David E. Ross wrote:
On 9/5/2019 9:02 AM, Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
Based on info received here, I created a user.js (never had one before)
so I could pass a different UA to one particular problem site. But I
can't tell if it's working. Is there a way to confirm that the site's
getting what I'm feeding it? Help | About just reports the standard UA.
I placed the file here:
C:\Users\(Windows
Username)\AppData\Roaming\Mozilla\SeaMonkey\Profiles\(profilename).default\
And here's the content, did I get it right?
# Mozilla User Preferences
user_pref("general.useragent.override.viki.com", "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows
NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:52.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/52.0");
Thanks.
1. Go to the Web site of your concern.
2. With the Web page for the site still in SeaMonkey's window, on the
SeaMonkey menu bar, select [Help > About SeaMonkey] or [Help >
Troubleshooting Information].
Either of those will display your current user agent string.
As I said above, "Help | About just reports the standard UA." It reports
the same UA no matter what site I'm visiting. Does that mean the user.js
pref has no effect?
A more complicated method involves installing the "Live HTTP headers"
extension and capturing the headers sent (and also received) when you go
to the site.
Hmmm....
--
War doesn't determine who's right, just who's left.
--
Paul B. Gallagher
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