How to enable delayed loading of tabs
How do I make Firefox Quantum 58.0.2 delay load the tabs?
It may only load tabs if I select a tab, just like it used to be.
The issue is that I have like 600 tabs in my session and Firefox Quantum has started trying to load all tabs at the same time which obviously fails when there is no more ram/swap left. In my case, it crashes once it reaches 30GB used.
So, Firefox Quantum is dead weight for me right now as I have no use for it without my tabs.
การตอบกลับทั้งหมด (2)
So you can't easily open Firefox and investigate because it will be tied up...
Could you start by checking or changing these Windows settings:
(1) Show hidden files and folders: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/14201/windows-show-hidden-files
(2) Show file extensions (e.g., .txt, .js): https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/tutorials/how-to-show-file-extensions-in-windows/
Now, we're going to check this file (don't double-click):
prefs.js
That is in your profile folder. To access that, see the part of this article about how to open the folder when you can't run Firefox: Profiles - Where Firefox stores your bookmarks, passwords and other user data.
You can open prefs.js in a text editor using either:
- right-click > Edit
- right-click > Open With > Notepad or Wordpad or your preferred text editor
In the file, look for this line. If this exists, it needs to be deleted (or the word false can be edited to true):
user_pref("browser.sessionstore.restore_on_demand", false);
If you found that line and deleted it, great, that will help. When saving, make sure to keep a plain text format.
Please repeat this process with the following optional file if you find it in your profile folder:
user.js
If you didn't find that line, hmm, why is Firefox loading all your tabs at once?!
Or, "Plan B" would be to temporarily hide all your session history files and check the browser.sessionstore.restore_on_demand preference on the about:config screen.
If you want to try that:
First, check or change these Windows settings:
(1) Show hidden files and folders: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/14201/windows-show-hidden-files
(2) Show file extensions (e.g., .txt, .js): https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/tutorials/how-to-show-file-extensions-in-windows/
Next, open your profile folder. To access that, see the part of this article about how to open the folder when you can't run Firefox: Profiles - Where Firefox stores your bookmarks, passwords and other user data.
(A) In your profile folder, look for these files and:
- sessionstore.jsonlz4 - right-click > Rename to sessionstoreOLD.jsonlz4
- sessionstore.js - right-click > Rename to sessionstoreOLD.js
- sessionstore.bak - right-click > Delete (this probably is really old)
(B) right-click the sessionstore-backups folder > Rename to sessionstore-backupsOLD
When you start Firefox, it should not find any previous session history, and just show your home page.
Then:
(1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button promising to be careful or accepting the risk.
(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste demand and pause while the list is filtered
(3) If the browser.sessionstore.restore_on_demand preference is bolded and "modified" or "user set" to false, double-click it to restore the default value of true
Then you'll need to exit Firefox and replace the useless new sessionstore.jsonlz4 file with a copy of the file you want Firefox to read at startup, giving it the sessionstore.jsonlz4 name.