A GNOME theme for Firefox
This theme follows lastest GNOME Adwaita style.
This is a bunch of CSS code to make Firefox look closer to GNOME's native apps.
This theme is supposed to work with current supported Firefox releases:
- Firefox 83
- Firefox 78 ESR
- Firefox 84 Beta
- Firefox 85 Nightly
-
Clone this repo and enter folder:
git clone https://github.com/rafaelmardojai/firefox-gnome-theme/ && cd firefox-gnome-theme
-
Run installation script:
./scripts/install.sh # Standard ./scripts/install.sh -f ~/.var/app/org.mozilla.firefox/.mozilla/firefox # Flatpak
-
-f <firefox_folder_path>
optional- Set custom Firefox folder path, for example
~/.mozilla/icecat/
. - Default:
~/.mozilla/firefox/
- Set custom Firefox folder path, for example
-
-p <profile_name>
optional- Set custom profile name, for example
e0j6yb0p.default-nightly
. - Default: standard default profile
- Set custom profile name, for example
-
-t <theme_name>
optional- Set the colors used in the theme.
- Default: Adwaita.
- Options:
adwaita
,maia
,yaru
.
You can also install this theme with one command:
curl -s -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rafaelmardojai/firefox-gnome-theme/master/scripts/install-by-curl.sh | bash
It will download the latest version of the theme and run the installation script for you.
-
Go to
about:support
in Firefox. -
Application Basics > Profile Directory > Open Directory.
-
Open directory in a terminal.
-
Create a
chrome
directory if it doesn't exist:mkdir -p chrome cd chrome
-
Clone this repo to a subdirectory:
git clone https://github.com/rafaelmardojai/firefox-gnome-theme.git
-
Create single-line user CSS files if non-existent or empty (at least one line is needed for
sed
):[[ -s userChrome.css ]] || echo >> userChrome.css
-
Import this theme at the beginning of the CSS files (all
@import
s must come before any existing@namespace
declarations):sed -i '1s/^/@import "firefox-gnome-theme\/userChrome.css";\n/' userChrome.css
-
Symlink preferences file:
ln -s chrome/firefox-gnome-theme/configuration/user.js ../user.js
-
Restart Firefox.
-
Open Firefox customization panel and move the new tab button to headerbar.
-
Be happy with your new gnomish Firefox.
Both manual and script installation methods should create a git clone in your-profile-folder-path/chrome/firefox-gnome-theme
, so the easiet way to update the theme is to open this folder in terminal and perform a git pull.
git pull origin master
Note: You can also run the installation script again to update (after cloning again the repo).
- Go to your profile folder. (Go to
about:support
in Firefox > Application Basics > Profile Directory > Open Directory) - Remove
chrome
folder.
To achieve Firefox with overlay scrollbars install firefox-gnome-scrollbars.
Optional features can be enabled by crating new boolean
preferences in about:config
.
- Go to the
about:config
page - Type the key of the feature you want to enable
- Set it as a
boolean
and click on the add button - Restart Firefox
-
Hide single tab
gnomeTheme.hideSingleTab
Hide the tab bar when only one tab is open.
Note: You should move the new tab button somewhere else for this to work, because by default it is on the tab bar too. See #54.
-
Normal width tabs
gnomeTheme.normalWidthTabs
Use normal width tabs as default Firefox.
-
Active tab contrast
gnomeTheme.activeTabContrast
Add more contrast to the active tab.
-
System icons
gnomeTheme.systemIcons
Use system theme icons instead of Adwaita icons included by theme.
Note: This feature has a known color bug.
-
Symbolic tab icons
gnomeTheme.symbolicTabIcons
Make all tab icons look kinda like symbolic icons.
-
Drag window from headerbar buttons
gnomeTheme.dragWindowHeaderbarButtons
Allow draging the window from headerbar buttons.
Note: This feature is BUGGED. It can activate the button with unpleasant behavior.
See upstream bug.
- Go to the
about:config
page - Search for the
layers.acceleration.force-enabled
preference and set it to true. - Now restart Firefox, and it should look good!
- Go to the
about:config
page - Type
mozilla.widget.use-argb-visuals
- Set it as a
boolean
and click on the add button - Now restart Firefox, and it should look good!
Icons might appear black where they should be white on some systems. I have no idea why, but you can adjust them directly in the system-icons.css
file, look for --gnome-icons-hack-filter
& --gnome-window-icons-hack-filter
vars and play with css filters.
If you wanna mess around the styles and change something, you might find these things useful.
To use the Inspector to debug the UI, open the developer tools (F12) on any page, go to options, check both of those:
- Enable browser chrome and add-on debugging toolboxes
- Enable remote debugging
Now you can close those tools and press Ctrl+Alt+Shift+I to Inspect the browser UI.
Also you can inspect any GTK3 application, for example type this into a terminal and it will run Epiphany with the GTK Inspector, so you can check the CSS styles of its elements too.
GTK_DEBUG=interactive epiphany
Feel free to use any parts of my code to develop your own themes, I don't force any specific license on your code.
Developed by Rafael Mardojai CM and contributors. Based on Sai Kurogetsu original work.
If you want to support development, consider donating via PayPal. Also consider donating upstream, Firefox & GNOME.