I am developing a WebGL driven application and I want to launch chrome like this from the command line:
open -a Google\ Chrome --args --disable-web-security
I just don't want to have to type that in every single time. Is there a way to easily turn that into a one word command? I am using a mac if it matters.
Just make an alias in your .bashrc or .bash_profile
alias ogc='open -a Google\ Chrome --args --disable-web-security'
And then reload your shell.
exec $SHELL
Now, every time you type ogc
(or whatever you want to call it) in your terminal, it will run the full command open -a Google\ Chrome --args --disable-web-security
This work for me:
- Modify the .bash_profile
- Write this alias:
alias cchrome='/Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google\ Chrome --user-data-dir="/tmp/chrome_dev_session" --disable-web-security'
- Run
exec $SHELL
- With the
cchrome
command open a new windows of chrome with the disable web security to solve the "access-control-allow-origin" problem
The Easiest way to Launch Chrome with flags in MAC using terminal is :
'/Applications/Google Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google Chrome' --disable-features=CrossSiteDocumentBlockingAlways,CrossSiteDocumentBlockingIfIsolating
Any filter can come after --
in the above code --disable-features=CrossSiteDocumentBlockingAlways,CrossSiteDocumentBlockingIfIsolating
is just an example.
Note: Make sure to close all instances of Chrome before running it.
Why not just run a webserver? Open a terminal and type
cd folder_with_html_and_assets
python -m SimpleHTTPServer
Now in your browser to go http://localhost:8000
When your done go to the terminal and press Ctrl-C
That seems much better than disabling your security and risking getting pwnd.