Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

autocomplete no longer working, what happened to nsLoginManager.js?

more options

I used to have a modification to nsLoginManager.js in the function _isAutocompleteDisabled() which forced a "return false". This was wonderful at remembering passwords for *all* sites, even those that set autocomplete=off.

Now, I'm running Firefox 3.6.13 (Firefox for Ubuntu) and I can't seem to find this fine any longer.

Where is the function _isAutoCompleteDisabled() now?

Or, is there another way (Not a bookmarklet) to force autocomplete to ON irrespective of the sites preferences?

I used to have a modification to nsLoginManager.js in the function _isAutocompleteDisabled() which forced a "return false". This was wonderful at remembering passwords for *all* sites, even those that set autocomplete=off. Now, I'm running Firefox 3.6.13 (Firefox for Ubuntu) and I can't seem to find this fine any longer. Where is the function _isAutoCompleteDisabled() now? Or, is there another way (Not a bookmarklet) to force autocomplete to ON irrespective of the sites preferences?

All Replies (5)

more options

If you do not want to use the bookmarklet then you have to use a Greasemonkey script that works similar as the bookmarklet and removes the autocomplete=off directive.

more options

Well, that wasn't the question.

Is nsLoginManager.js still around and is there a function like _isAutoCompleteDisabled() or a way to accomplish this other than a bookmarklet.

-amrith

Modified by amrith

more options

I also dearly miss this solution- forcing that function to return false made life easier by autocompleting all fields, and probably sped up Firefox to boot (if only marginally). By contrast, using a GreaseMonkey script is only going to slow things down. It doesn't seem like the right solution to me.

more options

Just to to inform you all.

The nsLoginManager.js file is stored in the file omni.jar

This file is just a zip file that you can open and edit. On Linux a program like MidNite commander (mc) makes it possible to edit this file on the fly. Once you open it you'll see a directory called "components" it's in there. Just edit it and you'll be able to use firefox like before.

more options

Is that solution still valid in FF8?