Refrax – my Arc Browser replacement I made from scratch
Open the same tab in two browser windows. In Chrome or Safari, you get two unconnected pages. In Arc, one window shows a placeholder. In Zen, it silently creates a duplicate. In Refrax, the browser I built, both windows show the same page updating live. The same web page, in as many windows as you want. This shouldn't be possible. WebKit's WKWebView can exist in exactly one view hierarchy at a time. With macOS 26, Apple added a SwiftUI API separating WebView from WebPage, so you can end up with multiple views referencing the same page. But if you try it, your app crashes. WebKit source code has a precondition with this comment: "We can't have multiple owning pages regardless, but we'll want to decide if it's an error, if we can handle it gracefully, and how deterministic it might even be..." So here's how I did it. CAPortalLayer is an undocumented private class that's been in macOS since 10.12. It mirrors a layer's composited output by referencing the same GPU memory, not copying it. Every scroll, animation, or repaint reflects instantly. This is what powers Liquid Glass effects, the iOS text selection magnifier, and ghost images during drag and drop. Apple uses portals for effects. I use them to put the same web page in two windows. Refrax keeps one real WKWebView per tab and displays a CAPortalLayer mirror everywhere else. When you click a different window, the coordinator moves the real view there and the old window gets a portal. You can't tell which is which. This sounds simple in theory, but making this actually work seamlessly took quite a lot of effort. Each macOS window has its own rendering context, and the context ID updates asynchronously, so creating a portal immediately captures a stale ID and renders nothing. The portal creation needs to be delayed, but delaying creates a visual gap. I capture a GPU snapshot using a private CoreGraphics function and place it behind the portal as a fallback. Another hard part is that none of it is documented. Portals are very capricious and would crash the app if you use them incorrectly. I had to inspect the headers and then disassemble the binaries to explore exactly how it works in order to build something robust. I never worked on a browser before this, I've only been a user. I started using Arc in 2022. I remember asking for an invite, learning the shortcuts, slowly getting used to it. I didn't like it at first as it had too much Google Chrome in it for my taste, and I'd been using Safari at the time. But it grew on me, and by the time it was essentially abandoned and sold to Atlassian, I couldn't go back to Safari anymore. I tried everything: Zen, SigmaOS, Helium. None felt right, and I didn't want another Chromium fork. WebKit ships with the OS, but all you get is the rendering engine. Tabs, history, bookmarks, passwords, extensions, everything else has to be made separately. And so, being a very reasonable person, I decided to make my own Arc replacement from scratch. And I did. Refrax is built in Swift and Objective-C with no external dependencies. The app itself is less than 30 MB. I have 393 tabs open right now using 442 MB of RAM; 150 tabs in Safari was already over 1 GB. I've been using it daily for over a month, and so have some of my friends. The portal mirror is just one feature. The same approach, finding what Apple built for themselves and using it to create something they didn't think about, runs through the entire browser. You can tint your glass windows with adjustable blend modes and transparency. The sidebar in compact mode samples the page and matches the colors. And it has support for Firefox and Chrome extensions. The alpha is public. Download from the linked website, enter REFRAX-ALPHA-HACKERNEWS to activate. No account needed. Telemetry is crash reports and a daily active-user ping, nothing else. And if you find a bug – I built this alone, so I'll actually read your report.
- Extension de navigateur
- Intégrations
- macOS
✨ Résumé IA
Refrax is a macOS browser built from scratch that allows users to open the same web page in multiple windows simultaneously, leveraging private Apple APIs for real-time mirroring. It offers features like customizable window transparency and support for Chrome/Firefox extensions.
Idéal pour
Power users who need to view and interact with the same web content across multiple displays, Users seeking an alternative to Arc Browser with a focus on WebKit, Developers interested in exploring undocumented macOS features for application development
Pourquoi c'est important
Refrax enables users to display and interact with a single web page across multiple windows simultaneously by utilizing private macOS CAPortalLayer technology.
Fonctionnalités clés
- Duplicate tabs across multiple windows with live updates
- Utilizes undocumented CAPortalLayer for mirrored content
- Supports Firefox and Chrome extensions
- Customizable window tinting with blend modes and transparency
Cas d'usage
- A developer debugging a responsive web application can open the same page in two Refrax windows side-by-side to simultaneously view and test its behavior on different screen sizes without needing to manually refresh or switch tabs.
- A content creator managing social media can keep a live feed or dashboard open in one Refrax window while composing a post in another, ensuring that any real-time updates are visible while they work.
- A researcher comparing two versions of a document or webpage can have both open in separate Refrax windows, allowing for immediate visual comparison and seamless scrolling synchronization between the two instances.