

- FIREFOX FOR MAC DOWNLOAD OLDER VERSION INSTALL
- FIREFOX FOR MAC DOWNLOAD OLDER VERSION ARCHIVE
- FIREFOX FOR MAC DOWNLOAD OLDER VERSION SOFTWARE
One should take into account the usefulness of being up-to-date.
FIREFOX FOR MAC DOWNLOAD OLDER VERSION INSTALL
I am aware this is an older post, and also a rather specific question, but in the general form of the title ( "How can I install a specific older version of Firefox and keep it from automatically updating?") it seems useful for any version of Ubuntu and Firefox. (No package is providing it it's installed manually without the package manager.) Using this method, you don't have to hold the firefox package, because the firefox package is not what is providing Firefox 7.0.1.
FIREFOX FOR MAC DOWNLOAD OLDER VERSION SOFTWARE
(If you apply this technique as I am recommending-that is, only to a similar but different problem where the software you're installing is still supported with security updates-then you'll be installing a different program and will thus have to change the argument to wget anyway.) You might want to change it, or implement the script to figure out a reasonable mirror to download from. There is no reason to think the download mirror I have used in the script is the best one for you. It creates a symbolic link to the newly installed Firefox 7.0.1 binary in /usr/bin, which will fail if you still had another version of Firefox installed, but you would want it to fail in that situation.

It also assumes that if you don't have a 64-bit PC (or Intel Mac), then you have a 32-bit PC (or Intel Mac), since the script would fail anyway for other architectures since binary builds are not provided upstream for them (you can still build from source for them though) while this is safe in the sense that it doesn't increase the risk of failure, it doesn't give any useful error message when the architecture is unsupported.
FIREFOX FOR MAC DOWNLOAD OLDER VERSION ARCHIVE
It assumes that /opt exists with reasonable permissions or that it doesn't exist and can be created (which is pretty safe), that the download succeeds (which is not particularly safe), and that the archive successfully unpacks (which is somewhat safe, if the download succeeded). The script above doesn't check to see whether or not commands completed successfully before proceeding. Ln -s /opt/firefox/firefox /usr/bin/firefoxĪs explained above, you should not do this at all! (This technique is useful for other purposes, which is the main reason I'm posting about it.) Sudo apt-get purge firefox # removes firefox comment out if definitely uninstalled Unless you can get one of the above techniques to work, the easiest way would probably be to make your script download the upstream Firefox 7.0.1 binary distribution, unpack it, and install it as root: || sudo mkdir -m 755 /opt (This is why Firefox 8 is in Lucid now.) Continuing to run Firefox 7.0.1 means you are running a version that has known security vulnerabilities that are not and never will be patched-it puts you (and your customers/clients, if applicable) at risk. You should not do this, because versions of Firefox past the 3.6-series do not remain supported, even with security updates, when new versions come out.
