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How to get rid of unrequested invasive rendered area debugging overlay?

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  • Paskiausią atsakymą parašė F0X

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After updating my openSUSE Firefox package from version 122 to 123 every frame inside each window started to have weird grey overlay of scrollable area. I failed to find any description of such a thing happening, let alone how to get rid of it. I tried removing build-in distro-default preferences and had complete audit of all my custom preferences in about:config but none changed that behavior. I even updated to 124b4 but this also haven't changed anything. Naturally, nuking entire profile is not an option, I might as well replace the whole browser. So, how do I get rid of this thing?

After updating my openSUSE Firefox package from version 122 to 123 every frame inside each window started to have weird grey overlay of scrollable area. I failed to find any description of such a thing happening, let alone how to get rid of it. I tried removing build-in distro-default preferences and had complete audit of all my custom preferences in about:config but none changed that behavior. I even updated to 124b4 but this also haven't changed anything. Naturally, nuking entire profile is not an option, I might as well replace the whole browser. So, how do I get rid of this thing?
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Chosen solution

Change apz.minimap.enabled to false in about:config. This setting had been broken for many years until it was fixed in version 123 (Bug 1604280).

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You appear to be using userChrome.css and userContent.css. You can set toolkit.legacyUserProfileCustomizations.stylesheets => false in about:config to disable these files.

Start Firefox in Troubleshoot Mode to check if one of the extensions ("3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Extensions) or if hardware acceleration or if userChrome.css/userContent.css is causing the problem.

  • switch to the Default System theme: "3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Themes
  • do NOT click the "Refresh Firefox" button on the Troubleshoot Mode start window

You can set toolkit.legacyUserProfileCustomizations.stylesheets => false in about:config to disable these files.

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None of that got rid of the overlay. I also tried temporarily running new, empty profile and it did not have the overlay but this didn't clarify much.

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I'm running Leap and Tumbleweed and not able to replicate your issue on Distro, Mozilla, nor Waterfox. X11 or Wayland? Graphic driver info? lshw -numeric -C display You may have to install lshw or use infocenter to get the info.

Operating System: openSUSE Tumbleweed 20240226 KDE Plasma Version: 5.27.10 KDE Frameworks Version: 5.115.0 Qt Version: 5.15.12 Kernel Version: 6.7.6-1-default (64-bit) Graphics Platform: X11 Processors: 8 × Intel® Xeon® CPU E3-1535M v6 @ 3.10GHz Memory: 62.2 GiB of RAM Graphics Processor: Quadro P4000/PCIe/SSE2 Manufacturer: HP Product Name: HP ZBook 17 G4

Modified by jonzn4SUSE

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F0X said

None of that got rid of the overlay. I also tried temporarily running new, empty profile and it did not have the overlay but this didn't clarify much.

New profile is not showing the issue, sounds like an add-on issue.

Modified by jonzn4SUSE

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jonzn4SUSE said

I'm running Leap and Tumbleweed and not able to replicate your issue on Distro, Mozilla, nor Waterfox. X11 or Wayland? Graphic driver info? lshw -numeric -C display You may have to install lshw.

Well, good for you then. And I'm here have to write even this text behind a grey bar because it generated another one over the input window too.

Full lshw -numeric -C display shows whole bunch irrelevant BIOS-level stuff and your example is not from lshw's output at all. But my setup is typical X11/KDE with AMD Radeon RX580 and latest Mesa.

jonzn4SUSE said

New profile is not showing the issue, sounds like an add-on issue.

Except that "Troubleshooting Mode" supposed to disable them all and it still didn't help. And what kind of addon would even be that? I'm 80% certain that some Firefox's (or some toolkit's used by it, like GTK) built-in rendering debug option got flipped somewhere. Maybe even one that is not triggered by prefs but by some hardcoded condition.

Modified by F0X

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Okay.

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Chosen Solution

Change apz.minimap.enabled to false in about:config. This setting had been broken for many years until it was fixed in version 123 (Bug 1604280).

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zeroknight said

Change apz.minimap.enabled to false in about:config. This setting had been broken for many years until it was fixed in version 123 (Bug 1604280).

Thanks! I have no idea how & when this got flipped and had no forethought to search for 'map' keyword too. It's been ages since I was so helpless with a technical issue.

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