Mozilla is planning to add multi process support to Firefox. Bill McCloskey has a detailed article explaining why. In short: security, performance, stability. It just so happens that the underlying Firefox changes drastically affect the inner workings of Greasemonkey.
The Greasemonkey developers have been working hard to rewrite significant portions of the extension. There are no new features, but the internals have changed quite a lot. As a result this release is bumping the major version number, to 3.0.
Ideally, you don't notice anything. Once multi process Firefox is enabled by default, everything should continue to work as normal. But this is a "point oh" release. Perhaps we've missed something? Please let us know if you have any problems!
Note that as always it takes some time for Mozilla to
review the new version. If you're interested in staying on the bleeding
edge, try installing the development channel beta release.
One noticeable difference I see with 3.0 is that scripts I explicitly let run on about:blank no longer work.
ReplyDeleteIs this a bug or intentional?
Bug. https://github.com/greasemonkey/greasemonkey/issues/2108
ReplyDeleteI think there's something wrong with version 3.0. My firefox memory usage goes up a lot more, sometimes to 2 GB, and FF doesn't release the memory. The browser becomes laggy. I've tried the beta version also. Going back to 2.3 fixes it.
ReplyDelete