Is there any way to disable the Same-origin policy on Google's Chrome browser?
Close chrome (or chromium) and restart with the --disable-web-security
argument. I just tested this and verified that I can access the contents of an iframe with src="http://google.com" embedded in a page served from "localhost" (tested under chromium 5 / ubuntu). For me the exact command was:
Note : Kill all chrome instances before running command
chromium-browser --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="[some directory here]"
The browser will warn you that "you are using an unsupported command line" when it first opens, which you can ignore.
From the chromium source:
// Don't enforce the same-origin policy. (Used by people testing their sites.)
const wchar_t kDisableWebSecurity[] = L"disable-web-security";
Before Chrome 48, you could just use:
chromium-browser --disable-web-security
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Make sure the directory exists on Windows. Create one in your personal Users[user]\ folder. – Dmitri R117 Nov 25 '20 at 7:46
Yep. For OSX, open Terminal and run:
$ open -a Google\ Chrome --args --disable-web-security --user-data-dir
--user-data-dir required on Chrome 49+ on OSX
For Linux run:
$ google-chrome --disable-web-security
Also if you're trying to access local files for dev purposes like AJAX or JSON, you can use this flag too.
-–allow-file-access-from-files
For Windows go into the command prompt and go into the folder where Chrome.exe is and type
chrome.exe --disable-web-security
That should disable the same origin policy and allow you to access local files.
Update: For Chrome 22+ you will be presented with an error message that says:
You are using an unsupported command-line flag: --disable-web-security. Stability and security will suffer.
However you can just ignore that message while developing.
For Windows users:
The problem with the solution accepted here, in my opinion is that if you already have Chrome open and try to run this it won't work.
However, when researching this, I came across a post on Super User, Is it possible to run Chrome with and without web security at the same time?.
Basically, by running the following command (or creating a shortcut with it and opening Chrome through that)
chrome.exe --user-data-dir="C:/Chrome dev session" --disable-web-security
you can open a new "insecure" instance of Chrome at the same time as you keep your other "secure" browser instances open and working as normal.
Important: delete/clear C:/Chrome dev session
folder every time when you open a window as second time --disable-web-security
is not going to work. So you cannot save your changes and then open it again as a second insecure instance of Chrome with --disable-web-security
.
For Windows:
Open the start menu
Type windows+R or open "Run"
Execute the following command:
chrome.exe --user-data-dir="C://Chrome dev session" --disable-web-security
For Mac:
Go to Terminal
Execute the following command:
open /Applications/Google\ Chrome.app --args --user-data-dir="/var/tmp/Chrome dev session" --disable-web-security
A new web security disabled chrome browser should open with the following message:
For Mac
If you want to open new instance of web security disabled Chrome browser without closing existing tabs then use below command
open -na Google\ Chrome --args --user-data-dir=/tmp/temporary-chrome-profile-dir --disable-web-security
It will open new instance of web security disabled Chrome browser as shown below
For windows users with Chrome Versions 60.0.3112.78 (the day the solution was tested and worked) and at least until today 19.01.2019 (ver. 71.0.3578.98). You do not need to close any chrome instance.
- Create a shortcut on your desktop
- Right-click on the shortcut and click Properties
- Edit the Target property
- Set it to "C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="C:/ChromeDevSession"
- Start chrome and ignore the message that says --disable-web-security is not supported!
BEWARE NOT TO USE THIS PARTICULAR BROWSER INSTANCE FOR BROWSING BECAUSE YOU CAN BE HACKED WITH IT!
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Worked like a charm. I can't believe Chrome doesn't allow developers to disable this without starting a new session. At least they have a way though. – FearlessFuture Sep 15 '17 at 22:47
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EDIT 3: Seems that the extension no longer exists... Normally to get around CORS these days I set up another version of Chrome with a separate directory or I use Firefox with https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/cors-everywhere/ instead.
EDIT 2: I can no longer get this to work consistently.
EDIT: I tried using the just the other day for another project and it stopped working. Uninstalling and reinstalling the extension fixed it (to reset the defaults).
Original Answer:
I didn't want to restart Chrome and disable my web security (because I was browsing while developing) and stumbled onto this Chrome extension.
Basically it's a little toggle switch to toggle on and off the Allow-Access-Origin-Control check. Works perfectly for me for what I'm doing.
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1how I achieve and integrate with my extension as my extension needs to access cross domain. I cannot force user to open the browser wth disable-web-security – codebased Apr 14 '15 at 3:01
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1This extension won't work for local files, unfortunately. Stick to the
--disable-web-security
switch in that case. – bryc Jul 15 '15 at 2:25 -
2@bryc It's not really meant to. Consider though that you can use
--allow-file-access-from-files
instead of disabling all web security. – Coburn Jul 15 '15 at 2:29 -
1Warning! Some sites won't let you log in with this extension enabled! Firebase console, for example. – campsjos Mar 23 '17 at 13:08
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1“the extension no longer exists” can you delete your answer or at least put Edit 3 at the top in bold – Michael Freidgeim Nov 23 '19 at 0:17
Seems none of above solutions are actually working. The --disable-web-security is no longer supported in recent chrome versions.
Allow-Control-Allow-Origin: * - chrome extension partially solved the problem. It works only if your request is using GET method and there's no custom HTTP Header. Otherwise, chrome will send OPTIONS HTTP request as a pre-flight request. If the server doesn't support CORS, it will respond with 404 HTTP status code. The plugin can't modify the response HTTP status code. So chrome will reject this request. There's no way for chrome plugin to modify the response HTTP status code based on current chrome extension API. And you can't do a redirect as well for XHR initiated request.
Not sure why Chrome makes developers life so difficult. It blocks all the possible ways to disable XSS security check even for development use which is totally unnecessary.
After days struggle and research, one solution works perfectly for me: to use corsproxy. You have two options here: 1. use [https://cors-anywhere.herokuapp.com/] 2. install corsproxy in the local box: npm install -g corsproxy
[Updated on Jun 23, 2018] Recent I'm developing an SPA app which need to use corsproxy again. But seem none of the corsproxy on the github can meet my requirement.
- need it to run inside firewall for security reason. So I can't use https://cors-anywhere.herokuapp.com/.
- It has to support https as chrome will block no-https ajax request in an https page.
- I need to run on nodejs. I don't want to maintain another language stack.
So I decide to develop my own version of corsproxy with nodejs. It's actually very simple. I have published it as a gist on the github. Here is the source code gist: https://gist.github.com/jianwu/8e76eaec95d9b1300c59596fbfc21b10
- It's in plain nodejs code without any additional dependencies
- You can run in http and https mode (by passing the https port number in command line), to run https, you need to generate cert and key and put them in the webroot directory.
- It also serves as static file server
- It supports pre-flight OPTION request as well.
To start the CORSProxy server (http port 8080): node static_server.js 8080
to access the proxy: http://host:8080/http://www.somesite.com
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If you're going to go to that extent, you could always just host a web server locally or remotely that pulls the content from the webpage you desire and then set the proper CORS headers on that. – Coburn Mar 3 '15 at 20:51
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I have thought of this route before. But this need some coding, especially in my case, I need to call several services which are originated from different domains. So I have to map different URL pattern to different domains. This is exactly what corsproxy has done for us. And it works perfectly. – Jianwu Chen Apr 22 '15 at 0:11
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4Not true.. The way mentioned in accepted answer worked for me.. As it mentions, Chrome 49 onwards command 'chrome.exe --disable-web-security --user-data-dir' worked for me.. – Gaurang Patel May 24 '16 at 6:15
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2Chromium 53, --disable-web-security --user-data-dir didn't work for me – Dark Star1 Sep 29 '16 at 1:57
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4In 53+ you need to actual provide a unique user data directory which is different from your normal directory. This creates a new profile for the insecure environment. --user-data-dir needs to be set equal to something, such as in Olas answer above. If you really want to, you CAN set it equal to your actual normal user profile folder, but this is highly discouraged as it leaves your normal profile open to accidental attacks if you start normal browsing while in that mode. – lassombra Jan 10 '17 at 14:27
Using the current latest chrome version (Version 88.0.4324.182 (Official Build) (64-bit)), the only way I could make it work on windows 10 was to start chrome using the below flags (change the D:\temp to your liking). This solution will start chrome as a sandbox for tests and it will not affect the main chrome profile:
--disable-site-isolation-trials --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="D:\temp"
in windows, click the start button then copy paste the below:
chrome.exe --disable-site-isolation-trials --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="D:\temp"
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6This is the only solution works for me. I have run this
chrome.exe --disable-site-isolation-trials --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="D:\temp"
onrun
window on windows 10. Thanks a lot. – Sampath Apr 7 '19 at 8:10 -
2Adding --disable-site-isolation-trials really helped me in my case, Chrome v 75.0, Selenium Web Driver, Java. Thanks! – Nikolay Chernov Aug 24 '19 at 16:52
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1
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1This is the only thing that worked in Chrome latest version as of July 2020. – Abraham Roy Jul 23 '20 at 7:10
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1It works for me on Linux, but with a little modification
google-chrome --disable-site-isolation-trials --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="/tmp"
– Serhii Popov Feb 25 at 11:04
For Windows... create a Chrome shortcut on your desktop.
Right-click > properties > Shortcut
Edit "target" path :
"C:\Program Files\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --args --disable-web-security
(Change the 'C:....\chrome.exe' to where ever your chrome is located).
et voilà :)
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As of today 08/27/20013 it's works for me, allowing me to do Ajax on my own localhost. – molokoloco Aug 27 '13 at 12:45
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got "you are using an unsupported command line tag: --disable-web-security" with Canary version 53 – khoailang Jun 28 '16 at 10:27
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4@khoailang you can still use the switch. That warning is part of Google's war on insecurity (a good thing). Also, as of version 55+ you need to also use --user-data-dir=<some other directory here> so Google doesn't want you mixing insecure rules with your normal profiles. – lassombra Jan 10 '17 at 14:33
Try this command on Mac terminal-
open -n -a "Google Chrome" --args --user-data-dir=/tmp/temp_chrome_user_data_dir http://localhost:8100/ --disable-web-security
It opens another instance of chrome with disabled security and there is no CORS issue anymore. Also, you don't need to close other chrome instances anymore. Change localhost URL to your's one.
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Most of the command-line answers above made no improvement for me on macOS. However this post alfilatov.com/posts/run-chrome-without-cors and the command line open worked for me. It is the same as the command above so voting up. – Max MacLeod Feb 12 '20 at 12:00
I find the best way to do this is duplicate a Chrome or Chrome Canary shortcut on your windows desktop. Rename this shortcut to "NO CORS" then edit the properties of that shortcut.
in the target add --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="D:/Chrome"
to the end of the target path.
your target should look something like this:
Update: New Flags added.
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="D:/Chrome"
Don't do this! You're opening your accounts to attacks. Once you do this any 3rd party site can start issuing requests to other websites, sites that you are logged into.
Instead run a local server. It's as easy as opening a shell/terminal/commandline and typing
cd path/to/files
python -m SimpleHTTPServer
Then pointing your browser to
http://localhost:8000
If you find it's too slow consider this solution
Update
People downvoting this answer should go over here and downvote this one too to be consistent. No idea why my answer is so downvoted and the same answer over here is the top voted answer.
You are opening yourself to attacks. Every single 3rd party script you include on your site remotely or locally like via npm can now upload your data or steal your credentials. You are doing something you have no need to do. The suggested solution is not hard, takes 30 seconds, doesn't leave you open attack. Why would you choose to make yourself vulnerable when the better thing to do is so simple?
Telling people to disable security is like telling your friends to leave their front door unlocked and/or a key under the doormat. Sure the odds might be low but if they do get burgled, without proof of forced entry they might have a hard time collecting insurance. Similarly if you disable security you are doing just that disabling security. It's irresponsible to do this when you can solve the issue so simply without disabling security. I'd be surprised if you couldn't be fired at some companies for disabling security.
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10This wouldn't open "your machine" to attacks. A malicious JavaScript code wouldn't be able to do much on the client machine itself. You, however, would allow malicious JavaScript code to potentially manipulate your accounts on other websites (facebook/administrations/banks/...). This certainly isn't any less dangerous, but it's completely different. – dim Apr 27 '17 at 9:07
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3Still, users might need to do this. The issue is not running a server. The issue is testing out CORS before you put it on your acceptance/production server, where this change is not needed. Modifying the hosts file wouldn't work either. – Jeff Huijsmans Jan 30 '19 at 12:34
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1@JohnHardy, Dad: "My daughter broke her arm, how do I fix it?", Me: "Take her to the hospital next door or you'll make it worse". You: "Downvoted because you didn't answer the question" – gman Dec 24 '20 at 4:19
For Selenium Webdriver, you can have selenium start Chrome with the appropriate arguments (or "switches") in this case.
@driver = Selenium::WebDriver.for(:Chrome, {
:detach => false,
:switches => ["--disable-web-security"]
})
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1that's two preceeding dashes for disable-web-security. it my browser it made them look like one looong dash. – mikelupo Mar 27 '12 at 13:09
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You can use this chrome plugin called "Allow-Control-Allow-Origin: *" ... It make it a dead simple and work very well. check it here: *
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4
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6No longer functional as per the date of this comment. Would recommend just using the flag route. – N.J.Dawson Aug 6 '18 at 14:57
If you are using Google Chrome on Linux, following command works.
google-chrome --disable-web-security
This Chrome plugin works for me: Allow-Control-Allow-Origin: * - Chrome Web Store
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5This plugin broke in my browser and started breaking all the XHR things. Use with caution. – etoxin Jan 13 '16 at 23:50
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1
You can simply use this chrome extension Allow-Control-Allow-Origin
just click the icon of the extensnion to turn enable cross-resource sharing ON or OFF as you want
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It is not. And yeah it's working. But we are here cause we now what a command means so use the above solutions before this! – Jánosi-Borsos Róbert Feb 4 '20 at 14:30
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@Jánosi-BorsosRóbert who are included in your "we", and how could your knowledge of the meaning of a command bring you here? FYI: Your command is imprecise, and I did not obey ;) – Superole Apr 15 '20 at 20:24
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True that @Superole. I meant that I think it's better to use a command than installing an extension. – Jánosi-Borsos Róbert Jun 25 '20 at 16:25
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- Create a new shortcut:
- Paste the following path:
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" "C:\Program Files\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="c:\temp\chrome"
- Name it:
Unsafe Chrome.exe
Now you have an unsafe version of Google Chrome on desktop to use it for debugging front-end applications without any CORS problems.
FOR MAC USER ONLY
open -n -a /Applications/Google\ Chrome.app --args --user-data-dir="/tmp/someFolderName" --disable-web-security
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@MohasinAli close all chrome windows and just run it like normally. It only affects the instance you ran with this argument. If you run it again without any arguments, this change is not applied. – Jeff Huijsmans Jan 30 '19 at 12:32
On Linux- Ubuntu, to run simultaneously a normal session and an unsafe session run the following command:
google-chrome --user-data-dir=/tmp --disable-web-security
For OSX, run the following command from the terminal:
open -na Google\ Chrome --args --disable-web-security --user-data-dir=$HOME/profile-folder-name
This will start a new instance of Google Chrome with a warning on top.
Following on Ola Karlsson answer, indeed the best way would be to open the unsafe Chrome in a different session. This way you don't need to worry about closing all of the currently opened tabs, and also can continue to surf the web securely with the original Chrome session.
These batch files should just work for you on Windows.
Put it in a Chrome_CORS.bat file for easy use
start "" "c:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --user-data-dir="c:/_chrome_dev" --disable-web-security
This one is for Chrome Canary. Canary_CORS.bat
start "" "c:\Users\%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome SxS\Application\chrome.exe" --user-data-dir="c:/_canary_dev" --disable-web-security
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This is a pointless use of a batch file. A shortcut would be much better for this. Just put everything after the first pair of quotes into the shortcut target. – lassombra Jan 10 '17 at 14:29
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It doesn't really matter. Yet in a batch you can do more things like deleting the user-data-dir after you close the browser, for example. – guya Jan 14 '17 at 21:21
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True, adding behavior outside of just launching would be useful, but for most people who need this at length, having a persistent user directory is helpful (for example with installed extensions) – lassombra Jan 18 '17 at 21:30
On Windows 10, the following will work.
<<path>>\chrome.exe --allow-file-access-from-files --allow-file-access --allow-cross-origin-auth-prompt
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I am surprised that your answer was downvoted. It worked very well for me on local files with the latest Chrome version. – Waruyama Mar 9 '16 at 10:15
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for mac users:
open -a "Google Chrome" --args --disable-web-security --user-data-dir
and before Chrome 48, you could just use:
open -a "Google Chrome" --args --disable-web-security
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Thanks. This works on the latest Chrome 73 that included the new CORB security policy. – StuyvesantBlue Mar 14 '19 at 10:12
this is an ever moving target.... today I needed to add another flag to get it to work:
--disable-site-isolation-trials
OS X:
open /Applications/Google\ Chrome.app --args --user-data-dir="/var/tmp/Chrome_dev_2" --disable-web-security --disable-site-isolation-trials
There is a Chrome extension called CORS Toggle.
Click here to access it and add it to Chrome.
After adding it, toggle it to the on position to allow cross-domain requests.
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1
Used below command in Ubuntu to start chrome (disable same origin policy and open chrome in detached mode):
nohup google-chrome --disable-web-security --user-data-dir='/tmp' &
For Windows:
(using windows 8.1, chrome 44.0)
First, close google chrome.
Then, open command prompt and go to the folder where 'chrome.exe' is.
( for me: 'chrome.exe' is here "C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application".
So I type:
cd C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application
)
now type: chrome.exe --disable-web-security
a new window of chrome will open.
On a Windows PC, use an older version of Chrome and the command will work for all you guys. I downgraded my Chrome to 26 version and it worked.
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2U dont need a older version of chrome use this full command --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="D:/Chrome" – Vignesh S Sep 24 '16 at 13:03
peter.sh
page, so must be pretty legit. – Benjineer Jan 7 '15 at 13:21--disable-web-security --user-data-dir
– vanduc1102 Mar 10 '16 at 1:37