Allan
Allan

Reputation: 2606

Javascript that detects Firebug?

What's a surefire way of detecting whether a user has Firebug enabled?

Upvotes: 67

Views: 16876

Answers (7)

Hao Dong
Hao Dong

Reputation: 53

Currently, the window.console.firebug has been removed by latest firebug version. because firebug is an extension based JavaScript debugger, Which defined some new function or object in window.console. So most times, you can only use this new defined functions to detection the running status of firebug.

such as

if(console.assert(1) === '_firebugIgnore') alert("firebug is running!"); 
if((console.log+'''').indexOf('return Function.apply.call(x.log, x, arguments);') !== -1)  alert("firebug is running!");

You may test these approach in each firebug.

Best wishes!

Upvotes: 0

Andreas Grech
Andreas Grech

Reputation: 108050

Original answer:

Check for the console object (created only with Firebug), like such:

if (window.console && window.console.firebug) {
  //Firebug is enabled
}

Update (January 2012):

The Firebug developers have decided to remove window.console.firebug. You can still detect the presence of Firebug by duck typing like

if (window.console && (window.console.firebug || window.console.exception)) {
  //Firebug is enabled
}

or various other approaches like

if (document.getUserData('firebug-Token')) ...
if (console.log.toString().indexOf('apply') != -1) ...
if (typeof console.assert(1) == 'string') ...

but in general, there should be no need to actually do so.

Upvotes: 86

skagedal
skagedal

Reputation: 2411

As of Firebug version 1.9.0, console.firebug is no longer defined because of privacy concerns; see release notes, bug report. This breaks the above mentioned methods. Indeed, it changes the answer to Allan's question to "there is no way"; if there is another way, it's considered a bug.

The solution instead is to check for the availability of console.log or whatever it is you want to use or replace.

Here is a suggestion for a replacement for the kind of code that David Brockman is presenting above, but one that doesn't remove any existing functions.

(function () {
    var names = ['log', 'debug', 'info', 'warn', 'error', 'assert', 'dir', 'dirxml', 
                'group', 'groupEnd', 'time', 'timeEnd', 'count', 'trace', 'profile', 'profileEnd'];

    if (window.console) {
        for (var i = 0; i < names.length; i++) {
            if (!window.console[names[i]]) {
                window.console[names[i]] = function() {};
            }
        }
    } else {
        window.console = {};
        for (var i = 0; i < names.length; i++) {
            window.console[names[i]] = function() {};
        }
    }
})();

Upvotes: 9

Stephan Kristyn
Stephan Kristyn

Reputation: 15752

Keep in mind in Chrome window.console also returns true or [Object console].

Furthermore, I would check whether Firebug is installed with

if (window.console.firebug !== undefined) // firebug is installed

Below is what I get in Safari and Chrome, no firebug installed.

if (window.console.firebug) // true
if (window.console.firebug == null) // true
if (window.console.firebug === null) // false

The Is-True and Is-Not Operators obviously do type coercion, which should be avoided in JavaScript.

Upvotes: 2

ceejayoz
ceejayoz

Reputation: 180177

If firebug is enabled, window.console will not be undefined. console.firebug will return the version number.

Upvotes: 20

David Brockman
David Brockman

Reputation: 567

You can use something like this to prevent firebug calls in your code from causing errors if it's not installed.

if (!window.console || !console.firebug) {
    (function (m, i) {
        window.console = {};
        while (i--) {
            window.console[m[i]] = function () {};
        }
    })('log debug info warn error assert dir dirxml trace group groupEnd time timeEnd profile profileEnd count'.split(' '), 16);
}

Upvotes: 3

Kent Fredric
Kent Fredric

Reputation: 57414

It may be impossible to detect.

Firebug has multiple tabs, which may be disabled separately, and, are now not enabled by default.

GMail as it is can only tell whether or not I have the "console" tab enabled. Probing further than this would likely require security circumvention, and you don't want to go there.

Upvotes: 4

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