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Frequently asked questions

  1. What is qutebrowser based on?

    qutebrowser uses Python, Qt and PyQt.

    The concept of it is largely inspired by dwb and Vimperator. Many actions and key bindings are similar to dwb.

  2. Why another browser?

    It might be hard to believe, but I didn’t find any browser which I was happy with, so I started to write my own. Also, I needed a project to get into writing GUI applications with Python and Qt/PyQt.

    Read the next few questions to find out why I was unhappy with existing software.

  3. What’s wrong with dwb/vimprobable/luakit/jumanji/…​ (projects based on WebKitGTK)?

    Most of them are based on the WebKitGTK+ WebKit1 API, which causes a lot of crashes. As the GTK API using WebKit1 is deprecated, these bugs are never going to be fixed.

    When qutebrowser was created, the newer WebKit2 API lacked basic features like proxy support, and almost no projects have started porting to WebKit2. In the meantime, this situation has improved a bit, but there are still only a few projects which have some kind of WebKit2 support (see the list of alternatives).

    qutebrowser uses Qt and QtWebEngine by default (and supports QtWebKit optionally). QtWebEngine is based on Google’s Chromium. With an up-to-date Qt, it has much more man-power behind it than WebKitGTK+ has, and thus supports more modern web features - it’s also arguably more secure.

  4. What’s wrong with Firefox and Pentadactyl/Vimperator?

    Firefox likes to break compatibility with addons on each upgrade, gets slower and more bloated with every upgrade, and has some horrible ideas lately.

    Also, developing addons for it is a nightmare.

  5. What’s wrong with Chromium and Vimium?

    The Chrome plugin API doesn’t seem to allow much freedom for plugin writers, which results in Vimium not really having all the features you’d expect from a proper minimal, vim-like browser.

  6. Why Python?

    I enjoy writing Python since 2011, which made it one of the possible choices. I wanted to use Qt because of QtWebKit so I didn’t have many other choices. I don’t like C++ and can’t write it very well, so that wasn’t an alternative.

  7. But isn’t Python too slow for a browser?

    No. I believe efficiency while coding is a lot more important than efficiency while running. Also, most of the heavy lifting of qutebrowser is done by Qt and WebKit in C++, with the GIL released.

  8. Is qutebrowser secure?

    Most security issues are in the backend (which handles networking, rendering, JavaScript, etc.) and not qutebrowser itself.

    qutebrowser uses QtWebEngine by default. QtWebEngine is based on Google’s Chromium. While Qt only updates to a new Chromium release on every minor Qt release (all ~6 months), every patch release backports security fixes from newer Chromium versions. In other words: As long as you’re using an up-to-date Qt, you should be recieving security updates on a regular basis, without qutebrowser having to do anything. Chromium’s process isolation and sandboxing features are also enabled as a second line of defense.

    QtWebKit is also supported as an alternative backend, but hasn’t seen new releases in a while. It also doesn’t have any process isolation or sandboxing.

    Security issues in qutebrowser’s code happen very rarely (as per March 2018, there has been one security issue caused by qutebrowser in over four years) and are fixed timely. To report security bugs, please contact me directly at mail@qutebrowser.org, GPG ID 0x916eb0c8fd55a072.

  9. Is there an adblocker?

    There is a host-based adblocker which takes /etc/hosts-like lists. A "real" adblocker has a big impact on browsing speed and RAM usage, so implementing support for AdBlockPlus-like lists is currently not a priority.

  10. How do I play Youtube videos with mpv?

    You can easily add a key binding to play youtube videos inside a real video player - optionally even with hinting for links:

    :bind m spawn mpv {url}
    :bind M hint links spawn mpv {hint-url}

    Note that you might need an additional package (e.g. youtube-dl on Archlinux) to play web videos with mpv.

    There is a very useful script for mpv, which emulates "unique application" functionality. This way you can add links to the mpv playlist instead of playing them all at once.

    It also works nicely with rapid hints:

    :bind m spawn umpv {url}
    :bind M hint links spawn umpv {hint-url}
    :bind ;M hint --rapid links spawn umpv {hint-url}
  11. How do I use qutebrowser with mutt?

    Due to a Qt limitation, local files without .html extensions are "downloaded" instead of displayed, see #566. You can work around this by using this in your mailcap:

        text/html; mv %s %s.html && qutebrowser %s.html >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; needsterminal;
  12. What is the difference between bookmarks and quickmarks?

    Bookmarks will always use the title of the website as their name, but with quickmarks you can set your own title.

    For example, if you bookmark multiple food recipe websites and use :open, you have to type the title or address of the website.

    When using quickmark, you can give them all names, like foodrecipes1, foodrecipes2 and so on. When you type :open foodrecipes, you will see a list of all the food recipe sites, without having to remember the exact website title or address.

  13. How do I use spell checking?

    Configuring spell checking in qutebrowser depends on the backend in use (see #700 for a more detailed discussion).

    For QtWebKit:

    1. Install qtwebkit-plugins.

    2. Note: with QtWebKit reloaded you may experience some issues. See #10.

    3. The dictionary to use is taken from the DICTIONARY environment variable. The default is en_US. For example to use Dutch spell check set DICTIONARY to nl_NL; you can’t use multiple dictionaries or change them at runtime at the moment. (also see the README file for qtwebkit-plugins).

    4. Remember to install the hunspell dictionaries if you don’t have them already (most distros should have packages for this).

    For QtWebEngine:

    1. Make sure your versions of PyQt and Qt are 5.8 or higher.

    2. Use dictcli.py script to install dictionaries. Run the script with -h for the parameter description.

    3. Set spellcheck.languages to the desired list of languages, e.g.: :set spellcheck.languages "['en-US', 'pl-PL']"

  14. How do I use Tor with qutebrowser?

    Start tor on your machine, and do :set content.proxy socks://localhost:9050/ in qutebrowser. Note this won’t give you the same amount of fingerprinting protection that the Tor Browser does, but it’s useful to be able to access .onion sites.

  15. Why does J move to the next (right) tab, and K to the previous (left) one?

    One reason is because dwb did it that way, and qutebrowser’s keybindings are designed to be compatible with dwb’s. The rationale behind it is that J is "down" in vim, and K is "up", which corresponds nicely to "next"/"previous". It also makes much more sense with vertical tabs (e.g. :set tabs.position left).

  16. What’s the difference between insert and passthrough mode?

    They are quite similar, but insert mode has some bindings (like Ctrl-e to open an editor) while passthrough mode only has escape bound. It might also be useful to rebind escape to something else in passthrough mode only, to be able to send an escape keypress to the website.

  17. Why takes it longer to open an URL in qutebrowser than in chromium?

    When opening an URL in an existing instance the normal qutebrowser Python script is started and a few PyQt libraries need to be loaded until it is detected that there is an instance running where the URL is then passed to. This takes some time. One workaround is to use this script and place it in your $PATH with the name "qutebrowser". This script passes the URL via an unix socket to qutebrowser (if its running already) using socat which is much faster and starts a new qutebrowser if it is not running already. Also check if you want to use webengine as backend in line 17 and change it to your needs.

  18. How do I make qutebrowser use greasemonkey scripts?

    There is currently no UI elements to handle managing greasemonkey scripts. All management of what scripts are installed or disabled is done in the filesystem by you. qutebrowser reads all files that have an extension of .js from the <data>/greasemonkey/ folder and attempts to load them. Where <data> is the qutebrowser data directory shown in the Paths section of the page displayed by :version. If you want to disable a script just rename it, for example, to have .disabled on the end, after the .js extension. To reload scripts from that directory run the command :greasemonkey-reload.

    Troubleshooting: to check that your script is being loaded when :greasemonkey-reload runs you can start qutebrowser with the arguments --debug --logfilter greasemonkey,js and check the messages on the program’s standard output for errors parsing or loading your script. You may also see javascript errors if your script is expecting an environment that we fail to provide.

    Note that there are some missing features which you may run into:

    1. Some scripts expect GM_xmlhttpRequest to ignore Cross Origin Resource Sharing restrictions, this is currently not supported, so scripts making requests to third party sites will often fail to function correctly.

    2. If your backend is a QtWebEngine version 5.8, 5.9 or 5.10 then regular expressions are not supported in @include or @exclude rules. If your script uses them you can re-write them to use glob expressions or convert them to @match rules. See the wiki for more info.

    3. Any greasemonkey API function to do with adding UI elements is not currently supported. That means context menu extentensions and background pages.

Troubleshooting

Unable to view flash content.

If you have flash installed for on your system, it’s necessary to enable plugins to use the flash plugin. Using the command :set content.plugins true in qutebrowser will enable plugins. Packages for flash should be provided for your platform or it can be obtained from Adobe.

Experiencing freezing on sites like duckduckgo and youtube.

This issue could be caused by stale plugin files installed by mozplugger if mozplugger was subsequently removed. Try exiting qutebrowser and removing ~/.mozilla/plugins/mozplugger*.so. See Issue #357 for more details.

When using QtWebEngine, qutebrowser reports "Render Process Crashed" and the console prints a traceback on Gentoo Linux or another Source-Based Distro

As stated in GCC’s Website GCC 6 has introduced some optimizations that could break non-conforming codebases, like QtWebEngine.
As a workaround, you can disable the nullpointer check optimization by adding the -fno-delete-null-pointer-checks flag while compiling.
On gentoo, you just need to add it into your make.conf, like this:

CFLAGS="... -fno-delete-null-pointer-checks"
CXXFLAGS="... -fno-delete-null-pointer-checks"

And then re-emerging qtwebengine with:

emerge -1 qtwebengine
Unable to view DRM content (Netflix, Spotify, etc.).

You will need to install widevine and set qt.args to point to it. Qt 5.9 currently only supports widevine up to Chrome version 61.

On Arch, simply install qt5-webengine-widevine from the AUR and run:

:set qt.args '["ppapi-widevine-path=/usr/lib/qt/plugins/ppapi/libwidevinecdmadapter.so"]'
:restart

For other distributions, download the chromium tarball and widevine-cdm zip from the AUR page, extract libwidevinecdmadapter.so and libwidevinecdm.so files, respectively, and move them to the ppapi plugin directory in your Qt library directory (create it if it does not exist).

Lastly, set your qt.args to point to that directory and restart qutebrowser:

:set qt.args '["ppapi-widevine-path=/usr/lib64/qt5/plugins/ppapi/libwidevinecdmadapter.so"]'
:restart
My issue is not listed.

If you experience any segfaults or crashes, you can report the issue in the issue tracker or using the :report command. If you are reporting a segfault, make sure you read the guide on how to report them with all needed information.