In short, worrying about a few housekeeping call to when launching Chromium is pointless for those who do not systematically block as a rule. , and all other which qualify as ubiquitous: twitter, facebook, etc.), and make scope-based exceptions. I personally block globally all net requests to ubiquitous domain names (i.e. when browsing the web casually, and these are the ones from which a profile can be drawn. Given how ubiquitous is et al., the few housekeeping net requests to when launching Chromium are drops in the ocean compared to all net requests to et al. It's been running without the 2-5 seconds lag when changing tabs and re-focusing the window now. Google takes Chromium source code, modified and add things into it, then release it as Chrome (i.e. e.g., pacman -R noto-fonts ttf-google-fonts-git noto-fonts-extra noto-fonts. The difference is that, Chrome contains additional proprietary code which is related to Google services and Chrome-only features. Do you systematically block all net requests to (and affiliates) when you surf using Firefox? The best solution on the chromium project bug tracker is to uninstall noto-fonts, which I had installed via the big ttf-google-fonts-git package. The second part is responsible for the user interface that’s the part you see and interact with the most. That’s the code we share with Chrome and other Chromium-based browsers. The first part the browser engine takes care of rendering webpages. Click to expand.Even with HTTPSB blocking all behind-the-scene requests, there will be requests by Chromium which can't be blocked: any security-sensitive net requests (extension updates, certificates, and whatever else) will bypass the webRequest API.īut here is the thing: unless you block systematically all net requests to (or affiliates) with your non-Chromium-based browsers, worrying about the few net requests by Chromium at start up is just silly. Browser code can be roughly divided into three parts.
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