, you are using a 64bit installation of Manjaro.
If the output is i686
, your Manjaro installation is 32bit.
2. Download the latest Firefox in your language from here: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/all/
Download "Linux", if you are using a 32bit installation of Manjaro or "Linux 64-bit" if your installation of Manjaro is 64bit.
3. Unpack/extract the downloaded firefox-xx.x.tag.bz2
file to
~/bin/
This is the default path this wiki page will use in the continuation of this tutorial. When you want to use other file paths you have to adjust this tutorial, too. An alternate file path of your home directory is the following (please replace <YourAccountNameHere> with your account name):
/home/<YourAccountNameHere>/bin/
If a bin
folder in your home directory
does not exist, create it.
If a visible bin
folder in your home directory bothers you, you can use a hidden .bin
folder instead:
~/.bin/
Most file managers make hidden files visible by pressing CTRL + H
.
You can now start to use Firefox by double clicking on the file (or executing it in a terminal):
~/bin/firefox/firefox
4. Let's create an icon in order to start Firefox much more easily:
create an firefox.desktop file and edit it:
sudo kwrite ~/.local/share/applications/firefox.desktop
(Instead of kwrite
, use your preferred text editor: e.g. leafpad, gedit, mousepad, juffed, etc.)
(Every file name beginning with a .
is a hidden file)
Copy and paste the following code into your firefox.desktop
file and save it:
[Desktop Entry] Name=Firefox GenericName=Web Browser Icon=~/bin/firefox/browser/icons/mozicon128.png Type=Application Categories=Application;Network;WebBrowser; Exec=~/bin/firefox/firefox Terminal=false StartupNotify=false
Now, you can click the firefox.desktop
file and your Firefox will start. Create links of your firefox.desktop
file or copy it to the place you prefer. You should also be able to start Firefox from your start menu now (after a reboot of your system).
More
This method works for firefox-betaand firefox-aurora, too. unfortunately, Firefox' own updater does not update to the next major version (e.g. from Firefox 33.0 to Firefox 34.0) for all these pre-stable releases of Firefox. The next major version needs to be downloaded and unpacked/extracted manually every time a new major update of Firefox is released.
This post is based on the following sources:
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3oLon1m3vl0
- https://forum.manjaro.org/index.php?topic=16206.msg151149#msg151149
There is a forum entry for this post: https://forum.manjaro.org/index.php?topic=16246.0
More Tips about Firefox here