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Firefox 70: Site Isolation testing begins officially


Karlston

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Firefox 70: Site Isolation testing begins officially

Mozilla has been working on integrating site isolation in the Firefox web browser for a while. Called Project Fission, the goal is to improve security in the Firefox web browser by isolating content by site in the browser.

 

Firefox uses a multi-process system currently that divides website content and browser specific content using multiple processes. Multiple sites may share a process and one of the main goals of Project Fission is to isolate these, including cross-site iframes, entirely.

 

Google implemented site isolation in its Chrome browser in 2018 stating that the feature improved security and stability of the browser. Google noted however that the feature would increase memory usage by about 20% on average.

 

Firefox users could enable Fission when the Nightly version hit version 69 already but this was mostly useful for internal testing of functionality. Now, with the release of Firefox 70 Nightly comes an official "go" from the organization to test the new site isolation feature.

 

firefox site isolation fission autostart

 

Site isolation is not enabled by default in the Firefox web browser at the time of writing. Users need to enable Fission to make use of it. When it is enabled, Firefox will load any cross-site iframe in its own content process.

When Fission is enabled, each cross-site iframe is loaded in a different content process, meaning lots of different processes participate in drawing  a single tab. The hover tooltip for a Fission-enabled tab is annotated with a "[F …]" containing a series of process IDs, as shown in the image below, serving as a visual verification of an active Fission-enabled session.

You may hover over any tab in the Firefox web browser after enabling Fission to display the process IDs used by Firefox to display that website.

 

firefox processes fission

 

Site Isolation is still a work in progress. Mozilla notes that it should be used for testing and not day-to-day browsing as users may experience stability and functionality issues because of open bugs.

 

Firefox users may also check the remote processes listed on the about:support page of the web browser to list web isolated processes.

Closing Words

Site Isolation improves the stability and security of the Firefox browser when enabled at the expense of increased memory usage. Memory usage will likely increase by about the same percentage that Chrome's memory usage increased after the implementation; this would mean an increase of about 20%.

 

Mozilla has yet to pick a release target for the new feature.

 

 

 

Source: Firefox 70: Site Isolation testing begins officially (gHacks - Martin Brinkmann)

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My damn old laptop would smoke like a barbecue. Gonna need more RAM or buy new rig. Sigh*

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