| assets | ||
| librewolf-portable | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile | ||
| mk.py | ||
| README.md | ||
| release | ||
| source_release | ||
| version | ||
LibreWolf for windows
- download latest release
- Visit the FAQ.
- Install via chocolatey:
choco install librewolf - or install via winget:
winget install librewolf - If your LibreWolf crashes on startup, you probably miss the right Visual C++ Runtime. You want the Visual Studio 2015, 2017 and 2019 version for x64, which would be this file.
- The .zip files are 'portable zip files' that allows for a user profile in the extracted zip file folders. It is self-contained.
Where to submit tickets
- For all about:config and librewolf.cfg issues, go here: [settings repository].
- For all other issues and setup/install issues, go here: [issues for windows repository].
Community links
- [reddit] - r/LibreWolf 😺
- [gitter], and the same room on matrix (element.io).
- The install instructions for Windows on librewolf.net.
Community contributions
- Guillaume created a windows updater script for the Task Scheduler. You might find this handy, and it can be found here.
Compiling the windows version
This segment is for people who want to build LibreWolf for themselves. The build of the LibreWolf source tarball is in public CI, so you can use that. Given that you have followed the steps in the Mozilla setup guide:
Once that works, you can check out and compile LibreWolf like this:
git clone https://gitlab.com/librewolf-community/browser/windows.git
cd windows
make fetch build
Currently a bug in ./mach package makes this build fail, but it did produce the distribution .zip file that we're after. So after this, you can just:
make artifacts
This will produce the -setup.exe and portable .zip. Have fun!
Uploading a release
To actually submit these artifacts to the Windows repository as release files, use:
python3 mk.py upload <token>
This would involve having a valid token, ofcourse, but also something more: Git for Windows. From this package, we only need sha256sum.exe to calculate our checksums. Mozilla provides only md5sum.exe in their very old version of the mingw tools. Simply installing Git won't be enough to get sha256sum.exe in our path, the C:\mozilla-build\start-shell.bat file needs a little tweak at line 55, to read:
SET "PATH=%PATH%;!GITDIR!;c:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin"
This should put sha256sum.exe in your path.