From MozillaWiki

Thanks

(5/1/2018) The Electrolysis Project is officially complete. Mozilla continues to work on scaling the Gecko process model through newer projects and work, including our process-per-origin initiative Project Fission. Props and thanks to our entire community for helping us ship this body work. We could not have successfully shipped this without your help!

Overview

Electrolysis functionality hosts, renders, or executes web related content in background child processes which communicate with the "parent" Firefox browser via various ipdl protocols. The two major advantages of this model are security and performance. Security improvements are accomplished through security sandboxing, performance improvements are born out of the fact that multiple processes better leverage available client computing power.

Electrolysis child processes are currently in use for the following tasks within Firefox:

Legacy NPAPI plugin hosting

Media playback ('Gecko Media Plugin', a.k.a. 'GMP')

Web content ('content processes')

[Fx53] GPU Process (Windows Only) bug 1264543

[Fx54] file://URL access process bug 1147911

[Fx55] Web Extensions bug 1190679

[Fx55, Fx56] ServiceWorker and in the future SharedWorker threads bug 1231208

In the future Electrolysis child processes may be used to handle other browser tasks including audio, networking (bug 1322426), PDFium and Pepper Flash (bug 558184).

In Mozilla documentation "Electrolysis" is often shorted as "e10s".

Testing

Nightly/Aurora

If you're on Nightly e10s-multi is enabled by default with 4 content processes. Soon, Firefox 54 Aurora, will also have e10s-multi (4 processes) enabled by default. A user-facing checkbox is available for controlling Electrolysis functionality. Open Preferences and check the "Enable multi-process" checkbox and then restart your browser:

Firefox Beta

If you're currently using Firefox Beta you might be testing e10s already, check about:support and look for a number higher than 0 in the "Multiprocess Windows" entry. If you would like to opt-in to help us test open about:config and toggle browser.tabs.remote.autostart to true. On your next restart, e10s should be active.

Firefox Release

If you're using Firefox 48 or later, you might be using e10s already. Check about:support and look for a number higher than 0 in the "Multiprocess Windows" entry. If you would like to opt-in, open about:config and toggle browser.tabs.remote.autostart to true. On your next restart, e10s should be active.

Force Enable

If you've tried enabling e10s following the instruction above, but your about:support indicates that e10s is disabled (e.g., accessibility, add-ons can trigger this), you can force e10s on for testing purposes. Within about:config create a new boolean pref named browser.tabs.remote.force-enable and set it to true. This is not encouraged, use it at your own risk!

Schedule and Status

View the Multiple Content Process wiki page for more information about release milestones, release criteria, and a gradual roll-out schedule of e10s-multi.

Schedule

The following schedule covers rollout of the single content process feature to release builds up to Firefox 54. Multi process is covered starting in Nightly 54.

What percent of the population actually has e10s enabled?

Date Trunk Aurora Beta Release 2015-04-30 40 default (working on m5) 39 off 38 off 37 off 2015-05-11 41 default (working on m6) 40 prompt 39 off 38 off 2015-06-29 42 default (working on m7/m8) 41 prompt 40 off 39 off 2015-08-10 43 default (working on m8) 42 default 41 off 40 off 2015-09-21 44 default 43 default 42 off 41 off 2015-11-02 45 default 44 default 43 off 42 off 2015-12-14 46 default 45 default 44 A/B [1] 43 off 2016-01-25 47 default 46 default 45 A/B [1] 44 off 2016-03-07 48 default 47 default 46 A/B [1] 45 off 2016-04-25 49 default 48 default 47 50% [1][2] 46 off 2016-06-06 50 default 49 default 48 [1][2] 47 off 2016-08-01 51 default[6] 50 default 49 [2][4] 48 ON [3] 2016-09-19 52 default [7][8] 51 default[6] 50 default [4] 49 ON [5] 2016-11-07 53 default [8] 52 default [7] 51 default [6] 50 ON [5] 2017-01-24 54 default 53 default 52 default [7] 51 ON 2017-03-07 55 default[9] 54 default[8] 53 default 52 ON 2017-04-18 55 default n/a 54 default 53 ON 2017-06-13 56 default n/a 55 default 54 ON [10]

[1] qualifying users: users that do not use addons and have not activated accessibility support over 30 days.

[2] full run across the entire beta period

[3] 1% of qualifying users with ramp up to 100% during the release cycle

[4] White listed Add-Ons + Add-Ons created as a WebExtension testing on beta, full cycle

[5] White listed Add-Ons + Add-Ons created as a WebExtension shipping on Release

[6] A11y+ Windows 8 touch screen support enabled, not riding trains

[7] Windows 8 riding trains

[8] E10s Multi Enabled, Not riding trains

[9] A11y Enabled for Windows

[10] E10s multi enabled, riding trains

[*] indicates the goal for the release has yet to be planned

Add-ons Schedule

The following schedule rollout of Electrolysis as it releases specifically to add-ons. Each release of Firefox will add more and more add-ons to the cohort of users who get multi process Firefox.

Users with add-ons not in yet the cohort to get multi-process, will continue to run Firefox (as before) without e10s enabled. The Road to 57 blog post has details and there is a visual of the schedule here.

Version Cohort 49 limited experimental set of Extensions and all WebExtensions 50 all Extensions marked "multiprocessCompatible" and all WebExtensions [1] 51 Moving back to Fx 50 release criteria. All Extensions and all WebExtensions [1], [2], [3], plus 770 add-ons testing in Beta that were not marked either way (initial expansion) had been included. 52 all Extensions marked "multiprocessCompatible" and all WebExtensions [1] 53 all Extensions marked "multiprocessCompatible" and all WebExtensions [1]. 54 all Extensions marked "multiprocessCompatible" and all WebExtensions [1]. 55 all Extensions marked "multiprocessCompatible" and all WebExtensions [1]. 56 all Extensions marked "multiprocessCompatible" and all WebExtensions [1]. 57 ONLY WebExtensions supported [4]

[1] Before each stage moves from beta to release, there are release criteria (crashes, jank etc) that need to be met. We will delay moving to Release if issues are identified in Beta.

[2] Initially Shims will be available that will help certain add-ons with compatibility. These are a temporary measure due to potential limitations that could impact user experience.

[3] With the exception of Extensions marked explicitly as NOT multiprocessCompatible.

[4] More details in blog post or broader add-on timing schedule see for details on what will be allowed

For information on add-on support rollout see the Add-on/e10s Project Wiki.

Staged Roll-Out Plan

To read a summary of the Roll-Out plan, see Asa's blog.

Windows XP

Due to stability issues Windows XP is currently not leveraging e10s on release channel. XP and Vista will move out to Extended Support Release (ESR) 45 when 45 merges to release (bug 1303827). As such there are no plans to support e10s for XP/Vista in the future.

Weekly Status Reports

2017

2016

2015





Experiments

There's a dedicated page for the experiments: E10s Experiments

Contributing

The simplest way to help out is to test a release that has e10s enabled, and file bug when you find them. Please try to find duplicates prior to filing.

For developers interested in helping out, MDN has a good introduction to e10s, useful for both Firefox and add-on developers.

Security Sandboxing

See the Security Sandbox wiki page for more information and status.

Accessibility Support

See the e10s Accessibility wiki page for support implementation detail.

Add-ons Compatibility

Add-on authors should refer to the MDN Firefox Add-on Migration Guide for porting existing add-ons to e10s. For general design information see the Multiprocess Firefox MDN documentation. Add-on testing compatibility is currently available at https://arewewebextensionsyet.com/.

For more information about Add-on issue mitigation and rollout of e10s to add-on users, see the Add-on Project Wiki page.

Past Milestones

2014-09-11 - bug 1064885 - Enable opt-in option for Nightly

2014-11-13 - bug 1093691 - Enabled for Nightly builds

2015-05-08 - bug 1161260 - Enable opt-in option for Aurora

2015-07-28 - bug 1182097 - Disabled on Aurora for about 1 week due to a bug in a11y prompting

2015-07-31 - bug 1188605 - Enabled for Aurora builds

2015-12-15 - bug 1229104 - Beta testing

2016-08-01 - Enabled for non-add-on users in Release 48 / Beta testing of add-on users in 49

Communication

People

Engineering Management Brad Lassey Product Management Jeff Griffiths Project Management Erin Lancaster - e10s Go to Market

Shell Escalante - Add-Ons QA Tracy Walker (e10s Quality Assurance Lead) Development Team Mike Conley

Felipe Gomes

Blake Kaplan

Gabor Krizsanits

William McCloskey

Jim Mathies

Tom Schuster

Dave Townsend

George Wright

Meeting Notes

Link

Reference

Bug Lists

Nightly enable blockers

M2 bugs: http://tinyurl.com/mjywvmb (one leftover bug, assigned m5+, 1047603)

M3 bugs: http://tinyurl.com/n7jekh6 (all resolved + dependencies resolved)

Beta blockers

GA Blockers

M9 Actionable Bugs: http://is.gd/qufPe0

M9 plus RC Meta Bugs: http://is.gd/tv81Zf

M9 RC Metas: http://is.gd/hTHo9U

RC Meta Children: http://is.gd/eKcXxH

Summary Lists

Performance bugs (e10s-perf)

Future

Triage Lists

Misc. Trackers