To starting the profile manager, open terminal and enter:

/Applications/Firefox.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox -P

Or start with a profile immediately:

/Applications/Firefox.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox -P "firefox2"

Replace "Firefox.app" with what you called the bundle for FF2.

--Klaus


On May 19, 11:39 pm, Collin Allen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Firefox 2 and 3 can co-exist so long as their app bundles are in
> separate places (or even just named differently in the same place).
> For example, I have FF 2.0 in /Applications, and FF 3.0rc1 in ~/
> Applications/, my user's apps folder.  They share the same profile, so
> you'll be doing a lot of extension-update-checking between launches,
> but you might even be able to make a new profile for one or the other,
> then use the -P command line switch to force each to use separate
> profiles.  I'm not sure how to do that last bit on the Mac, though --
> should be in Mozilla documentation somewhere...
>
> HTH
>
> ~ Collin
>
> On May 19, 2:18 pm, Shelane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Is there a way to install Firefox 3 RC1 without affecting FF2 on a
> > Mac.
>
> > The release notes have this message: Please note that installing
> > Firefox 3 will overwrite your existing installation of Firefox on Mac
> > OS X and Linux.
>
> > I'm guessing that's if you simply install it into the Applications
> > folder.  If I install it in another folder within the Applications
> > folder, will it be ok?  If it's using this same directory for it's
> > support files (~/Library/Application Support/Firefox) can it still
> > affect FF2?
>
> > I have to keep FF2 because it's the "officially" supported browser at
> > work.  But I would love to install FF3 to start testing on my apps.

Reply via email to