Additional Resourcesĭirect documentation references are available for both add-ons and plugins, as seen below. The only supported plugin will be the Adobe Flash plugin, which will be supported until 2020.Ī list of the more common plugins can be found here. In addition to the add-on changes, Firefox 60 ESR is discontinuing support for NPAPI plugins, such as the Java JRE plugin. browsers began developing a roadmap to gradually phase out Flash support. Custom add-ons that use the XUL technology have been implemented, and these add-ons have not been ported to the WebExtensions format yet. When Mozilla releases Firefox 85, the option to re-enable Flash Player will be.Users will not be prompted to enable Flash, but it will still be possible to activate Flash on certain sites using browser settings. One or more publicly available add-ons from Firefox Add-ons are in use, which are based on the XUL technology, and those add-ons have not been ported to the new format. As per Firefoxs published plugin road-map: 2019 Firefox will disable the Flash plugin by default.
Firefox flash plugin road map driver#
EnvironmentĮither of the followings scenarios are known to result in issues: Kongregate free online game Road Rage - Leave your mark as the angriest driver in the universe Bust through traffic and evade the cop. As part of this change, support for classic Add-Ons that use the XUL technology will be removed in the May/June 2018 timeframe. As of Firefox 60 ESR, this add-on technology is modernizing and switching to a new format, WebExtensions, which has been used by Chrome and Chromium.
Mozilla Firefox has been known for its extendability, and has grown a large ecosystem of native add-ons which add or modify its features and behavior.