Goanna (software)
| Goanna | |
|---|---|
| Developer | M. C. Straver[1] |
| Initial release | January 2016[2] |
| Written in | C++ |
| Type | Browser engine |
| License | MPL 2.0 |
| Website | www |
Goanna is an open-source browser engine and part of Unified XUL Platform that was forked from Mozilla's Gecko.[3] It is used in the Pale Moon and Basilisk browsers, the Interlink mail client, and other UXP-based applications.[4][5]
History
[edit]Goanna as an independent fork of Gecko was first released in January 2016.[2] The project's founder and lead developer, M. C. Straver,[1] cited technical- and trademark-related motives to do this in the context of Pale Moon's increasing divergence from Firefox.[6][7] There are two significant aspects of Goanna's divergence: it does not have any of the Rust language components that were added to Gecko during Mozilla's Quantum project,[8][9] and applications that use Goanna always run in single-process, multi-threaded mode, whereas Firefox became a multi-process application.[10][11]
References
[edit]- ^ a b M.C. Straver. "About Moonchild Productions". Archived from the original on 2017-03-13. Retrieved 2018-04-19.
- ^ a b "Release notes for old versions of Pale Moon". palemoon.org.
- ^ M.C. Straver. "The Goanna layout engine". Pale Moon website. Archived from the original on 2023-01-24. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ "UXP vs goanna". forum.palemoon.org.
- ^ "There is only XUL". Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ "Introducing Goanna". Pale Moon forum. M.C. Straver. 2015-06-22. Retrieved 2017-02-10.
- ^ Brinkmann, Martin (2015-06-22). "Pale Moon to switch from Gecko to Goanna rendering engine". ghacks.net. Retrieved 2017-11-25.
- ^ "Basilisk web browser". basilisk-browser.org. Retrieved 2018-04-18.
- ^ "Quantum". MozillaWiki. Retrieved 2018-04-18.
- ^ "Multiprocess Firefox". Mozilla Developer Network. Archived from the original on 4 September 2015. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
- ^ "Multi-process, or: the drawbacks nobody ever talks about". Pale Moon forum. M.C. Straver. 2017-11-20. Archived from the original on 2020-11-11. Retrieved 24 August 2018.