Easily turn on Java in Firefox
X
This article was co-authored by wikiHow staff writer, Jack Lloyd. Jack Lloyd is a Technology Writer and Editor for wikiHow. He has over two years of experience writing and editing technology-related articles. He is technology enthusiast and an English teacher.
The wikiHow Tech Team also followed the article's instructions and verified that they work.
This article has been viewed 370,878 times.
Learn more...
This wikiHow teaches you how to turn on Java support in Firefox, both on a per-website basis and across the entire browser, as well as how to enable JavaScript for your Firefox browser. You can enable both Java and JavaScript in the desktop version of Firefox.
Steps
Method 1
Method 1 of 3:
Allowing Java Content on a Website
-
1Open Firefox. Its app icon resembles an orange fox wrapped around a blue globe.
-
2Go to a site that uses Java. If there's a particular site that you want to access using Java, go to that site.Advertisement
-
3Wait for a Java prompt to appear. You should see a link in the middle of the page (or the Java content area) that says "Activate Java" or something similar.[1]
-
4Click the "Activate Java" link. It should be on or near the Java content that you want to load.
- If you see a message that says Java is "unsupported", "disabled", "not installed", or something similar instead of the "Activate Java" link, you cannot run the site in question on Firefox.
-
5Click Allow Now when prompted. It should appear in the upper-left side of the Firefox window. This will reload the website with the Java content enabled.
- You can also click Allow and Remember to place the site on Firefox's "Allowed" list.
Advertisement
Method 2
Method 2 of 3:
Enabling All Java Content
-
1Understand the limitations of this method. Due to security issues, current versions of Firefox do not support Java, nor will future versions. To enable Java content, you'll have to install an old, 32-bit version of Firefox and then manually add the Java plugin. This is possible on Windows computers, but Firefox for Mac defaults to 64-bit, making it impossible to install Java for Firefox on a Mac.[2]
- Closing and re-opening Firefox may result in Firefox updating, which will render Java unusable.
- Using an old version of Firefox increases the risk of contracting a computer virus or running into malware.
- You can never update your old version of Firefox, as doing so will remove your Java support.
-
2Open the Java website. Go to https://java.com/en/download/ in a browser. You'll need to download and install Java before you can install it as a plugin in Firefox.
-
3Download and install Java. To do so:
- Click Free Java Download
- Click Agree and Start Free Download
- Double-click the downloaded Java setup file.
- Click Yes when prompted.
- Click Install at the bottom of the Java window.
-
4Open the Firefox 51 download page. Go to https://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/firefox/releases/51.0b9/ in a browser. This is where you can download the last version of Firefox that supported Java.
-
5Select a 32-bit link. Click the firefox-51.0b9.win32.sdk.zip link near the bottom of the list of links on this page.
-
6Open the downloaded ZIP folder. Double-click the ZIP folder to do so.
-
7Extract the ZIP folder's contents. To do this:
- Click the Extract tab at the top of the window.
- Click Extract all in the resulting toolbar.
- Click Extract at the bottom of the pop-up window.
-
8Open the extracted folder. Double-click the firefox-51.0b9.win32.sdk folder (not the ZIP one) to open it.
-
9Open the firefox-sdk folder. It's the only folder in the window.
-
10Open the bin folder. Double-click this folder, which is near the top of the window, to do so.
-
11Scroll down and double-click the Firefox app icon. It's near the middle of the page. This will prompt the Firefox 51 app to open.
-
12Disable automatic updates. Type about:config into the Firefox address bar and press ↵ Enter, then do the following:
- Click I accept the risk! when prompted.
- Click the search bar at the top of the page.
- Type in app.update.auto
- Double-click the app.update.auto result to change its value from "true" to "false".
- Be sure to click Not now or Ask later if ever prompted to update.
-
13Click ☰. It's in the upper-right side of the window. A menu will appear.
-
14Click Add-ons. This puzzle piece-shaped icon is in the menu. Doing so will open the Add-Ons page.
-
15Click the Plugins tab. It's on the left side of the page.
-
16Find the "Java(TM) Platform" option. You'll usually find this option near the bottom of the page.
-
17Click the "Ask to Activate" drop-down box. It's to the right of the "Java(TM) Platform" heading. A drop-down menu will appear.
-
18Click Always Activate. This option is in the drop-down menu. Doing so will activate Java for any website that you visit in this version of Firefox, though you must be careful not to update Firefox at all.
- If you accidentally update Firefox or an update gets pushed through, you can reinstall Firefox 51 by deleting the firefox-51.0b9.win32.sdk folder (not the ZIP version), opening the ZIP folder of the same name and re-extracting it, and then re-opening the Firefox 51 app from within the bin folder.
Advertisement
Method 3
Method 3 of 3:
Enabling JavaScript
-
1Open Firefox. Its app icon resembles an orange fox wrapped around a blue globe.
-
2Go to the configuration page. Type in about:config and press ↵ Enter to do so.
-
3Click I accept the risk! when prompted. It's a blue button in the middle of the page.
-
4Search for the JavaScript option. Click the search bar, then type in javascript.enabled to search for the matching result.
-
5Review the JavaScript value. If you see "true" below the "value" heading that's on the right side of the page, JavaScript is currently enabled; this is the default Firefox setting.
- If you see "false" below the "value" heading, proceed.
-
6Change the JavaScript value to "true" if necessary. Double-click javascript.enabled near the top of the page. You should see the status below the "value" heading change to "true".
Advertisement
Warnings
- Future versions of Firefox will most likely not support Java.⧼thumbs_response⧽
Advertisement
References
About This Article
Advertisement