Шукати в статтях підтримки

Остерігайтеся нападів зловмисників. Mozilla ніколи не просить вас зателефонувати, надіслати номер телефону у повідомленні або поділитися з кимось особистими даними. Будь ласка, повідомте про підозрілі дії за допомогою меню “Повідомити про зловживання”

Learn More

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

  • 8 відповідей
  • 0 мають цю проблему
  • 3 перегляди
  • Остання відповідь від F0X

more options

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?
Прикріплені знімки екрана

Обране рішення

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).

Читати цю відповідь у контексті 👍 1

Усі відповіді (8)

more options

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.

Корисно?

more options

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.

Корисно?

more options

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

Змінено jonzn4SUSE

Корисно?

more options

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.

Змінено jonzn4SUSE

Корисно?

more options

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.

Змінено F0X

Корисно?

more options

Okay.

Корисно?

more options

Вибране рішення

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).

Корисно?

more options

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.

Корисно?

Запитати

Щоб відповідати на повідомлення, ви повинні ввійти у свій обліковий запис. Поставте нове питання, якщо ви ще не маєте облікового запису.