Gran Paradiso Alpha 3 187
kbrosnan writes "Gran Paradiso Alpha 3 is a release of the Gecko rendering engine for testing purposes only. Here are the release notes. While this release uses the interface of Firefox, no significant interface changes have been made. These alpha releases focus on making improvements to the core elements: graphics, JavaScript, page rendering, etc."
Changes. (Score:3, Funny)
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The click makes it very clear when the browser is sucking ass, and when it is not
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I would call it "The Status Bar".
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Release notes and comments (Score:5, Informative)
* The DOM clientLeft and clientTop attributes are now supported.
* Introduced support for , which puts resources into the browser's offline cache. This allows a web application to ensure that its resources are available in the cache when the browser goes into offline mode. See * * * Marking Resources for Offline Use for further details on offline support.
* Improved precision of layout and scaling across a wide range of screen and printer resolutions.
* Implemented cycle collection in XPCOM, which detects cases where two released objects hold one another, but neither is held by anyone else. In this scenario, both objects can safely be purged. Previously, the holds each has on the other would have prevented them from being purged.
* Added support for the HttpOnly cookie attribute, which marks a cookie as readable only by the server and not by client-side scripts.
* Added a new preference, "Warn me when web sites try to redirect or reload the page", which notifies the user when the page specifies HTTP-EQUIV=refresh.
* Windows 95, Windows NT 4, Windows 98, and Windows ME are not supported for Gecko 1.9.
* OS X 10.2 is no longer supported, and OS X 10.3.9 or better is required.
* The non-standard JavaScript Script object is no longer supported.
* Moving DOM nodes between documents now requires a call to importNode or adoptNode as per the DOM specification.
It's kind of sketchy that they're not supporting older Windows or OS X versions, but I don't think that's a huge deal. I wish they'd reintroduced MNG instead of APNG (purely a personal preference; APNG is probably actually a better way of doing it), and any fixes to JavaScript are nice to have.
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At a certain point, this sort of decision has to be made: Move forward, or live in the past. The technical issues that surround supporting old systems verses moving forward with more elegant solutions for modern systems.
But what I don't understand is why they continue to insist that there are no memory usage issues when there is a lot of practical evidence that there are?
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Where do "they continue to insist that there are no memory usage issues" and where do you find "a lot of practical evidence that there are"? I find that Firefox does have some memory leaks, and they are being fully acknowledged by the developers. Do you think there are some memory leak reports that are being ignored? If so, you should be far more specific about what these are.
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But if a large number of people us FF in a way that causes problems, it is a design flaw. Either that, or they just don't care what their users want.
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I think users want Mozilla to build a browser that takes into account common usage patterns, and not respond with flip comments that it's being used wrong.
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Certainly I almost exclusively open links in new tabs unless I'm sure I'm done with the page I'm currently on, and with the number of comments I read here from people who describe having dozens of tabs open simultaneously, it seems I'm not the only one. I freely admit to not being Joe Average though,
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An Introduction to R [r-project.org] (PDF file)
Opened in Firefox 2.0.0.3 with the Acrobat plugin, VM Size 14 MB
Opened in Opera 9.10 with the Acrobat plugin, VM Size 22 MB
After closing the tab with the PDF file, VM Size did not drop significantly in either browser. Still don't see any problem with memory in Firefox. Remember to open only that one page just after you start the browser
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Sorry, but "Open a bunch of tabs that use plugins." isn't exactly a reproducible set of steps. I open a bunch of tabs that use plugins all the time, and I have seen memory usage go up to 400 MB, but memory usage almost always goes back down to below 200 MB after I close the tabs. Don't all browsers use lots of memory when you open a bunch of tabs that use plugins, and then release the memory when you close the tabs?
If you still think that Firefox has memory problems that other browsers don't have, please
Re:Release notes and comments (Score:5, Interesting)
Just to make my vague, general statements concrete, I picked three sites at random, each of which uses a different plugin:
The official US time clock [time.gov] (Java)
weatcher.com interactive map [weather.com] (Flash)
Panda Pang [zeronews-fr.com] (Shockwave for Director)
With these three pages open Firefox 2.0.0.3 on Windows XP has a VM Size of 175 MB. Huge memory problem in Firefox? No, Opera 9.10 on Windows XP has a VM Size of 171 MB. After closing the tabs in Firefox, VM Size goes down to 46 MB. Doing the same in Opera, VM Size goes down to 59 MB. If anything, it looks like Opera may have a problem releasing unused memory. Keep in mind for a fair comparison that you must open only those sites after starting the browser, otherwise, you could see the built-up memory usage form hours or days of use in a browser that you've been visiting other pages in.
If you can come up with a series of steps that causes high memory usage in Firefox, and not high memory usage in other browsers, maybe you're on to something.
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No, of course not! But if all browsers suck, why say "Firefox sucks"? That implies other browsers don't suck. Why not say "all browsers suck," which conveys what you're trying to say much more clearly?
about:config (Score:3, Informative)
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I have a Linux box and a Macbook Pro running OSX, and it happens consistently on both of them, and have since 1.0.x at least.
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According to the operating system, no it doesn't make any difference. That's because, due to memory fragmentation, memory is being released somewhere in Firefox's memory pool so that it cannot be returned to the operating system. Memory is being released and reused internally, but not back to the OS. It's a well-known effect that isn't a problem specific to Firefox. All browsers exhibit this behavior.
Generally speaki
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How long?
I've had 40 tabs open, and (in the v1.5 & 2.0 series) see the RES mem get up to 300m, but no higher.
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Ok. I'll try this one, too. I've opened up Firefox 2.0.0.3 on Windows XP with just this page open, and it has a VM Size of 16 MB. After one reload, it's up to 22 MB. I notice that the ad changed, so memory cache and the Flash plugin are probably responsible for the extra memory, as is memory fragmentation. After another reload, it's down to 20 MB. After the third reload, still at 20 MB. Fourth reload, 24 MB. Fifth, 23 MB. After the 22nd reload, it's using 31 MB. So, the memory is going up over time, but the
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If you're happy with win2k you'll be happy with Firefox 2. Simple concept.
uh, no I will not be. FF3 is progress. anything after W2K is bloat. and FF3 will support W2K (RTFGP) so your point doesn't stand.
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ppl like you prefer the eye-candyless w2k.
and i now hear ppl saying it about XP since vista is out (including me).
and i'm pretty sure ppl will say the same about vista once the successor is released.
so like someone earlier posted:
it's ok to live in the past
(for a while at least)
we don't want to come to a total halt in technology
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You'd be much less angry at Windows if you'd simply use Google or another resource to find out how to tell it to not do what you don't want it to.
Re:Release notes and comments (Score:5, Informative)
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There is a reason for this. The changes they have made to the core won't work with older versions of Windows as easily as they do with more modern versions. This means that a lot of work would be need to add support for them. But it has been said that if anyone is interested doing the job, he/she is quite welcome to do it.
Bug! (Score:4, Interesting)
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Not a gecko release (Score:5, Informative)
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ACID 2 Compliance (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:ACID 2 Compliance (Score:4, Informative)
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What? (Score:5, Funny)
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redraws involve headache-inducing white flashes (Score:2)
On OSX, Gran Paradiso Alpha 3 had an annoying habit of flashing a white screen before redrawing a page. To test this, just go to http://www.mozilla.org/products/ [mozilla.org] and click from tab to tab.
One can only hope that this won't occur in the release versions, because it is really quite annoying.
Re:redraws involve headache-inducing white flashes (Score:4, Funny)
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It's even more annoying in debug builds
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Release schedule? (Score:2)
I tried recent nightly builds, and I really liked what I saw on the painting front. I hope we can get a stabilized release soon.
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Wikipedia quotes the same source.
Run both firefox and Gran Paradiso ? (Score:2)
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I keep a separate user account for this sort of thing. Not exactly convenient though.
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Is there a way to run both firefox and Paradiso without affecting firefox settings and extensions etc ?
Unzip firefox in a separate directory, for example c:\beta\firefox, make an extra directory for profiles and start firefox with the -profile option:
The MOZ_NO_REMOTE variable will prevent it from connecting to another running instance of Firefox. All the settings are stored in the profile directory so it will leave the regular installation alone.
Ask your admin to grant you write access (Score:2)
If you don't have write-access to c:\beta\firefox, then you are not the administrator. If you are not the administrator of a machine, and the administrator refuses to grant you this write access, then you probably shouldn't be running alpha software on the machine.
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I thought you would easily figure that out given that you are running Debian.
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I thought you would easily figure that out given that you are running Debian.
The point is: why should you need write access to a non-$HOME directory, no matter where it is?
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And last, for some of us c:\beta is home :)
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First of all I recommend you create a new profile for V3 (Gran Paradiso). After that it's possible to run new instances of Firefox from a batch file with the contents:
Mac users, give it a try! (Score:4, Interesting)
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If it looks like Firefox, acts like Firefox, but is as fast as Safari -- it's still Firefox. Fuck that.
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Where did I say anything about rendering? As far as I can tell, Safari/WebKit and Firefox/Gecko are both more or less accurate. Safari passed Acid2 back in 2005, while Firefox is just now getting there. Besides, if I wanted to run a Gecko browser, I'd run Camino over Firefox, because it doesn't feel like a bad port from Windows.
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Even Mozilla guys ignore non-x86 Linux (Score:3, Insightful)
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I find your comment about
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Nobody wants binaries from hardware manufacturers. I think most Linux devs would be over the moon if the manufacturers released only source code for non-x86 (or even x86).
Re:That felt weird (Score:5, Funny)
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Alanis uses irony correctly (Score:2)
Ironic you should think so (Score:2)
Um... no. (Score:2)
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Why should it? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why should it? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So.. (Score:4, Insightful)
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New word! (Score:4, Funny)
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Just wait for the metric assload of fucknozzles.
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Re:So.. (Score:5, Informative)
Nice rant, but Firefox does not seem to use more memory than other browsers. See my above posts and the following links:
Radically New IE 7 or Updated Mozilla Firefox 2--Which Browser Is Better? [pcworld.com]
IE 7 vs IE 6 [zimbra.com]
Firefox 2 - the lean, mean browser [mozillazine.org]
If you can give a set of steps that causes Firefox to use "up to a gig of memory" and does not cause other browsers to use nearly as much memory, let's have it. Then whatever problem you're seeing can be reported and fixed.
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my fault, assuming you are using an alpha or nightly build. There are still a bunch of font bugs in cairo, in particular when the text is scaled. Most of those were fixed in cairo 1.4.2, they should land in the mozilla soonish, and hopefully the next release will look a lot better. Mac fonts on cairo trunk are now pretty much up to par with the other platforms, and Robert O'Callahan, Vlad, etc have done great stuff making it all perform well too.
-Baz (maintaining mac font stuff in cairo)
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