From MozillaWiki

Warning: Prism is no longer developed by Mozilla Labs, although this documentation will still be useful to those using WebRunner (see next paragraph). There are now two alternatives: The Prism code was picked up by Matthew Gertner who started a company to continue its open source development under the name WebRunner. See his blog post at http://www.salsitasoft.com/blog/2011/02/09/prism-is-now-webrunner/ Mozilla Labs itself started a new project called Chromeless. See their blog post at http://mozillalabs.com/blog/2011/02/prism-is-now-chromeless/

Prism is a simple XULRunner based browser that hosts web applications without the normal web browser user interface. Prism is based on a concept called Site Specific Browsers (SSB). An SSB is an application with an embedded browser designed to work exclusively with a single web application. It doesn’t have the menus, toolbars and accoutrements of a normal web browser. Some people have called it a "distraction free browser" because none of the typical browser chrome is used. An SSB also has a tighter integration with the OS and desktop than a typical web application running through a web browser.

Prism / SSB Objectives

Looking at what has already been done and discussed about desktop/webapp integration, the following is a suggested roadmap for SSB experimentation:

Separate process: When the webapp goes down or locks up, I don’t want anything else affected. Thankfully, Firefox does have session restore, but that is beside the point. When I open many tabs and have several webapps running in a browser, things get slow and unstable after a day or two.

When the webapp goes down or locks up, I don’t want anything else affected. Thankfully, Firefox does have session restore, but that is beside the point. When I open many tabs and have several webapps running in a browser, things get slow and unstable after a day or two. Minimal UI: A generic browser UI is not needed for webapps. If any UI is present, make it specific to the webapp I am using.

A generic browser UI is not needed for webapps. If any UI is present, make it specific to the webapp I am using. Basic desktop integration: Create shortcuts to start the webapp, add ability to show specialized icons in the tray or dock and ability to display notifications.

Create shortcuts to start the webapp, add ability to show specialized icons in the tray or dock and ability to display notifications. Platform with extensions: I don’t want to download a full browser runtime for each webapp. I do want to be able to add some custom code/features that are not directly supported in the webapp. I should be able to install one runtime and then get packages or extensions for each webapp. Think Firefox extensions or Greasemonkey scripts. These extensions should be able to tweak the SSB UI as well.

I don’t want to download a full browser runtime for each webapp. I do want to be able to add some custom code/features that are not directly supported in the webapp. I should be able to install one runtime and then get packages or extensions for each webapp. Think Firefox extensions or Greasemonkey scripts. These extensions should be able to tweak the SSB UI as well. Open external links in real browser: If I click a link in the webapp that opens a new site, don’t change my webapp browser window. Open all external links in my default/real browser.

Current Features

Window title tracking

Context menu for basic clipboard and selection operations

Simple Print support via context menu

About support via context menu which is useful for checking the XULRunner runtime version

Launch Prism with commandline parameters to host specific webapps

Web application profile support - parameters for a web app can be saved to an INI-style *.webapp file

Support for webapp owned popup windows - some email webapps can use a popup to compose email

Show float-over link destinations in the statusbar so users can see where the link will take them

Support download manager

Support for inline spellcheck and suggestions on context menu

A tool to create new webapp profiles so new webapps can be installed from Prism

An extension to allow Firefox to create webapp profiles since most of this process starts in the browser

Wishlist

Add Taskbar icon representation option for the web applications.

Make all link open in it's own app (eg. Facebook Prism app will force all facebook link from any other app to open in this app)

Add one instance behavior in order for the shortcuts to bring the web app to view rather than open a second window.

Add menus for page setup, open profile and work offline

Add support for form field autocompletion, like Firefox

Enable extension support so Prism can be tweaked or enhanced. Also, webapps themselves can be tweaked by extensions

Create some form of adjusting preferences (about:config?). For instance, I had to add the code below in webruner-prefs.js to adjust proxy

using a parameter in the .webapp file would be the best solution :

but you could also have a sort of "Registry Editor" webapp (just create one with about:config as the URL--maybe keep it in the Prism shortcuts, rather than the webapp ones)

Add url/domain/subdomain restriction (external links won't work) give more detail on the discussion page

Add ability to open external links with other browsers (Firefox/Konqueror/IE/etc.) this should be working now - give more detail on the discussion page

Add ability to have entire software and webapp run from a USB memory device for roaming use.

Possibility of full screen mode

Find box

Use webpage (favicon) icon instead of prism icon

Navigation with Alt + mouse scroll wheel is working, even if navigation is disabled in webapp.ini. Maybe it should be like in firefox Shift + mouse scroll wheel when navigation is enabled.

Navigation with mouse gestures. A left-click, hold and move cursor to the left would signify a Back page request on a left-click, hold and move cursor to the right would be forward. Others such as to the top left corner to signify minimize window. This would enable the use of touch-screen kiosks without keyboard or mouse attached.

More robust command line handling. It would be nice be able to simply type one of these:

webrunner gmail.webapp webrunner https://mail.google.com/mail - Nope

Updater like firefox that tells you when a new version of webrunner has been released.

Add something to configure and block advertisement.

Back, forward (history) and reload buttons are necessary.

Support for increasing and decreasing text size (ctrl++ and ctrl--)

Menu option - 'Preferences'

Option to load "sidebar services", what I mean by this is the option to load services which are meant to load in sidebar (google Chat and google Notebook have specific webpages for the sidebar for example) and which will load in prism as a fixed size window on the left of the screen (and best would be that maximized windows will stay right of it)

Configuration option to sandbox a webapp so it doesn't share cookies with other webapps in the same Prism. This could allow multiple Google apps to be open with different accounts (a@gmail.com Gmail; b@msn.com for Reader; c@hostedgmail.com for Hosted Gmail). (more at gnucitizen.org)

Detection of window close ( user clicks the X button ) with JavaScript. Existing ways to detect browser closure are not reliable and in the context of an app it is essential. Detection of window minimize/restore might be useful as well ( like in a real desktop app... )

Better shell integration: Most options should be accessible via command line and --help should print out something usable.

Add ability to configure/clear private data (cookies, history, passwords, etc.)

NTLM Authentification like "network.automatic-ntlm-auth.trusted-uris" in Firefox

Minimize to system tray with balloon notifications

Enable selecting spell checker's language in context menu, or guess it based on LANG environment variable and lang html attribution. (As of 0.8 it always uses US English.)

Make it possible for the website developer to specify a menu structure in the host window for the normal menu-bar in the top of an application.

The website developer should be able to specify the supported configuration of prism, e.g. enable/disable sidebar service, preferred sidebar url, icon, etc. This will remove the need for the decentralized .app file.

The website developer should be able to specify the preferred/minimum size of the host window.

Security for use in Computer-Based Exams - Traagoob - 19 July 2008

A toggle-option that locks down the SSB to a registered domain name. For example, an SSB set to w3schools.com would allow links to any higher-level domain name (e.g., www.w3schools.com) or folder (e.g., www.w3schools.com/xml/), but not allow vectoring to another domain name such as google.com. Currently, an SSB set to w3schools.com will vector to www.google.com if the user enters that url into the site's site-search box. At that point the examinee is free to explore unauthorized sites during the examination.

A toggle-option to restrict starting a regular browser. This is possible if the directory names for the regular browsers are modified, but it would be nicer if the SSB could manage this.

To be able to set the window height and width via the configuration file, as well as set the border type (dialog, sizeable, none?, etc). I believe the windowsize could be set in the webapp.js though I think it would be more appropriately set within the webapp.ini

Web Application Bundles

A web application bundle is a zip archive that holds a configuration file, icons and an optional webapp JS script. The profile can be used to launch and install the webapp in Prism:

prism -webapp [webapp-bundle]

Whenever a web application has been launched / installed using the above command line and the webapp configuration has an ID parameter, the web application is unpacked into the Prism profile folder and can be launched directly using:

prism -webapp [webapp-id]

Here is a simple how-to for building a basic web application bundle.

See: Prism/Bundle

Web Application Configuration

A webapp bundle should contain a webapp.ini configuration file. The configuration file is a simple, INI-style text file that specifies some parameters about a web application.

See: Prism/Config

Web Application Script

Some Prism-based web applications may want to tweak the behavior or add desktop-ish features to the webapp. Prism supports a simple scripting system that can be used to add custom JS script to the Prism chrome host, but not the webcontent itself.

In the future, the webapp script may have lower privileges. We are looking into the security aspects of the higher privilege level.

See: Prism/Scripting

Web Application Styling

One of Prism's goals is to make web applications feel more like desktop applications. One way to make the illusion seem more real is to use styling (or theming). Prism supports a simple styling system that allows the user to add CSS files to the webapp bundle.

See: Prism/Styling

Prism Host Window

Prism provides a simple, scaled down browser window for running web applications. Using configuration files and webapp scripting, the host window can be modified.

See: Prism/HostWindow

Installer

The installer should configure the OS to associate *.webapp files with Prism. This means that when you double-click or launch a *.webapp file, Prism is launched and automatically opens the web application.

Current Windows and Mac installs automatically associate *.webapp with Prism.

One interesting side effect is that after this change, you can select a link to a .webapp file in a Web Page and you get it run by Prism - in IE this runs anywhere, but this won't work in Firefox unless the webapp is being issued with an appropriate MIME type on the server: application/x-webrunner works (see here for an example).

Installs

Prism is available as an extension for Firefox 3 or as a standalone application.

Beta version

Beta 1.0b2

Beta 1.0b1

Latest version

Old version

NOTE: "bash: ./prism: No such file or directory" error on 64-bit Linux (Ubuntu Gutsy Gibbon) occurs if you do not have the "ia32-libs" package installed. Installing the package with "sudo aptitude install ia32-libs" resolves the issue.

Bookmarklet

Prism Bookmarklet Experiment: prismspectrum.com/bookmarklet (generates webapps on-the-fly via web)

Bundles

User Contributed Bundles

Contributing

Blog Posts

Mozilla Prism : Web-приложения на рабочем столе (Russian)

Site-Specific Browsers

How to install Flash player in Mozilla Prism

ThansCorner: Mozilla Prism - Webrunner with Pazzaz

Mozilla Prism - A Revolution in Web Apps

ThansCorner: Mozilla WebRunner 0.7

Site Specific Browsers

WebRunner

Using WebRunner

WebRunner + Gears = Offline Desktop Reader

WebRunner 0.5

WebRunner 0.5 - Mac Support

WebRunner 0.5 - Linux Install

WebRunner, Google Reader, and Google Notebook

Distraction Free GTD - 32+ web app files for online todo lists

Mozilla WebRunner: a one-window, tabless browser with no URL bar

WebRunner becomes Prism - A Mozilla Labs Project

Mozilla Labs: Prism

Alex Faaborg: Prism

Mozilla Prism: Bringing Web Apps to the Desktop

Everyone should use Site Specific Browsers

Mozilla Prism Portable (Spanish)

Prism, l'avenir des applications Web selon Mozilla (French)

Mozilla Prism : bundle custom Google Reader + Talk (French)

Mozilla Prism : arthuran.net (Thai)