搜索 | 用户支持

防范以用户支持为名的诈骗。我们绝对不会要求您拨打电话或发送短信,及提供任何个人信息。请使用“举报滥用”选项报告涉及违规的行为。

详细了解

Firefox installed as secondary browser - how do I restrict it to just one website?

  • 1 个回答
  • 1 人有此问题
  • 8 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 the-edmeister

more options

We are in local government with IE 11 as our standard browser - that is a policy we cannot change. However, we are in the process of getting a new cloud vendor and they ONLY take Firefox for their website, so we must install and support it - somehow. Our IT support group is "strongly recommending" (read: we gotta do this) that we somehow restrict Firefox to function only on/with one website.

Is there any way to do this in Firefox natively (i.e. registry entry, ...)? Is there an add-on or app that can do this?

Signed: Perplexed Techie

We are in local government with IE 11 as our standard browser - that is a policy we cannot change. However, we are in the process of getting a new cloud vendor and they ONLY take Firefox for their website, so we must install and support it - somehow. Our IT support group is "strongly recommending" (read: we gotta do this) that we somehow restrict Firefox to function only on/with one website. Is there any way to do this in Firefox natively (i.e. registry entry, ...)? Is there an add-on or app that can do this? Signed: Perplexed Techie

所有回复 (1)

more options

See if this will work for you - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/r-kiosk/

Never needed it myself, but it sounds like it restricts users to one site which would need to be set as the "homepage". And it hides all user controls which would allow the user to "stray" elsewhere.

As far as the user reviews for that extension go, users who rate it as 5 star seem to know what they are talking about. The 1 star ratings sound (to me at least) like the user didn't know what they were installing.


Another extension that might interest you is - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/cck2wizard/ - which would probably a lot more initial setup time, but it can be deployed to multiple PC's more easily.