Ramblings of an old Doc
Published on March 14, 2015 By DrJBHL In Personal Computing

 

Lots of improvements! Using it now and it's faster.

Fixes/changes:

  • Overhauled WebGL. It now properly supports depth textures, shadow mapping and glow shaders.
    Note that older operating systems or older/embedded video processors may be limited in their support of these features.
  • Updated the ANGLE library to a much more current version.
  • Removed the crash reporter code completely to improve overall browser responsiveness and operation.
    Please note that a necessary victim of this has been the in-browser (devtools) SPS profiler because of its reliance on crash reporter data-gathering tools.
  • Removed the Mozilla Plugin Finder Service (no longer in use @Mozilla).
  • Android: removed the Mozilla "product announcements" service.
  • Re-added control of the number of concurrent tabs to be restored from a session withbrowser.sessionstore.max_concurrent_tabs (accepted values 1-10)
  • Significantly improved performance and accuracy of date/time/timer handling.
  • Significantly improved performance of the creation of DOM elements with plain text content.
  • Added several significant performance optimizations for arrays and strings in javascript.
  • Added several code performance optimizations and bugfixes in SVG, the presentation shell, SCTP, style gradients and CSS parsing routines. (Thanks, Axiomatic!)
  • Added an "Open link in current tab" context menu entry on links for UI consistency.
  • Updated styling of the browser with personas (lightweight themes) once more to improve display in tabs-on-top mode, improve overall legibility of tab text, and display of inverted close buttons on some controls on dark personas.
  • Added a special case check for the Flash plugin version check on Linux failing due to commas instead of periods in the version string.
  • Added Windows 10 compatibility in executable manifests.
  • Android: Fixed a crash on GL canvas surfaces.
  • Fixed incorrect Sync "howto" instruction links from the Sync dialogs.
  • Fixed the color of selected tabs in Linux when personas (lightweight themes) are in use that do not match the overall tone of the OS system theme.
  • Fixed a bug where a variable in parentheses would abort Javascript parsing.
  • Fixed a bug where the address bar would incorrectly be cleared.
  • Fixed padding issues for dropdown lists.
  • Fixed DNS lookups so proper record types are requested for IPv4 and IPv6.
Security fixes:
  • Disabled all RC4-based encryption ciphers by default. [More info]
  • Fixed several miscellaneous memory safety hazards.
    (applicable bugs related to CVE-2015-0835 and CVE-2015-0836)
  • Fixed loading of locally stored DLL files through the internal updater. (CVE-2015-0833)
  • Fixed a potential crash point in IndexedDB. (CVE-2015-0831) DiD
  • Fixed a double-free situation when using non-default memory allocators and a 0-length XHR. (CVE-2015-0828)
    Note: production builds of Pale Moon were never vulnerable.
  • Fixed a crash using DrawTarget in the Cairo graphics library. (CVE-2015-0824)
  • Fixed potential reading of local files through manipulation of form autocomplete. (CVE-2015-0822)
  • Fixed a potential PNG heap-overflow crash. DiD
  • Followed up on research regarding CVE-2014-8639 (see 25.2) and made cookie handling through proxies more restrictive again.

DiD This means that the fix is "Defense-in-Depth": It is a fix that does not apply to an actively exploitable vulnerability in Pale Moon, but prevents future vulnerabilities caused by the same code when surrounding code changes, exposing the problem.

If you have Pale Moon and have it set to auto update…no problems. If not, then Help> About Pale Moon.

If you haven’t gotten it, and want it: http://www.palemoon.org/ and go to “Downloads” on the options bar under the Moon.

Want to read a review? Excellent one: http://www.ghacks.net/2015/03/13/pale-moon-25-3/?_m=3n%2e0038%2e1547%2ehj0ao01hy5%2e1lpv

Happy Pi Day and A. Einstein’s birthday!


Comments (Page 2)
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on Mar 17, 2015

Sounds like perhaps PM can't keep up the pace for Adobe's updates...or, lacks something in the basic coding, for whatever reason. However, since it was designed especially for Windows, you'd think the basic code is compatible.

on Mar 17, 2015

Just heard about this browser for the first time. Being intrigued, I downloaded and installed it. I would switch over from Firefox but unfortunately, Roboform Pro doesn't work with it so I'm going to stick with Firefox. Hopefully, in the future they will make it compatible! Thanks for the heads up on this.

on Mar 17, 2015

I think it's ridiculous that it would support all browsers EXCEPT Pale Moon...what's the deal, I wonder?

on Mar 17, 2015

DrJBHL

I think it's ridiculous that it would support all browsers EXCEPT Pale Moon...what's the deal, I wonder?

 

No idea. I just sent them a support ticket asking if they would consider supporting it. Fingers crossed!

 

EDIT: I just received a reply from Roboform Support, this is what they said:

"Ivan replied (2015/03/17 02:31 pm EDT):
Thank you for your message,
Note: PaleMoon 64-bit is not supported by RoboForm yet.

To attach RoboForm to Palemoon x32:
Click RoboForm > Options > Browser Integration, uncheck the option 'Mozilla FireFox', you have the option 'Attach RoboForm to FireFox even if adapter is not installed' checked, please keep it checked and click OK.
To let RoboForm attach to PaleMoon, you have to keep running RoboForm taskbar icon in system tray. Open PaleMoon, click the RoboForm Taskbar icon -> Select Show Toolbar."

 

So at least the 32bit version is doable for now and the use of the word "yet" indicates they are going to get it to work. Hopefully soon.

on Mar 19, 2015

on Mar 19, 2015

I just tried installing the 32bit version on my work computer and Roboform works flawlessly there with the tip Ivan gave me. Still, I'd prefer having the 64bit version working, hopefully not too much longer!

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