Command line arguments: Difference between revisions
From MozillaZine Knowledge Base
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary |
Wintogreen (talk | contribs) m (link) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
:''This also applies to Firefox and Thunderbird. However, some Mozilla Suite command line arguments may not work in Firefox or Thunderbird.'' | :''This also applies to Firefox and Thunderbird. However, some Mozilla Suite command line arguments may not work in Firefox or Thunderbird.'' | ||
You can use command line arguments to bypass the Profile Manager and open a specific profile (if you have multiple profiles). You can also control how Mozilla opens, which components open initially, and what the components do when they open. | You can use command line arguments to bypass the [[Profile Manager]] and open a specific profile (if you have multiple profiles). You can also control how Mozilla Suite opens, which components open initially, and what the components do when they open. | ||
==Firefox Command line arguments (incomplete)== | ==Firefox Command line arguments (incomplete)== |
Revision as of 09:09, 28 March 2005
- This also applies to Firefox and Thunderbird. However, some Mozilla Suite command line arguments may not work in Firefox or Thunderbird.
You can use command line arguments to bypass the Profile Manager and open a specific profile (if you have multiple profiles). You can also control how Mozilla Suite opens, which components open initially, and what the components do when they open.
Firefox Command line arguments (incomplete)
Command | Result | Example |
---|---|---|
profile "path" | Starts firefox with profile located at path | firefox.exe -profile "E:\myprofile" |
p "profile name" | Starts firefox with the profile of the given name. | firefox.exe -p "JoelUser" |
url | Launches firefox and opens the given url | firefox.exe "www.mozilla.org" |
External Links
- Mozilla Suite's command line options: some of these apply to Firefox and Thunderbird too. The page being outdated, some command line options may not work.
- Extensions Manager's command line options: applies to Firefox, Thunderbird, and other applications that use the Extension Manager code in those two programs. (Does not apply to the Mozilla Suite.)