It is possible to force scripting enabled/disabled for a given WebBrowser control by implementing three specific COM interfaces (IOleClientSite, IServiceProvider and IInternetSecurityManager) and calling the SetClientSite method of the control's IOleObject interface.
Ultimately, you need to implement the IInternetSecurityManager::ProcessUrlAction method. When the WebBrowser calls it with the dwAction parameter set to URLACTION_SCRIPT_RUN, you can set *pPolicy to URLPOLICY_DISALLOW to prevent scripting or URLPOLICY_ALLOW to enable scripting, and return S_OK (zero) to enforce the policy.
The necessary code is shown below, and can be implemented by simply calling SetWBClientSite() after creating the control but before navigating. The global variable WB must contain a reference to the WebBrowser control.
/* Complex workaround to override "Active scripting" setting
* and ensure scripts can't run within the WebBrowser control.
*/
global WBClientSite
SetWBClientSite()
{
interfaces := {
(Join,
IOleClientSite: [0,3,1,0,1,0]
IServiceProvider: [3]
IInternetSecurityManager: [1,1,3,4,8,7,3,3]
)}
unkQI := RegisterCallback("WBClientSite_QI", "Fast")
unkAddRef := RegisterCallback("WBClientSite_AddRef", "Fast")
unkRelease := RegisterCallback("WBClientSite_Release", "Fast")
WBClientSite := {_buffers: bufs := {}}, bufn := 0,
for name, prms in interfaces
{
bufn += 1
bufs.SetCapacity(bufn, (4 + prms.MaxIndex()) * A_PtrSize)
buf := bufs.GetAddress(bufn)
NumPut(unkQI, buf + 1*A_PtrSize)
NumPut(unkAddRef, buf + 2*A_PtrSize)
NumPut(unkRelease, buf + 3*A_PtrSize)
for i, prmc in prms
NumPut(RegisterCallback("WBClientSite_" name, "Fast", prmc+1, i), buf + (3+i)*A_PtrSize)
NumPut(buf + A_PtrSize, buf + 0)
WBClientSite[name] := buf
}
global wb
if pOleObject := ComObjQuery(wb, "{00000112-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}")
{ ; IOleObject::SetClientSite
DllCall(NumGet(NumGet(pOleObject+0)+3*A_PtrSize), "ptr"
, pOleObject, "ptr", WBClientSite.IOleClientSite, "uint")
ObjRelease(pOleObject)
}
}
WBClientSite_QI(p, piid, ppvObject)
{
static IID_IUnknown := "{00000000-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}"
static IID_IOleClientSite := "{00000118-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}"
static IID_IServiceProvider := "{6d5140c1-7436-11ce-8034-00aa006009fa}"
iid := _String4GUID(piid)
if (iid = IID_IOleClientSite || iid = IID_IUnknown)
{
NumPut(WBClientSite.IOleClientSite, ppvObject+0)
return 0 ; S_OK
}
if (iid = IID_IServiceProvider)
{
NumPut(WBClientSite.IServiceProvider, ppvObject+0)
return 0 ; S_OK
}
NumPut(0, ppvObject+0)
return 0x80004002 ; E_NOINTERFACE
}
WBClientSite_AddRef(p)
{
return 1
}
WBClientSite_Release(p)
{
return 1
}
WBClientSite_IOleClientSite(p, p1="", p2="", p3="")
{
if (A_EventInfo = 3) ; GetContainer
{
NumPut(0, p1+0) ; *ppContainer := NULL
return 0x80004002 ; E_NOINTERFACE
}
return 0x80004001 ; E_NOTIMPL
}
WBClientSite_IServiceProvider(p, pguidService, piid, ppvObject)
{
static IID_IUnknown := "{00000000-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}"
static IID_IInternetSecurityManager := "{79eac9ee-baf9-11ce-8c82-00aa004ba90b}"
if (_String4GUID(pguidService) = IID_IInternetSecurityManager)
{
iid := _String4GUID(piid)
if (iid = IID_IInternetSecurityManager || iid = IID_IUnknown)
{
NumPut(WBClientSite.IInternetSecurityManager, ppvObject+0)
return 0 ; S_OK
}
NumPut(0, ppvObject+0)
return 0x80004002 ; E_NOINTERFACE
}
NumPut(0, ppvObject+0)
return 0x80004001 ; E_NOTIMPL
}
WBClientSite_IInternetSecurityManager(p, p1="", p2="", p3="", p4="", p5="", p6="", p7="", p8="")
{
if (A_EventInfo = 5) ; ProcessUrlAction
{
if (p2 = 0x1400) ; dwAction = URLACTION_SCRIPT_RUN
{
NumPut((URLPOLICY_DISALLOW := 3), p3+0) ; *pPolicy := URLPOLICY_DISALLOW
return 0 ; S_OK
}
}
return 0x800C0011 ; INET_E_DEFAULT_ACTION
}
_String4GUID(pGUID)
{
VarSetCapacity(String,38*2)
DllCall("ole32\StringFromGUID2", "ptr", pGUID, "str", String, "int", 39)
Return String
}
The current AutoHotkey installer contains code identical to this, with the exception that it sets URLPOLICY_ALLOW (0) rather than URLPOLICY_DISALLOW (3). This was necessary to allow the installer to work on systems which have scripting disabled.
As you can see, implementing COM interfaces directly in an AutoHotkey script is no simple matter. It is a little easier in plain C (see COM in plain C), and much easier in C++.