Tìm kiếm hỗ trợ

Tránh các lừa đảo về hỗ trợ. Chúng tôi sẽ không bao giờ yêu cầu bạn gọi hoặc nhắn tin đến số điện thoại hoặc chia sẻ thông tin cá nhân. Vui lòng báo cáo hoạt động đáng ngờ bằng cách sử dụng tùy chọn "Báo cáo lạm dụng".

Tìm hiểu thêm

How to access the local filesystem from a webpage in Firefox

  • 4 trả lời
  • 1 gặp vấn đề này
  • 2458 lượt xem
  • Trả lời mới nhất được viết bởi mark_1

more options

We are wanting to move our intranet users from IE to Firefox but we have some places where we want to be able to open local (or network) files or directories. I have found quite a few references in Stack Overflow and otherwise but most of them are quite old and none of the old techniques seem to work with the current version of Firefox Quantum (v68 at the time of writing).

The Local Filesystem Links extension seems to work well but I would rather not rely on an extension, particularly one that also requires installation of an addon module, if possible. Can anybody tell me how to access the local filesystem from a webpage in Firefox by just changing settings in about: config? Or is this just not possible anymore?

I am hoping to get something like <a href="file://///networkdrive/directory"> working if possible

We are wanting to move our intranet users from IE to Firefox but we have some places where we want to be able to open local (or network) files or directories. I have found quite a few references in Stack Overflow and otherwise but most of them are quite old and none of the old techniques seem to work with the current version of Firefox Quantum (v68 at the time of writing). The Local Filesystem Links extension seems to work well but I would rather not rely on an extension, particularly one that also requires installation of an addon module, if possible. Can anybody tell me how to access the local filesystem from a webpage in Firefox by just changing settings in about: config? Or is this just not possible anymore? I am hoping to get something like <a href="file://///networkdrive/directory"> working if possible

Giải pháp được chọn

Your timing is excellent, there is now a Policy/GPO way to do this as of Firefox 68. No extension required. See:


There also is an old school method which is backwards compatible and doesn't require an extension. It involves adding some lines to an optional user.js file (in the user's current Firefox profile), but which might be more conveniently deployed through an Autoconfig file (in the program folder). Those are both files Firefox reads at startup.

// == FILE URI LINK POLICY (checkloaduri) ==

// Create policy enabling http: or https: pages to link to file:
user_pref("capability.policy.policynames", "filelinks");
user_pref("capability.policy.filelinks.checkloaduri.enabled", "allAccess");

// Sites to which the policy applies (protocol://hostname protocol://hostname)
user_pref("capability.policy.filelinks.sites", "http://example.com http://intranet");
 

More info on Autoconfig: Customize Firefox using AutoConfig

Đọc câu trả lời này trong ngữ cảnh 👍 1

Tất cả các câu trả lời (4)

more options

Giải pháp được chọn

Your timing is excellent, there is now a Policy/GPO way to do this as of Firefox 68. No extension required. See:


There also is an old school method which is backwards compatible and doesn't require an extension. It involves adding some lines to an optional user.js file (in the user's current Firefox profile), but which might be more conveniently deployed through an Autoconfig file (in the program folder). Those are both files Firefox reads at startup.

// == FILE URI LINK POLICY (checkloaduri) ==

// Create policy enabling http: or https: pages to link to file:
user_pref("capability.policy.policynames", "filelinks");
user_pref("capability.policy.filelinks.checkloaduri.enabled", "allAccess");

// Sites to which the policy applies (protocol://hostname protocol://hostname)
user_pref("capability.policy.filelinks.sites", "http://example.com http://intranet");
 

More info on Autoconfig: Customize Firefox using AutoConfig

more options

Thanks for that, I tried the old school method on my local machine and it worked perfectly, I will pass the policy method on to our IT team so they can apply it business-wide. I raised the same question on Stack Overflow, do you mind if I post your answer there?

more options

Hi mark_1, please feel free to share the info. And let us know how the new policy method works out.

more options

Our IT team have added the policy and it is working for us but I had to do the following to get the directories to open in Windows Explorer rather than in a webpage within Firefox.

In about:config I added 2 preferences

network.protocol-handler.expose.file – set this to false network.protocol-handler.external.file – set this to true

Thanks very much for your help