Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Deploying Firefox ESR for Mac with policies.json

  • 1 reply
  • 1 has this problem
  • 1 view
  • Last reply by D3xbot

more options

I'm working on building a deployment for Firefox 78.1.0 ESR in a mixed Windows/macOS environment. I've got a policies.json file that works, and was able to install it on Windows via a batch script that runs the installer MSI, creates the distribution directory, and copies the policies.json to that location.

Where I'm struggling is getting this deployed on the Mac side of things. I've followed the directions to apply policy and remove the quarantine here: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/deploying-firefox-customizations-macos While this works on my Mac, when I deploy it to my test collection (via AirDrop, Self-Service, or by running the PKG file made by JAMF Composer), macOS says the app is damaged and should be deleted.

Does anyone know a way around that?

I'm working on building a deployment for Firefox 78.1.0 ESR in a mixed Windows/macOS environment. I've got a policies.json file that works, and was able to install it on Windows via a batch script that runs the installer MSI, creates the distribution directory, and copies the policies.json to that location. Where I'm struggling is getting this deployed on the Mac side of things. I've followed the directions to apply policy and remove the quarantine here: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/deploying-firefox-customizations-macos While this works on ''my'' Mac, when I deploy it to my test collection (via AirDrop, Self-Service, or by running the PKG file made by JAMF Composer), macOS says the app is damaged and should be deleted. Does anyone know a way around that?

Chosen solution

In speaking with my supervisor, I found that in building a policy, I can instruct JAMF to install Firefox and run a script post-install. This allowed me to customize Firefox without worrying about signing apps or gatekeeper.

Script:

#! /bin/bash

cd /Applications mkdir ./Firefox.app/Contents/Resources/distribution printf "Your minified JSON\n formatted to Firefox's liking with printf" > ./Firefox.app/Contents/Resources/distribution/policies.json xattr -r -d com.apple.quarantine Firefox.app

Mind the whitespace - when I tried to collapse the spaces, Firefox did not like it. For instance: {

 "policies": {
   "Bookmarks": [
    {
     "Placement": "toolbar",
     "Title": "Google",
     "URL": "https://www.google.com"
    }
   ]
 }

} would become {\n "policies": {\n "Bookmarks": [\n {\n "Placement": "toolbar",\n "Title": "Google",\n "URL": "https://www.google.com"\n }\n ]\n }\n}

Read this answer in context 👍 0

All Replies (1)

more options

Chosen Solution

In speaking with my supervisor, I found that in building a policy, I can instruct JAMF to install Firefox and run a script post-install. This allowed me to customize Firefox without worrying about signing apps or gatekeeper.

Script:

#! /bin/bash

cd /Applications mkdir ./Firefox.app/Contents/Resources/distribution printf "Your minified JSON\n formatted to Firefox's liking with printf" > ./Firefox.app/Contents/Resources/distribution/policies.json xattr -r -d com.apple.quarantine Firefox.app

Mind the whitespace - when I tried to collapse the spaces, Firefox did not like it. For instance: {

 "policies": {
   "Bookmarks": [
    {
     "Placement": "toolbar",
     "Title": "Google",
     "URL": "https://www.google.com"
    }
   ]
 }

} would become {\n "policies": {\n "Bookmarks": [\n {\n "Placement": "toolbar",\n "Title": "Google",\n "URL": "https://www.google.com"\n }\n ]\n }\n}