https://github.com/mdn/webextensions-examples
Maintained by the MDN team at Mozilla.
WebExtensions are a way to write browser extensions: that is, programs installed inside a web browser that modify the behaviour of the browser or of web pages loaded by the browser. They are built on a set of cross-browser APIs, so WebExtensions written for Google Chrome or Opera will in most cases run in Firefox or Edge too.
The "webextensions-examples" repository is a collection of simple but complete and installable WebExtensions. You can use the examples to see how to use the WebExtensions APIs, and as a starting point for your own WebExtensions.
For an index of all the examples, see the "Example extensions" page on MDN.
The examples are made available under the Mozilla Public License 2.0.
To use the repository, first clone it.
Each example is in its own top-level directory. Install an example in your favourite web browser (installation instructions are below), and see how it works. Each example has its own short README explaining what it does.
To find your way around a WebExtension's internal structure, have a look at the Anatomy of a WebExtension page on MDN.
To use these examples in Firefox, you should use the most recent release of Firefox. Some examples work with earlier releases.
A few examples rely on APIs that are currently only available in pre-release
versions of Firefox. Where this is the case, the example should declare
the minimum version that it needs in the strict_min_version
part of the
applications key
in its manifest.json file.
There are a couple ways to try out the example extensions in this repository.
- Open Firefox and load
about:debugging
in the URL bar. Click the Load Temporary Add-on button and select themanifest.json
file within the directory of an example extension you'd like to install. Here is a video that demonstrates how to do this. - Install the
web-ext
tool, change into the directory of the example extension
you'd like to install, and type
web-ext run
. This will launch Firefox and install the extension automatically. This tool gives you some additional development features such as automatic reloading.
These examples are only tested in Firefox. They may work in other browsers, if the browser supports the APIs used. Note though that these examples all use the name browser
for the namespace and use promises to work with asynchronous functions. This means the examples won't work in Chrome unless you use the polyfill provided by Mozilla. See the overview of WebExtension APIs for more information on this.
To learn more about developing WebExtensions, see the WebExtensions documentation on MDN for getting started guides, tutorials, and full API reference docs.
If you find a problem, please file a bug.
If you need help, email the dev-addons mailing list or contact the WebExtensions team in the #webextensions IRC channel on irc.mozilla.org.
We welcome contributions, whether they are whole new examples, new features, bug fixes, or translations of localizable strings into new languages. Please see the CONTRIBUTING.md file for more details.