ref: https://superuser.com/questions/92617/stop-never-ending-popup-alerts-in-firefox
Firefox is particularly problematic ...
Warning! Caveat! Do NOT run this!
javascript:
while (true) alert("irritated and exhausted - yet?");
This will go "infinite" and will NOT exhaust an internal timeout since the script will not chew up CPU time fast enough. In FF 11 this guarantees there will be no "unresponsive script" abortion opportunities.
Gracefully stopping just the offending script was possible and trivial in early browser versions, using manual intervention, without croaking and aborting the whole browser. To not have such control is a major browser software design flaw. Unreasonable dexterity and reflex are required to effect the manual motor mechanics of the "solutions" described in the reference.
Caveat: It is possible for scripts to go "infinite" w/o timing out AND w/o alert type prompts. These are particularly pernicious and annoying. Basically, the scripts run slowly enough so that the CPU time cycle allotment of say 20 sec. is stretched out over several minutes or hours or ..., before timing out, by suspension of execution pending resumption on an event trigger. Instead of timing CPU cycles it would be far better for scripts to timeout on real world clocking. (Ever notice how you cannot abort a script that is trying to retrieve content - but unsuccessfully - for constructing a page? In FF both the address bar buttons reload
and cancel/stop
are disabled though the tab at least can be closed.) Normal javascript Timeout()
and setInterval()
calls do not suffer from this and are conditioned so that while suspended, manual intervention is possible to abort them "gracefully".
Test environment for empirical observations:
window.navigator.userAgent=
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:11.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/11.0
PS. the script
for (i=1; i > 0; ++i);
will eventually trap on an overflow error when i
exceeds the maximum value allowed.