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javascriptgoogle-chrome-extensionmozillafirefox-addon-webextensions

How to check if a Firefox WebExtension is installed or not with page JavaScript?


I have developed a WebExtension for Firefox and my website works with the extension as a prerequisite. I need to check programmatically whether the extension is installed or not and if not ask the user to install it.

I am not able to find a way how to check this operation of whether my extension is already installed in the user's browser.

Editor note: Methods available in Firefox differ from those available in Chrome, so this question is not a duplicate.


Solution

  • Important note to begin with: A page can't query if an extension is installed without explicit help from the extension. This is done to prevent browser fingerprinting and/or preventing sites from denying content if certain extensions are installed.

    WebExtensions are largely built upon the same principles as Chrome extensions. As such, this question is relevant: Check whether user has a Chrome extension installed.

    However, some of the best methods available in Chrome are currently unavailable in Firefox:

    The files will then be available using a URL like:

    moz-extension://<random-UUID>/<path/to/resource>
    

    This UUID is randomly generated for every browser instance and is not your extension's ID. This prevents websites from fingerprinting the extensions a user has installed.

    As such, what are your options? The page can't talk directly to the extension context (background), and the background can't directly affect the page; you need a Content script to interact with the page content.

    How can page code and a content script communicate? They are isolated from each other unless content script does something about it.

    First off, generic tricks that work in both FF and Chrome:

    • You can create or modify a DOM element on the page from a content script and look for those modifications in the page.

        // Content script
        let beacon = document.createElement("div");
        beacon.classname = browser.runtime.id;
        document.body.appendChild(beacon);
      
        // Page script
        // Make sure this runs after the extension code
        if (document.getElementsByClassName("expected-extension-id").length) {
          // Installed
        } else {
          // Not installed
        }
      
    • You can use postMessage to communicate between contexts, though it's clunky to use as a bidirectional channel.

      Here's documentation and sample WebExtension.

        // Content script code
        window.postMessage({
          direction: "from-content-script",
          message: "Message from extension"
        }, "*");
      
        // Page code
        window.addEventListener("message", function(event) {
          if (event.source == window &&
              event.data.direction &&
              event.data.direction == "from-content-script") {
            // Assume extension is now installed
          }
        });
      
    • You can use custom DOM events in a similar way.

    There are interesting Firefox-specific approaches as well:

    • You can share code with the page using exportFunction or cloneInto:

        // Content script
        function usefulFunction() {
          /* ... */
        }
      
        const extensionInterface = {
          usefulFunction
        }
        window.wrappedJSObject.extensionInterface = 
          cloneInto(extensionInterface, window, {cloneFunctions: true});
      
        // Page code
        if (typeof window.extensionInterface !== "undefined") {
          // Installed
          window.extensionInterface.usefulFunction();
        } else {
          // Not installed
        }