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    You may have installed countless add-on in Firefox to enhance your using experience, but if you want to get the most out of Firefox, you really
    have to hack your way into the about:config.

    The about:config page contains most (if not, all) of Firefox configuration options. It is so far the most effective, and the most powerful way to tweak and enhance your Firefox performance. Here are 28 of the popular tweaks.

    Accessing your about:config page

    In your Firefox, type about:config in the address bar.

    about-config

    You will be shown a warning page. Click the “I’ll be careful, I promise!” button to proceed.

    firefox-config-warning

    On the main page, you will see a long list of configuration entries. Enter the name of the key you want to update in the “Filter” field. The list will narrow to only the entries that match your keyword as you type.

    To modify the value, simply double click on the entry value field and update the entry. That’s all!

    Isn’t that simple? Now, let’s get to the tweaking.

    1) Adjust the Smart Location Bar’s Number of Suggestions

    In Firefox 3, when you start typing in the location bar, a drop-down list of suggestion URLs will be shown. If you want it to show more than 12
    suggestions (12 is the default), you can adjust the browser.urlbar.maxRichResults keys and get it to show the number you want.

    firefox-smart-location

    Config name: browser.urlbar.maxRichResults
    Default: 12
    Modified value: Set to your desired number of suggestion. If you want to disable it all together, set it to -1

    2) Disable the session restore function

    Firefox 3 automatically saves your session every 10 secs so that whenever it crashes, it can restore all your tabs. While this is a useful feature,
    some of you might find it irritating. To disable this function, toggle
    the value of browser.sessionstore.enabled to False

    Config name: browser.sessionstore.enabled
    Default: True
    Modified value: False if you want to disable the session restore function

    3) Adjust the Session Restore Saving Frequency

    Same as above, if you decided to keep the session restore feature on, but want to reduce the session saving frequency, change the value of browser.sessionstore.interval so that Firefox will save the session at a longer interval.

    Config name: browser.sessionstore.interval
    Default: 10000 (in msecs, equivalent to 10secs)
    Modified value: Set it to your desired value. 1000 means 1 sec and 60000 means 1 minute.

    4) Enable Advanced Color Profile Support

    Firefox has this advanced color profile features that display higher image quality. It is not enabled by default as it has a negative effect on the performance of the browser. If you are concern with the image quality rather than the performance, you can activated it via the gfx.color_management.enabled setting

    Config name: gfx.color_management.enabled
    Default: False
    Modified value: True (if you want to activate the color profile support feature)

    5) Disable Antivirus Scanning

    This is mainly for Windows users. By default, Firefox 3 automatically scan the downloaded file with the default anti-virus application to make sure it is free of virus. If you download a big file, it could take a long time for the whole scanning process to complete. To increase the performance of the browser, you might want to consider disabling the anti-virus scanning via the browser.download.manager.scanWhenDone key.

    Config name: browser.download.manager.scanWhenDone
    Default: True
    Modified value: False (if you want to disable it)

    6) Configuring The Scrolling Tabs

    When you opened many tabs, Firefox will not keep on reducing the tab width. Instead, it shows a scrolling bar so that the min width (100px) is
    conserved and you can scroll to find your tabs. If you are those who
    don’t like the scrolling tab function and prefer Firefox to show all the
    tabs, regardless how small it is, you can set the value of browser.tabs.tabMinWidth
    to 0 to disable it. Similarly, if you want Firefox to display more tabs
    before showing the scrolling button, you can reduce the default value
    to a lower value, say 75 pixels.

    Firefox-scrollingtab

    Config name: browser.tabs.tabMinWidth
    Default: 100
    Modified value: 0 if you want to disable the scrolling functions, other values to set the min width value

    7) Show/Disable Close button on Tabs

    Some people love to see the Close (the red X) button on every tabs, but some hate it. Whatever is it, you can configure it to your preferences via the browser.tabs.closeButtons setting.

    firefox-tab-close

    Config name: browser.tabs.closeButtons
    Default: 1
    Modified values:

    • 0 – display a close button on the active tab only
    • 1- display close buttons on all tabs
    • 2- don’t display any close buttons
    • 3- display a single close button at the end of the tab strip

    8) Extend Scripts Execution Time

    In Firefox 3, a script is only given 10 seconds to respond, after which it will issue a unresponsive script warning. If you are hooked on a slow network connection, you might want to increase the script execution time via dom.max_script_run_time to cut down on the frequency of the no script warning.

    Config name: dom.max_script_run_time
    Default:10 (in secs)
    Modified value: 20, or any values greater than 10

    9) Handling JavaScript Popups

    When you come across a site that executes a javascript open new window function, and if the popup window is without all the usual window
    features, i.e. back/forward/reload buttons, status bar etc,
    Firefox will automatically treat it as a popup and will not open it as a
    new tab. However, if you find this to be a nuisance and wanted to open
    all new windows in a new tabs, you can specify it via the browser.link.open_newwindow.restriction setting.

    Config name: browser.link.open_newwindow.restriction
    Default: 2 – Open all JavaScript windows the same way as you have Firefox handle new windows unless the JavaScript call specifies how to display the
    window
    Modified values:

    • 0 – open all links as how you have Firefox handle new windows
    • 1 – do not open any new windows
    • 2- open all links as how you have Firefox handle new windows unless the Javascript specify how to display the window

    10) Enable Spell Checking In All Text Fields

    The default spell checking function only checks for multi-line text boxes. You can get it to spell-check for single line text box as well.

    Config name: layout.spellcheckDefault
    Default: 1 (spell checker for multi-lines text boxes only)
    Modified values:

    • 0 – disable the spell checker
    • 2 – enable the spell checker for all text boxes

    11) Open Search Box Results In New Tab

    When you search using the search box at the top right hand corner of the browser, it will display the search results in the current tab. If you don’t want the search to interfere with your current tab, you can tweak the browser.search.openintab to make it open in a new tab.

    Config Name: browser.search.openintab
    Default: False
    Modified value: True (open search box results in new tab)

    12) Lower The Physical Memory Used When Minimized

    This tweak is mainly for Windows users. When you minimize Firefox, it will send Firefox to your virtual memory and free up your physical memory for other programs to use. Firefox will reduce its physical memory usage, when minimized, to approximately
    10MB (give or take some) and when you maximize Firefox it will take back
    the memory that it needs.

    The preference name does not exist and needs to be created.

    Right click on the background and select New->Boolean.

    Enter the name when prompted: config.trim_on_minimize
    Enter the values: True

    13) Speed up your Firefox

    Several tweaks required for this

    Config name: network.http.pipelining
    Default: False
    Modified value: True

    Config name: network.http.proxy.pipelining
    Default: False
    Modified value: True

    Config name: network.http.pipelining.maxrequests
    Default: 4
    Modified value: any value higher than 4, but not more than 8

    Config name: network.http.max-connections
    Default: 30
    Modified value: 96

    Config name: network.http.max-connections-per-server
    Default: 15
    Modified value: 32

    14) Increase/Decrease the Amount of Disk Cache

    When a page is loaded, Firefox will cache it into the hard disk so that it doesn’t need to be download again for redisplaying. The bigger the storage size you cater for Firefox, the more pages it can cache.

    Before you increase the disk cache size, make sure that browser.cache.disk.enabled browser.cache.disk.enable is set to True.

    Config name: browser.cache.disk.capacity
    Default: 50000 (in KB)
    Modified value:

    • 0 – disable disk caching
    • any value lower than 50000 reduces the disk cache
    • any value higher than 50000 increases the disk cache.

    15) Select all text when click on the URL bar

    In Windows and Mac, Firefox highlights all text when you click on the URL bar. In Linux, it does not select all the text. Instead, it places the
    cursor at the insertion point. Regardless which platform you are using,
    you can now tweak it to either select all or place cursor at insertion point.

    firefox-select-all

    Config name: browser.urlbar.clickSelectsAll
    Modified value:

    • False – place cursor at insertion point
    • True – select all text on click

    16) Autofill Address in URL Bar

    Other than the smart location feature, you can also get your URL bar to autofill the address as you type the URL.

    firefox-autofill

    Config name: browser.urlbar.autofill
    Default: False
    Modified value: True (Have Firefox autofill the address as you type in the URL bar)

    17) Same Zoom Level For Every Site

    Firefox remembers your zoom preference for each site and set it to your preferences whenever you load the page. If you want the zoom level to be
    consistent from site to site, you can toggle the value of browser.zoom.siteSpecific from True to False.

    Config name: browser.zoom.siteSpecific
    Default: True
    Modified value: False (enable same zoom preferences for every sites)

    18) Setting your zoom limit

    If you find that the max/min zoom level is still not sufficient for your viewing, you can change the zoom limit to suit your viewing habits.

    Config name: zoom.maxPercent
    Default: 300 (percent)
    Modified value: any value higher than 300

    Config name: zoom.minPercent
    Default: 30 (percent)
    value: any value

    19) Configure Your Backspace Button

    In Firefox, you can set your backspace to better use by getting it to either go back to the previous page or act as page up function.

    Config name: browser.backspace_action
    Default: 2 (does nothing)
    Modified value:

    • 0 – go back previous page
    • 1- page up

    20) Increase Offline Cache

    If you do not have access to Internet most of the time, you might want to increase the offline cache so that you can continue to work offline. By
    default, Firefox 3 caches 500MB of data from supported offline Web apps.
    You can change that value to whatever amount of your choice.

    Config name: browser.cache.offline.capacity
    Default: 512000 (in KB)
    Modified value: any value higher than 512000 will increase the cache value

    21) Auto Export Firefox 3 bookmarks to bookmarks.html

    Unlike the previous version, Firefox 3 backup the bookmarks file in places.sqlite rather than the usual bookmarks.html. Since bookmarks.html allows us to export and sync our bookmarks with other browser, it will be very useful if Firefox 3 can backup the bookmark to the bookmarks.html as well.

    Config name: browser.bookmarks.autoExportHTML
    Default: False
    Modified value: True (auto export bookmarks file to bookmarks.html)

    22) Disable Extension Compatibility Checks

    This is useful if you want to use an extension that is not supported by your version of Firefox badly. It is not recommended, but you can still do
    it at your own risk.

    Right click and select New->Boolean. Enter extensions.checkCompatibility in the field. Enter False in the next field.

    Right click again and select New->Boolean. Enter extensions.checkUpdateSecurity into the field and enter False into the next field.

    23) Disable Delay Time When Installing Add-on

    Everytime you wanted to install a Firefox add-on, you will have to wait for several secs before the actual installation starts. If you are tired of
    waiting, you can turn the function security.dialog_enable_delay off so that the installation will start immediately upon clicking.

    firefox-add-on-delay

    Config name: security.dialog_enable_delay
    Default: 2000 (in msec)
    Modified value:

    • 0 – start installation immediately
    • any other value (in msec)

    24) View Source in Your Favorite Editor

    This is very useful for developers who are always using the ‘view source‘ function. This tweak allows you to view the source code in an external editor.

    There are two configuration need to be made:
    Config name: view_source.editor.external
    Default: False
    Modified value: True ( enable view source using external text editor)

    Config name: view_source.editor.path
    Default: blank
    Modified value: insert the file path to your editor here.

    25) Increasing ‘Save Link As‘ timeout value

    When you right click and select the ‘Save Link As…‘, the browser will request the content disposition header from the URL so as to determine the filename. If the URL did not deliver the header
    within 1 sec, Firefox will issue a timeout value. This could happen very
    frequently in a slow network connection environment. To prevent this
    issue from happening frequently, you can increase the timeout value so
    as to reduce the possibility of a timeout.

    Config name: Browser.download.saveLinkAsFilenameTimeout
    Default: 1000 (1 sec)
    Modified value: any value higher than 1000 (value is in msec)

    26) Animate Fullscreen Toolbar Collapse mode

    In Firefox’s fullscreen mode, toolbars and the tab strip are hidden at the top of the screen and only shown on mouseover. To draw attention to
    this, there is an animation of the toolbar sliding upwards and
    off-screen when fullscreen mode is toggled on. For performance issue,
    the animation of the collapse of the toolbar only appear for the first
    time. For some reason that you may love/hate the animation, you can
    adjust Browser.fullscreen.animateUp to switch it on/off for every collapse.

    Config name: Browser.fullscreen.animateUp
    Default: 1 (animate the toolbar collapse only the first time)
    Modified value:

    • 0 -disable the animation
    • 2- enable the animation for every collapse

    27) Autohide Toolbar in Fullscreen mode

    In fullscreen mode, the toolbar is set to autohide and appear upon mouseover. If you have a need to view the toolbar at all time, you can
    toggle the value of browser.fullscreen.autohide to False to always show the toolbar.

    Config name: browser.fullscreen.autohide
    Default: True (always autohide)
    Modified value: False (always show the toolbar)

    28) Increase Add-On search result

    If you go to Tools->Add-ons->Get Add-ons and perform a search there, Firefox will only fetch and display 5 matching results. If you want Firefox to show more than 5 results (say
    10), you can adjust extensions.getAddons.maxResults to get it to display more results.

    Config name: extensions.getAddons.maxResults
    Default: 5
    Modified value: any value more than 5

    This list of about:config is definitely not the complete list. If you have any tricks not listed here, please add it in the comment.

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