Background and Browser Web Modules
F1, aka Firefox Share, lets users share links right from their browser. Here we work to make it easy to add/remove sharing providers, even by the user.
F1 will move towards using Browser Web Modules (WebMod). A WebMod is based on the service-discovery portion of Open Web Apps: a WebMod has a manifest which includes a list of supported services that the browser can hook into. For example, the Facebook WebMod might provide the link-send, image-send, and status-update services. F1 invokes the Facebook WebMod with action link-send when the user indicates, via F1, that he wishes to share a link with Facebook friends.
When F1 wishes to access sharing providers, it uses the WebMod framework to instantiate all relevant WebMods, each into its own iframe. F1 calls into the WebMod framework using a JavaScript API, and the WebMod framework communicates with each WebMod over postMessage. The key difference between a full-blown Open Web App and a WebMod is meant to enhance browser functionality, while an Open Web App exists to provide loosely-coupled functionality to web content. Thus, a WebMod is almost always headless, while an Open Web App almost always presents a UI. A WebMod is effectively a postMessage-based javascript API.
F1 will be a proving ground for WebMods, but also needs to be its own product. Thus, the complete WebMod architecture is described here, with generic pieces and F1-specifics carefully separated.
Architecture
The WebMod framework provides to F1 (and eventually to other browser features) a simple JavaScript API that mediates access to a number of service providers of a particular feature, in this case link sharing. A WebMod is defined by a manifest that includes:
- web origin (one WebMod per origin)
- list of features and, for each one, a URL that handles it
- an icon
Life Cycle
When a WebMod is needed for a particular feature, the WebMod Framework (WMF):
- creates an IFRAME and loads the prescribed WebMod URL into it.
- when the WebMod's page is fully loaded and ready, it indicates readiness by sending a message to the WMF.
- WMF and the WebMod engage in user authentication and potentially authorization (see below).
- WMF sends additional messages to the WebMod to fulfill the actual feature. The pattern and structure of these messages depend on the specific feature being implemented. For F1, the specifics of the API are defined below.
User Interface
In the basic WebMod scenario, each WebMod is only an API provider: all UI is handled by the feature mediator, in this case F1. WMF provides a channel between this feature mediator and the various implementor/providers of the API.
We will also consider the case of a WebMod where each provider is assigned some screen real-estate. The specifics of how the UI interactions are coordinated across the IFRAME boundary are TBD, but one aspect is clear: a WebMod with UI is a strict superset of a WebMod: authentication and authorization are still likely to require a popup to the provider's origin for trustworthiness.
Authentication
F1, or any other WMF feature mediator (e.g. image share), does not get involved in the user's authentication with the WebMod's backend server beyond coordinating the WebMod's UI needs. Specifically:
- WMF asks the WebMod its login status.
- the WebMod may return either
- a user-information blob, or
- a "need-to-login" message.
- When WMF receives a "need-to-login" message from the WebMod, it opens up a pop-up to the WebMod's preferred login URL, which is indicated as a parameter in the need-to-login message..
- The WebMod is then responsible for authenticating the user however it sees fit, in its own HTML content window, likely by prompting for username and password. (That said, OpenID, OAuth, Verified Email, client-side certs, ... can be used at this point.)
- Once a user has successfully logged in, the WebMod messages WMF back with an optional opaque credentials JavaScript object, which WMF stores securely. The use of credentials helps when a user wants to invoke the WebMod with different identities, e.g. two Twitter identities.
- WMF then messages the WebMod IFRAME with a login() call including the credentials object it received and stored. The WebMod should, at this point, respond with an ok message including user identity details (display name, username, potentially a profile photo URL, ..)
F1 WebMod APIs
The specific F1 WebMod API is documented separately:
Implementation Plan
How will F1 manage WebMods? Over time, this management will move from F1-specific to OWA-generic.
Version 1 -- Hard-Wired WebMods
In the first release, all F1 WebMods are hard-wired. Users are not able to add sharing providers, nor can they view a dashboard of WebMods. The modularity of the system is hidden from user view. F1 is self-contained, with no code dependence on Open Web Apps (the framework for WebMods). The list of available WebMods is update-able via F1 software updates.
The implementation of each Webmod is ideally done by corresponding partners, each responsible for their WebMod. That said, if needed, we can implement the WebMods on our own and use OAuth to bridge the API calls. We may need chrome-level permissions to allow WebMods to make OAuth calls directly from Firefox.
The focus of this version is the definition and refinement of the F1-specific link-sharing WebMod API, both in parameterizing the UI and in sending the shared link and associated message. We should ensure that our generalization matches existing major providers, and ideally a few non-major ones.
Version 2 -- Installable WebMods
In the second version, modularity begins to be exposed to the user. Long-tail providers can advertise a manifest which triggers a Firefox "install App" dialog, which adds a new WebMod, which is then available to F1 if that WebMod advertises the appropriate link-sharing feature. Firefox also displays a dashboard of Apps, where the user can disable existing WebMods.
By this point, the manifest specification and the link-sharing API definition should be quite stable. F1 continues to be independent, with OWA functionality built-in.
Version 3 -- Full OWAs
Eventually, once Open Web Apps are ready for prime-time, the OWA functionality takes over the WebMod and App management, the dashboard, and the WebMod/App Framework that mediates communication with WebMods. F1 then focuses on purely link sharing (and potentially other types of sharing by then).
If OWA functionality progresses sufficiently quickly, we will attempt to merge Versions 2 and 3 so that users are not faced with separate dashboards of apps, one for F1 and one for OWA.