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Can you set a cookie exception for .home and .local tld's?

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  • 1 has this problem
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  • Last reply by john542

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I run a number of Web applications on my LAN that I access using .local and .home domains. I'd like to set up an "allow" rules for any host ( i.e. hostname.home or hostname.local ) in these top level domains (TLD's ).

Can this be accomplished? I'm running Firefox for Mac version 89.0.2.

I run a number of Web applications on my LAN that I access using .local and .home domains. I'd like to set up an "allow" rules for any host ( i.e. hostname.home or hostname.local ) in these top level domains (TLD's ). Can this be accomplished? I'm running Firefox for Mac version 89.0.2.

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What are your current cookie settings that makes it necessary to create an allow exception ? Are you blocking all cookies ?

You can only set an exception for an origin (protocol and hostname) and not for a top level domain. You can consider to setup an extra profile that has these cookies enabled by default so you wouldn't need an exception.

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I'm using the default "strict" "Browser Privacy" settings. I notice that most websites aren't keeping me logged in. They are also not saving my preferences like they did before.

I already have and use multiple profiles. For convenience sake, I'm not going to create yet another one. I use my main" profile for managing servers on my home network, since I'm on them every day and need quick access , another profile would slow me down quite a bit.

I am researching other browsers to see if I can find one with multiple profiles and lets you whitelist TLD's and ipv4/v6 subnets. Those features would make life a lot easier for me!

john542 modificouno o