Mozilla Addons Blog: Add-ons Update – Week of 2015/07/01 |
I post these updates every 3 weeks to inform add-on developers about the status of the review queues, add-on compatibility, and other happenings in the add-ons world.
As we announced before, there’s a new add-ons community forum for all topics related to AMO or add-ons in general. The Add-ons category is already the most active one on the community forum, so thank you all for your contributions! The old forum is still available in read-only mode.
A number of factors have lead to the current state of the queues: increased submissions, decreased volunteer reviewer participation, and a Mozilla-wide event that took most of our attention last week. We’re back and our main focus are the review queues. We have a new reviewer on our team, who will hopefully make a difference in the state of the queues.
If you’re an add-on developer and would like to see add-ons reviewed faster, please consider joining us. Add-on reviewers get invited to Mozilla events and earn cool gear with their work. Visit our wiki page for more information.
The Firefox 40 compatibility blog post is up. The automatic compatibility validation will be run in a few weeks.
As always, we recommend that you test your add-ons on Beta and Firefox Developer Edition (formerly known as Aurora) to make sure that they continue to work correctly. End users can install the Add-on Compatibility Reporter to identify and report any add-ons that aren’t working anymore.
We announced that we will require extensions to be signed in order for them to continue to work in release and beta versions of Firefox. The wiki page on Extension Signing has information about the timeline, as well as responses to some frequently asked questions.
There’s a small change to the timeline: Firefox 40 will only warn about unsigned extensions (for all channels), Firefox 41 will disable unsigned extensions by default unless a preference is toggled (on Beta and Release), and Firefox 42 will not have the preference. This means that we’ll have an extra release cycle before signatures are enforced by default.
Electrolysis, also known as e10s, is the next major compatibility change coming to Firefox. In a nutshell, Firefox will run on multiple processes now, running content code in a different process than browser code. This should improve responsiveness and overall stability, but it also means many add-ons will need to be updated to support this.
We will be talking more about these changes in this blog in the future. For now we recommend you start looking at the available documentation.
https://blog.mozilla.org/addons/2015/07/01/add-ons-update-67/
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