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Speed Up Ubuntu Firefox — For Real!
June 29, 2009 319 views 3 comments
So I was getting a bit frustrated with the responsiveness of my Ubuntu Firefox when compared to the Firefox installed on my Windows machine. I’d tried everything I could find, from about:config tweaks to disabling IPv6 support, but still Firefox remained one area where the Windows experience was actually noticeably faster.
So I did some further research. Turns out the default installed version of Ubuntu’s Firefox has Pango, a font and script smoothing library, enabled by default. I’m all for smooth fonts, but it appears Pango can slow down Firefox’s performances by as much as 45%.
But don’t just take my word for it. Check out some complaints from other people regarding Pango.
To disable pango, just add the following line to your .bashrc or .bash_profile file (located in your home directory):
export MOZ_DISABLE_PANGO=1
Re-source the file and restart Firefox to get a noticeable increase in speed.
-Chris
Disclaimer: This fix affects the default, packaged installation of Firefox on Ubuntu installations. If you’ve upgraded your Firefox install manually (ie: upgrading to this week’s release of Firefox 3.5), you most likely won’t have Pango enabled at all.
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Nice. Guess that's why Firefox is so much faster since I upgraded. Thanks for the tip.
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"History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake."
~ Stephen Dedalus
Ulysses by James Joyce
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oh this is brilliant. best performance boon to firefox i've ever tried!
i switch off anti-aliasing wherever i can, it's a waste of performance, all i need do is move a foot further back from the screen, and everything appears "anti-aliased" on their own anyway.

in honour of Aaron H. Swartz,
make liberating JSTOR (and similar)'s database(s) of knowledge from behind paywalls your #1 priority,
and keep making the world a better place.
live up to what he lived for.
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This is the most noticeable difference in the speed of Firefox that I've seen in some time. Thank you for sharing 
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Hello friends!
Thnaks for sharing.
This tips is really efficient
!
A+ Francis.
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Re-source the file and restart Firefox to get....
pardon my n00bish-ness, but what is "re-sourcing" the file? 
n00b~ness, evolving at a glacial pace
"I don't have an internet-addiction....I'm just trying to get to the end of it."
--------------------Registered Linux User #494414--------------------
Dell D420 | 1.2Ghz Core Duo | 2Gb Ram | Intel 950GM | Kick~ass #! Box
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re-executing the .bashrc by running
. ~/.bashrcor just start a new xterm, and run firefox from that.
I will try it myself, but does text look any worse with this setting. Any problems noticed?
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oh, &*&*^%#! guess who is still running FF3.5 from the mozilla download, rather than upgrading the ubuntu package - ie "firefox" runs 3.0.10
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Happy that this tip interested you :-)
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Just done it, Firefox is much faster now. Thanks.
Running Crunchbang on eee pc 701 and Dell Mini 10v.
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........ does text look any worse with this setting. Any problems noticed?
imo, things look better. crisper. every pixel in it's correct place. to me, this feels more like it was intended. anti-aliasing is just fancyness for plush graphics. i put performance before aesthetics... at least where aesthetics are going to cause noticeable performance knocks.
i'll leave the anti-aliasing for prerendered graphics (like when i play with the gimp n put text on a background), and keep them well away from anywhere they need to be making demands of my processor. leaving the processor for doing the stuff i want/need it to. ... like fancy gimp filters. 
Last edited by Digit (2009-08-19 01:15:25)
in honour of Aaron H. Swartz,
make liberating JSTOR (and similar)'s database(s) of knowledge from behind paywalls your #1 priority,
and keep making the world a better place.
live up to what he lived for.
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Thanks!!
Linux user #366129
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