I'm exploring Google Chrome extensions for the first time. I would like to create what appears as a toolbar along the top of the page when you click the extension icon, much like the StumbleUpon toolbar.
I can't see how to do this. The examples mainly show a popup.html, and not a fixed toolbar.
Although this answer shows two ways to create a toolbar in Chrome, I strongly recommend using page action or browser action badges. These do not take as much space as toolbars, and can also be used to show a panel on click, and even get temporary host permissions to interact with the page.
And for those who do not really need a toolbar, but a sidebar, there is an active proposal for a chrome.sidebar
API. This is just a proposal, whether and when it will be implemented is not set in stone yet.
chrome.infobars
APIThis section used to show a demo using the chrome.infobars
API. This API has never been to the stable channel, and will be removed; do not use it.
Creation of toolbars using content scripts is tricky. You have to insert code in the page, and even modify the structure of the document, which could break some pages on the internet.
To create a toolbar using content scripts, the following steps have to be taken:
<iframe>
- explained later).Step 1 is easy, see my previous example or read the documentation of content scripts.
To minimize styling conflicts, and to prevent the page from using your toolbar, insert an iframe. Unlike the previous method, you do not directly have access to the extension API (because the embedded page is neither a content script, nor a page running in the extension's process).
Inserting the toolbar:
add-toolbar.js
(content script)var height = '40px';
var iframe = document.createElement('iframe');
iframe.src = chrome.extension.getURL('toolbar.html');
iframe.style.height = height;
iframe.style.width = '100%';
iframe.style.position = 'fixed';
iframe.style.top = '0';
iframe.style.left = '0';
iframe.style.zIndex = '938089'; // Some high value
// Etc. Add your own styles if you want to
document.documentElement.appendChild(iframe);
Now create a file called toolbar.html
and add it to the "web_accessible_resources"
section of your manifest file. This file is going to used at the spot of the toolbar, feel free to do anything non-evil with it. Just keep in mind that it acts like a normal web page, it literally does not have access to any of the Chrome APIs.
So far, you've only added a frame to the page. There's one problem: The content on the page is partially hidden. That is not very nice. There are several ways to fix this, I choose to use CSS transforms, because it's relatively easy to use, and most pages don't use this property on the body element.
// continuing add-toolbar.js
var bodyStyle = document.body.style;
var cssTransform = 'transform' in bodyStyle ? 'transform' : 'webkitTransform';
bodyStyle[cssTransform] = 'translateY(' + height + ')';
translateY
causes the body to shift down, including those child elements with position:fixed
. Because we've appended the iframe to the root element, outside the <body>
tag, the element is not affected.
Unfortunately, Chrome treats the embedded html page as a non-privileged extension page. You can only use some of the extension APIs (similar to content scripts).
Another option is to load a page from your server, then execute a content script on that specific page. Set up a Cache manifest to ensure that your toolbar is still available if the user isn't on a network.