This article describes how an add-on developer can temporarily install an extension in Firefox for testing and debugging. The extension will stay installed until you restart Firefox. You can use this method with any kind of restartless extension, including bootstrapped extensions and Add-on SDK add-ons.
Note that this is not how end users should install add-ons in Firefox. End users will install add-ons by downloading and opening packaged add-ons that have been signed by Mozilla. To learn how an extension developer can get an add-on packaged and signed, see Publishing your extension.
To install an extension temporarily:
- open Firefox
- enter "about:debugging" in the URL bar
- click "Load Temporary Add-on"
- open the extension's directory and select any file inside the extension.
The extension will be installed, and will stay installed until you restart Firefox.
Reloading a temporary extension
Starting in Firefox 48, there's a new button labeled "Reload" next to the extension's entry in about:debugging:
This does what it says:
- reloading any persistent scripts, such as background scripts
- parsing the manifest.json file again, so changes to
permissions
,content_scripts
,browser_action
or any other keys will take effect.
Note that in Firefox 48 only, "Reload" does not update the extension's name and description that are displayed in about:debugging and about:addons. This is fixed in Firefox 49.
Using the command line
If you are already using the command line for development, check out the web-ext tool. It automates the temporary installation step and automatically reloads your extension when its source code changes.