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Releases: Alex313031/Thorium-Raspi

M128.0.6613.194 - 11th Release

01 Nov 08:22
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I have personally tested it to be working on a Raspberry Pi 4B and Qualcomm Laptop!

M128
Thorium 2024 UI "Th24" is complete. Please see the past 3 beta releases if you aren't up to speed about it. On top of those, we now:

  • Have the restored bookmarks folder icon used in the bookmarks ui and bookmarks bar
  • Fixed spacing of the new tab button
  • Added 180px as an option to the new custom-tab-width chrome flag
  • Tab separators are 2px again after I had temporarily reverted back to 1px
  • More WebUI stuff is reverted to its pre-Chrome 2023 appearance.
  • I am writing a full write-up/explainer on what Cr23 is, what Th24 is, and why I made it. It will have pictures to illustrate as well. It isn't finished yet but you can find it Here.

Now, other stuff:

  • New flag chrome://flags#classic-omnibox "classic omnibox". When enabled, the omnibox (i.e. url bar) takes on a more squareish shape similar to classic versions of Chromium/Chrome. It was adapted from the same flag in Supermium, but I adjusted the radius, and I fixed an issue with stuff not showing up quite right when the omnibox is focused, i.e. when the results are all showing up. Might make a pull request upstream.
  • The Thorium 2024 flag was added to "Chrome Labs" to make it easier to enable than going to chrome://flags. Just click the "beaker" icon (actually an Erlenmeyer flask lol) in the top bar, and you can enable it there.
  • New flag chrome://flags/#remove-tabsearch-button to remove the tab search button from the tab strip.
  • The bug on Linux where me setting it to the classic theme by default was causing crashes is now fixed.
  • I finally added some background music to the Chrome Dino game. You can hear it on chrome://dino
  • Added a new WebUI page chrome://eggs that has images from the easter egg contest on it.
  • I enabled the Customize Toolbar feature ahead of schedule (the official stable enabled by default release was in M129). This lets you add a bunch of stuff to the toolbar.
  • The size of the main menu button (aka the "hamburger menu" or "three dots menu") has been corrected to be smaller
  • Better compiler tuning on MacOS
  • "About Thorium" item in the main menu is now in a better place and doesn't have a blue "i" icon on it anymore.
  • New flag chrome://flags#transparent-tabs, which makes tabs semi-transparent (Windows only)
  • Limits of MV3 were removed. A MV3 extension like UBlock Origin Lite, if it were coded to take advantage of Thorium, now has limits on declarativeNetRequest that are similar to MV2. Thorium still intends to restore MV2 code when the time comes, but I thought this would be an interesting experiment. I might try to fork Ublock, so if you're interested in this, watch my GitHub account for a new repo.

M126.0.6478.246 - 10th Release

22 Aug 19:18
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M126

  • This is also Thorium's 30th major version anniversary. Very first Thorium was based on M96.
  • Skipped M125 because it was too old. I was house-sitting for my dad/stepmom while they were away on a month long trip. I didn't have access to my workstation which I really need to do anything more than minor development work.
  • kAllowWindowDragUsingSystemDragDrop was re-enabled at the source level. This should fix tab/window dragging issues on Wayland, but may cause other unforeseen bugs on Wayland. File bugs if appropriate. Can be disabled with the cmdline flag --disable-features=AllowWindowDragUsingSystemDragDrop
  • Google Hangouts component extension was removed, following concerns about privacy. However, if you use hangouts frequently and would like this extension back, see this ReadMe. Closes Alex313031/thorium#743, Alex313031/thorium#740, Alex313031/thorium#449, Alex313031/thorium#410
  • The Chrome Refresh 2023 UI is now the default.
  • I moved the tab search button back to the right of the tabstrip. I think it was a bad decision to put it on the left in the 2023 UI. However, if you prefer it on the left (to have Thorium's UI match Chrome's), enable the new chrome://flags/#left-aligned-tab-search-button flag I added.
  • Another performance bump due to some new PGO configs courtesy of @RobRich999. See this commit. In some limited testing it got better Speedometer 3.0 scores than Chrome.
  • libjxl updated to 0.10.3
  • The keep-all-history flag was fixed. It would sometimes corrupt dates of history entries when enabled.
  • Disabled some more "Privacy Sandbox" APIs
  • Manifest V2 support force enabled (Starting in M128 they are experimenting with disabling MV2). It will be completely removed in M136 (10 months from now), and when they finally do remove the actual code for loading MV2 extensions, it will be restored, because F**k Google! Even if it takes a crapload of work, I am determined to restore it, because without UBlock Origin working properly in Thorium, I wouldn't even want to use my own browser! If you want to use other Chromium based browsers, you will eventually be out of luck, and will either need to use Firefox, or find another Chromium fork that has MV2 support when the time comes.
  • New flag chrome://flags#revert-from-portable can be used to prevent data loss when reverting a user profile from portable mode to normal mode (i.e. when turning off the disable-encryption and disable-machine-id flags). Can also be used when moving the user profile from one machine to another. Read the flag description for details.

Two more things:
– I have created a new user survey for 2024. The more responses I get, the better, and it will be used to guide decisions about Thorium into Q4 of 2024. Take the 8 question quick survey here > https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/355TK88
– I am hosting an art/image contest! The winner's image will be displayed on the easter egg page, as well as the chrome://version page. It should be an art or clipart image. See details and requirements over here > https://thorium.rocks/contest

M124.0.6367.218 - 9th Release

17 May 13:10
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M124

  • AC3/E-AC3 Audio support restored. It was disabled in the last couple of versions due to ffmpeg changes. Dolby Atmos audio is also restored. Note that for ARM/ARM64 builds, it is still disabled, due to incompatibilities with how Chromium loads the libffmpeg library.
  • WebRTC (used for real-time communication like video chats, i.e. Zoom, for example) can now use H.265/HEVC (recent upstream Chromium feature) on devices without hardware decoding support (Thorium feature). This is good because H.265 compression means that you will have less stuttery streams if you are on a bandwidth limited connection.
  • Fingerprinting protection patch added. Note this isn't a safety blanket, and doesn't mean Thorium will remove all types of fingerprint tracking it just makes it better than normal Chromium/Chrome. I would like to expand on this in the next version by adding a setting to enable the Global Privacy Control header, alongside the "Do Not Track" setting, which is also enabled by default in Thorium.
  • Added flag to enable/disable Side Panel Journeys, which can be annoying. chrome://flags#side-panel-journeys
  • Added flag to enable/disable showing the built in internal extensions that are normally hidden. They are now hidden by default (like in normal Chromium), but can be re-enabled with chrome://flags#show-component-extension-options. I did this because I was getting too many issues with people wondering what they are, why they couldn't be removed, and if they were a security concern. These extensions are built in to every Chromium browser. Disabling them would remove support for the Web Store, viewing PDFs, and integrating with Google Hangouts. I added a patch from UnGoogled Chromium a while back to un-hide them, but it has led to more confusion than it is worth. Since most people don't care, they are now hidden again, but the flag is for people who want to inspect or debug them, or just want the transparency of showing all extensions that are loaded in the browser.
  • The Side Panel Chrome Customization feature now works even if Chrome Refresh 2023 UI is disabled (Thorium has it disabled by default). However, fixing this this led to an unforeseen minor issue, that I didn't catch until everything was already built. Even if Chrome Refresh 2023 is enabled with the chrome://flags/#chrome-refresh-2023 and chrome://flags/#customize-chrome-side-panel flags as mentioned in the M123 release, it still won't actually work unless you also pass the --disable-features=CustomizeChromeSidePanelNoChromeRefresh2023 flag. Since I didn't catch this until afterward, there is no GUI flag available on the chrome://flags page. You will need to specify it manually on the commandline, either from the terminal, or to make it permanent, by editing the shortcut (on Windows), or editing /usr/bin/thorium-browser (on Linux). Next release will fix this.
  • The entire browser now respects Gamma/Alpha settings that the user has set for the display (Windows only for now). It is unknown how this will play with Thorium's JPEG-XL support. Feedback requested.
  • New commandline flag to disable the custom Thorium DNS config. Normally, Thorium uses two patches, to make DNS queries more privacy respecting, and to use DNS over HTTPS (DoH) by default, which is more secure and can't be intercepted by "man in the middle" attackers. However, this was breaking some people's configurations, especially when they had manually set DNS options in the OS, or were using external third party apps that change DNS settings (like VPN services). So, if you pass the --disable-thorium-dns-config flag on the commandline, Thorium will use the default Chromium DNS configuration. You can make it permanent using the same steps as above. I will also make this a GUI flag in the next release.
  • 32 Bit Linux is now supported, however I am not going to be regularly building binaries. But it is at least supported at the source code level again. There is an M123 release available. Note that Ubuntu 16.04 is not supported.
  • FTP support restored! Chromium and Firefox both removed all support for ftp:// URLs back in 2021. This has always annoyed me, because alot of ftp servers are still around, and alot of old software is only downloadable from ftp servers. In addition, tools like wget and curl wont download from them by default. This made it really convoluted to download files from an ftp website, usually making the user have to download a third party app. FTP means "File Transfer Protocol", and it was used heavily on the web for serving download directories to people (Microsoft used to host updates on an ftp site, for example). Learn more about it Here.
    It is enabled by default, but can also be disabled by the restored flag chrome://flags/#enable-ftp. There are two minor bugs though. First, favicons don't work, so when you are on an ftp site, the tab will show the "dino" icon usually used when a site is not reachable. Second, directly clicking links doesn't work, and will instead land you on an "about:blank#blocked" page. To go to an ftp site, right click the link, and select "Copy link address", and then open a new tab, paste the link in the address bar, and press enter. I hope to resolve these in the next version. This makes Thorium the only modern browser that supports FTP anymore. Thorium also now registers as an FTP URL handler with the OS, but I have not tested if opening an ftp url in an external app will cause Thorium to open it correctly, or land you on that "about:blank#blocked" page. Feedback is requested. Thanks to @win32ss for modernizing some of the code, since obviously stuff has changed alot in the Chromium repo since 2021. I took his patches, and adapted/fixed them to work on the M124 Chromium revision(s).
  • I enabled a feature that is normally disabled, that allows you to configure more options for PWA (Progressive Web App) windows. See the settings while in a PWA to see the extra options.
  • Global Media Controls (this little icon in the top bar > Screenshot from 2024-05-17 03-00-16) can be disabled again. I had enabled a feature that updates the UI on ChromiumOS/ThoriumOS, but it had the unforeseen effect of force-enabling it on other platforms.
  • Major vulnerability CVE-2024-4671 is fixed in this version.

NOTE: Ubuntu 24.04 and Debian Sid are having issues with Chromium based stuff (including Electron), due to the sandbox (the chrome-sandbox binary). The .deb and .rpm should work, however, you will probably get a crash if you are using the portable .zip or .appimage on these OS versions. A workaround is to use the --no-sandbox flag, but this decreases security. See other potential workarounds Here. There is active work to fix this on the Ubuntu bug tracker. > https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/apparmor/+bug/2046844

M123.0.6312.133 - 8th Release

24 Apr 04:17
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M123

  • Enabled WebSQL by default (for things like Session Buddy 3)
  • More compiler optimizations in PGO (Linux-only for now) > Alex313031/thorium@acf69dd#diff-9b63dea0428a0efde7b9737c2b752678592868f64817cfbad4af4767d4bdfa84
  • More compiler optimizations (well, actually the removal of some LLVM flags) > Alex313031/thorium@c55c6b3
  • Disabled the ugly "Chrome Refresh 2023" UI by default Alex313031/thorium@ec8b741 however, if you decide you want it, set these two flags to true: chrome://flags/#chrome-refresh-2023 & chrome://flags/#customize-chrome-side-panel
  • If Chrome 2023 Refresh UI is enabled, then I added updated icons for the top bar (colored by default like usual, but can be made grey with the chrome://flags/#disable-thorium-icons flag). > Alex313031/thorium@ec8b741
  • Minor spacing and spelling fixes on some chrome:// pages that Thorium modifies. > Alex313031/thorium@8d050fc
  • Added Policy Templates for people wanting to set enterprise policies, or simply to see the available options to control certain behaviors. These are identical to the ones for Chromium, except the directory names and registry key names have been changed to "Thorium" so that you don't have to do that yourself. They are in the thorium_policy_templates.zip file. > Alex313031/thorium@dcf4dd9
  • Added a Memorial easter egg dedicated to my Grandmother "Gramma Linda", who I spent the last month in the hospital with, and she sadly died March 23, 2024 at the age of 83. 😭 Born on Dec. 27th, 1940. You can view the easter egg by running Thorium from the cmdline with --enable-logging --v=1 >> /place/where/you/want/debug.log. The top of the logfile will print the Thorium brand name and version, and under that is my little memorial code. > Alex313031/thorium@8c0850e
  • The NTP page was broken when using a search engine other than Google, including the extra ones I added to some locales. I fixed it here > Alex313031/thorium@e113003
  • Fixed the disable-encryption flag not working properly (for users of the portable .zips) > Alex313031/thorium@1ac0e00 This should fix issues where Thorium signs you out of sites on every restart.
  • Updated libhighway in the libjxl repo to 1.1.0 > Alex313031/thorium-libjxl@1a4d1e7 for better SIMD optimization
  • Update libjxl to 0.10.2, which makes JPEG-XL rendering much faster, and fixes bugs when images were above a certain size > Alex313031/thorium-libjxl@fb2a3d6

Big news! On top of Thorium continuing to support Windows 7/8/8.1 (which I have been doing for a while now, since M110), Thorium now supports Windows XP and Windows Vista! I made a page dedicated to it, with an XP style theme similar to the Win7 page > https://thorium.rocks/xp/.

Download releases for all these Pre-Windows 10 OSes here > https://github.com/Alex313031/thorium-legacy/releases

This also means that Thorium now supports more OSes and architectures than ANY other browser on the market!. Windows XP - 11 x32, x64, and arm64. MacOS x64 and arm64. Linux x64 and Raspberry Pi arm64. And Android arm32, arm64, and x86.

M122.0.6261.132 - 7th Release

15 Mar 05:30
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Nothing too special this release, just your standard Chromium upgrade.

However, five things:

M121.0.6167.204 - 6th Release

20 Feb 05:56
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M121 Thorium's 30th version birthday!

  • Disabled annoying feature promos like "Show me how to set Chrome's theme?" and "Do you want to take the privacy check now?". It wouldn't be so bad if these didn't appear randomly, and interrupt your workflow by blocking interaction with the rest of the browser until you click "Yes" or "Not right now". (Also notice how they say "Not right now" instead of "No". WTF is up with corporations doing this. It's subtle, but it's like psychologically saying "we'll let you say no now, but we expect you to change your decision later". Like no, leave me alone!).
  • Dolby Vision should now use proper color space info from your machine. Note that Dolby support still requires a hardware decoder to work at all, unlike HEVC/H.265 content which we added a patch to allow software decoding.
  • Updated libhighway to 1.0.7, and libjxl to 0.9.2. This should hopefully fix the JPEG-XL HDR issues some people reported. Should fix Alex313031/thorium-libjxl#18
  • Network Certificates now use the BoringSSL library (yes that's really its name), which is better overall than OpenSSL. (Don't worry, BoringSSL is still open source, and is actually a fork of OpenSSL).
  • Enabled a new Experimental feature, called kResponsiveToolbar. This makes it where when the window size is too small to hold both the tabstrip and top bar buttons (for example if you have alot of pinned extensions), the top bar buttons will be moved to a little chevron overflow menu.
  • Added a new flag for Linux users > chrome://flags/#gtk-version which allows you to set the GTK version (3 or 4), without having to use the command line. Use 4 for example on Arch Linux or the latest Ubuntu 24.04 Beta, which default to using GTK4 Libraries. Setting this appropriately can theme the browser and dialogs better to match the system theme. Setting it wrong or not setting at all won't cause bugs or problems, it's just a nice to have.
  • Re-enabled a setting that I previously disabled due to crashes, which allows you to toggle AutoPlay settings at chrome://settings/content/sound
  • Added a flag to enable VAAPI on NVidia GPUs (requires a vdpau translation driver) > chrome://flags/#vaapi-on-nvidia-gpus NOTE: Do not set this flag if chrome://flags/#enable-global-vaapi-lock is also enabled, you will put Thorium into an endless crash loop.
  • Added a much requested feature to be able to disable the colored custom top bar icons. You can now disable them with the flag > chrome://flags/#disable-thorium-icons. Rejoice! as I know many people don't like that I added blue and green colors to those. Note that icons used in the menus and settings still have blue colored triangles. I'm not gonna change those, as it's too much work and most people don't care about those. Fixes Alex313031/thorium#307 and Alex313031/thorium#66
  • Prevented Thorium complaining about missing Vulkan drivers on non-Intel platforms. This has been a long standing issue in Chromium, but I'm not going to file a bug because it is used by their infrastructure.
  • Added Thorium's extra search engines to even more locales, including Mexico and Venezuela.
  • Completely disabled the "Privacy Sandbox" (previously known as FLOC), because it's a s**tshow, and not good for user's privacy at all. See > https://proton.me/blog/google-privacy-sandbox
  • Enabled a compiler flag called _LIBCPP_HARDENING_MODE = _LIBCPP_HARDENING_MODE_FAST, which hardens C++ code against flow integrity issues and memory overflows, while still keeping stuff fast compared to = 1
  • Removed some extraneous LLVM opts
  • Re-enabled the chrome://whats-new page after I accidentally disabled it in M117.
  • More SIMD optimizations in the AVX2 versions.
  • I changed the download bubble flag name to chrome://flags/#disable-download-bubble, so if you changed this to restore the old download shelf, you will need to set it again.
  • Updated the documentation in the //docs directory, and on the site at https://thorium.rocks/docs which should allow you all to easily make your own builds now. Previously, following the docs which were very out of date (out of date for both upstream and because of the new build scripts added to the repo) would not yield a working browser. Fixes Alex313031/thorium#488, Alex313031/thorium#362, Alex313031/thorium#551, and Alex313031/thorium#477.
  • Added SSE3, AVX, and AVX2 builds for both Windows and Linux. I am deprecating the Thorium-Linux-AVX2, Thorium-SSE3, and Thorium-Win-AVX2 repos.
  • Added a build of Thorium_UI_Debug_Shell since I haven't done that in a long time, and I will need it for the upcoming M122 due to Chrome Refresh 2023 and having to make new .icon files.

M120.0.6099.235 - 5th Release

26 Jan 07:39
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M120

  • More optimization flags as per guidance from @RobRich999 here > RobRich999/Chromium_Clang#26 (comment) (x64 only)
  • Blocked annoying obtrusive promos like "Show me how to change the background"
  • Added a new right-click menu item to "Save video frame" which you can use to save a .png of the current paused frame.
  • Added three new chrome://flags flags. These are:
  • chrome://flags/#vaapi-video-decode-linux-gl to toggle using the GL backend for VAAPI acceleration (Linux only). Fixes Alex313031/thorium#162
  • chrome://flags/#close-window-with-last-tab which allows you to keep the application open when closing the last tab (i.e. closing the last tab will simply open a new blank one). Fixes Alex313031/thorium#338
  • chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-downloads to fix the annoying issue where Thorium won't download files if they come from http:// ftp:// or "mixed origins" i.e. an http:// download initiated by an https:// page. Fixes Alex313031/thorium#509

M119.0.6045.214 - 4th Release

06 Jan 18:32
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First, to address the easter egg and website stuff, here is my explanation/apology post > https://alex313031.blogspot.com/2024/01/the-good-bad-and-ugly.html (it also addresses why I was gone for a month).

M119 (M118 was too old, so skipped that version)

  • Fixes multiple CVEs including GHSA-xm5p-7w7v-qqr5
  • Better HLS support
  • Better JavaScript compilation performance due to new Thorium compiler flags as well as upstream V8 re-workings.
  • The search engine choices that Thorium adds are now available in more locales. (Notably not in Russia or China because ya know, their governments not allowing certain URLs. Hong Kong and Ukraine are not affected).
  • Live Caption should now finally work (English only, sorry. The .grdp files for other languages are closed source for now).
  • ChromeCast can now use VP8 and VP9 codecs for less bandwidth consumption if you have slower internet. (Note that this is disabled by default in Chromium, I enabled it, but it is still experimental).
  • New chrome://flags flag chrome://flags#disable-aero This disables transparency effects and GPU accelerated window frame compositing (while still leaving GPU acceleration for the actual web contents intact). It is useful if you dislike transparency, or are getting glitches on Windows 11 with the window frame.
  • Thorium on Linux with multiple monitors should now restore Thorium to the last monitor it was open on.
  • Storage Access API was disabled because the security risk is more than the usability improvement. If you need this, use the new chrome://flags/#storage-access-api flag I added to enable it.
  • Keyboard shortcuts in ThoriumOS now align better with Linux.
  • Portable version now also sets the cache dir to ./.config/cache, to prevent any disk writes outside of the dir.
  • Rejoice! If you are like me and hate the new "Download bubble" and want the old "Download shelf" back, well I reverted a commit from upstream, and now there is a flag for it! > chrome://flags#download-bubble
  • Windows builds are now more hardened against memory overflows by enabling the arg "win_enable_cfg_guards = true"
  • PGO is now more effective (thanks @RobRich999) > Alex313031/thorium@5fe3937
  • New flag from Ungoogled-Chromium chrome://flags#tab-hover-cards Allows removing tab hover card images, and instead replace with a tooltip (the behavior before M106).

M117.0.5938.157 - 3rd Release

13 Oct 12:16
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  • Removed VDPAU patch as Chromium has unified the VAAPI backend. It didn't work half the time anyway. If you have an Nvidia card like me, sorry but we're stuck with software video decoding (except for H.264 with the FOSS nouveau drivers). This also removed 4 files that were always alot of work for me to rebase.
  • Removed Linux middle click autoscroll by default because it caused bugs for some people. You can still enable it by using the cmdline flag --enable-blink-features=MiddleClickAutoscroll (and I removed the warning bar for people who do). Fixes > Alex313031/thorium#199
  • You can now choose to not show full URLs. Previously it was forced to true, and selecting/unselecting "Always show full URLs" would do nothing. It is now still enabled by default, but you can choose to unselect it. I will be making a PR to Ungoogled Chromium about this.
  • HEVC/H.265 decoding is now multi-threaded. Thanks to @RobRich999 for pointing this out and where to enable it.
  • Two major security vulnerabilities in libwebp and libvpx were fixed. See the new security policy for info about submitting security bugs, and a list of fixed vulnerabilities (which will be updated henceforth). If you use any of my Electron apps, those were also recently fixed.
  • On top of my Thorium-Win7 fork, which will soon be updated to be based on Supermium M118 (me and @gz83 are working on a unified patch for this), I also made a new repo: https://github.com/Alex313031/chromium-xp with ongoing work to resurrect Chromium on XP. I currently have fixed google search, compiling with the windows 10 sdk, and added Thorium's optimizations (minus AVX).
  • chrome_management_service should work properly now, if any of you out there are using Thorium with enterprise policies set.
  • Slightly higher Speedometer scores, due to both upstream optimizations, and me tweaking rustflags in the compiler config.

M116.0.5845.169 - 2nd Release

09 Sep 10:16
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Do Not Use - Crashed on startup.
IDK why.

[UPDATE]: Found out why. It's widevine. If there is any widevine installed either from debians repos, or in the Thorium install dir, delete it. Then it will run OK.